This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this
book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely
coincidental.
Copyright © 2003 by David Weber
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions
thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN: 0-7434-3593-1
Cover art by David Mattingly
First printing, March 2003
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Weber, David, 1952–
Empire from the ashes / by David Weber.
p. cm.
"Previously published as the separate novels Mutineers' moon, The
armageddon
inheritance, and Heirs of empire"—Jkt.
ISBN 0-7434-3593-1
1. Space warfare—Fiction. 2. Science fiction, American. 3. War stories,
American.
I. Weber, David, 1952– Mutineers' moon. II. Weber, David, 1952– Armageddon
inheritance. III. Weber, David, 1952– Heirs of empire. IV. Title: Mutineers'
moon.
V. Title: Armageddon inheritance. VI. Title: Heirs of empire. VII. Title.
PS3573.E217 E47 2003
813'.54—dc21
2002038395
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Typeset by Windhaven Press, Auburn, NH
Printed in the United States of America
Honor Harrington:
On Basilisk Station
The Honor of the Queen
The Short Victorious War
Field of Dishonor
Flag in Exile
Honor Among Enemies
In Enemy Hands
Echoes of Honor
Ashes of Victory
War of Honor
edited by David Weber:
More than Honor
Worlds of Honor
Changer of Worlds
The Service of the Sword (forthcoming)
Empire from the Ashes (omnibus)
Mutineers' Moon
The Armageddon Inheritance
Heirs of Empire
Path of the Fury
The Apocalypse Troll
The Excalibur Alternative
Oath of Swords
The War God's Own
with Steve White:
Insurrection
Crusade
In Death Ground
The Shiva Option
with John Ringo:
March Upcountry
March to the Sea
March to the Stars
with Eric Flint
1633
The huge command deck
was as calm, as peacefully dim, as ever, silent but for the small background
sounds of environmental recordings. The bulkheads were invisible beyond the
projection of star-specked space and the blue-white shape of a life-bearing
world. It was exactly as it ought to be, exactly as it always had
been—tranquil, well-ordered, as divorced from chaos as any setting could
possibly be.
But Captain Druaga's
face was grim as he stood beside his command chair and data flowed through his
neural feeds. He felt the whickering lightning of energy weapons like heated
irons, Engineering no longer responded—not surprisingly—and he'd lost both
Bio-Control One and Three. The hangar decks belonged to no one; he'd sealed
them against the mutineers, but Anu's butchers had blocked the transit shafts
with grab fields covered by heavy weapons. He still held Fire Control and most
of the external systems, but Communications had been the mutineers' primary
target. The first explosion had taken it out, and even an Utu-class ship
mounted only a single hypercom. He could neither move the ship nor report what
had happened, and his loyalists were losing.
Druaga deliberately
relaxed his jaw before his teeth could grind together. In the seven thousand
years since the Fourth Imperium crawled back into space from the last surviving
world of the Third, there had never been a mutiny aboard a capital ship of
Battle Fleet. At best, he would go down in history as the captain whose crew
had turned against him and been savagely suppressed. At worst, he would not go
down in history at all.
The status report ended,
and he sighed and shook himself.
The mutineers were
hugely outnumbered, but they had the priceless advantage of surprise, and Anu
had planned with care. Druaga snorted; no doubt the Academy teachers would have
been proud of his tactics. But at least—and thank the Maker for it!—he was only
the chief engineer, not a bridge officer. There were command codes of which he
had no knowledge.
"Dahak,"
Druaga said.
"Yes,
Captain?" The calm, mellow voice came from everywhere and nowhere, filling
the command deck.
"How long before
the mutineers reach Command One?"
"Three standard
hours, Captain, plus or minus fifteen percent."
"They can't be
stopped?"
"Negative, Captain.
They control all approaches to Command One and they are pushing back loyal
personnel at almost all points of contact."
Of course they
were, Druaga thought bitterly. They had combat armor and heavy weapons; the vast
majority of his loyalists did not.
He looked around the
deserted command deck once more. Gunnery was unmanned, and Plotting,
Engineering, Battle Comp, Astrogation. . . . When the alarms went, only he had
managed to reach his post before the mutineers cut power to the transit shafts.
Just him. And to get here he'd had to kill two subverted members of his own
staff when they pounced on him like assassins.
"All right,
Dahak," he told the all-surrounding voice grimly, "if all we still
hold is Bio Two and the weapon systems, we'll use them. Cut Bio One and Three
out of the circuit."
"Executed,"
the voice said instantly. "But it will take the mutineers no more than an
hour to put them back on line under manual."
"Granted. But it's
long enough. Go to Condition Red Two, Internal."
There was a momentary
pause, and Druaga suppressed a bitter smile.
"You have no suit,
Captain," the voice said unemotionally. "If you set Condition Red
Two, you will die."
"I know."
Druaga wished he was as calm as he sounded, but he knew Dahak's bio
read-outs gave him the lie. Yet it was the only chance he—or, rather, the
Imperium—had.
"You will give a
ten-minute warning count," he continued, sitting down in his command
chair. "That should give everyone time to reach a lifeboat. Once
everyone's evacuated, our external weapons will become effective. You will
carry out immediate decon, but you will allow only loyal personnel to re-enter
until you receive orders to the contrary from . . . your new captain. Any
mutinous personnel who approach within five thousand kilometers before loyal
officers have reasserted control will be destroyed in space."
"Understood."
Druaga could have sworn the voice spoke more softly. "Comp Cent core
programs require authentication of this order, however."
"Alpha-Eight-Sigma-Niner-Niner-Seven-Delta-Four-Alpha,"
he said flatly.
"Authentication
code acknowledged and accepted," the voice responded. "Please specify
time for implementation."
"Immediately,"
Druaga said, and wondered if he spoke so quickly to avoid losing his nerve.
"Acknowledged. Do
you wish to listen to the ten-count, Captain?"
"No, Dahak,"
Druaga said very softly.
"Understood,"
the voice replied, and Druaga closed his eyes.
It was a draconian
solution . . . if it could be called a "solution" at all. Red Two,
Internal, was the next-to-final defense against hostile incursion. It opened
every ventilation trunk—something which could be done only on the express,
authenticated order of the ship's commander—to flood the entire volume of the
stupendous starship with chemical and radioactive agents. By its very nature,
Red Two exempted no compartment . . . including this one. The ship would
become uninhabitable, a literal death trap, and only the central computer,
which he controlled, could decontaminate.
The system had never
been intended for this contingency, but it would work. Mutineers and loyalists
alike would be forced to flee, and no lifeboat ever built could stand up to Dahak's
weaponry. Of course, Druaga wouldn't be alive to see the end, but at least his
command would be held for the Imperium.
And if Red Two failed,
there was always Red One.
"Dahak," he
said suddenly, never opening his eyes.
"Yes,
Captain?"
"Category One
order," Druaga said formally.
"Recording,"
the voice said.
"I, Senior Fleet
Captain Druaga, commanding officer Imperial Fleet Vessel Dahak, Hull
Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Nine-One," Druaga said even more formally,
"having determined to my satisfaction that a Class One Threat to the
Imperium exists aboard my vessel, do now issue, pursuant to Fleet Regulation
Seven-One, Section One-Nine-Three, Subsection Seven-One, a Category One order
to Dahak Computer Central. Authentication code
Alpha-Eight-Delta-Sigma-Niner-Niner-Seven-Delta-Four-Omega."
"Authentication
code acknowledged and accepted," the voice said coolly. "Standing by
to accept Category One orders. Please specify."
"Primary mission of
this unit now becomes suppression of mutinous personnel in accordance with
instructions already issued," Druaga said crisply. "If previously
specified measures fail to restore control to loyal personnel, said mutinous
elements will be destroyed by any practicable means, including, if necessary,
the setting of Condition Red One, Internal, and total destruction of this
vessel. These orders carry Priority Alpha."
"Acknowledged,"
the voice said, and Druaga let his head rest upon the cushioned back of his
chair. It was done. Even if Anu somehow managed to reach Command One, he could
not abort the order Dahak had just acknowledged.
The captain relaxed. At
least, he thought, it should be fairly painless.
* * *
" . . . nine
minutes and counting," the computer voice said, and Fleet Captain (E) Anu,
Chief Engineer of the ship-of-the-line Dahak cursed. Damn Druaga! He
hadn't expected the captain to reach his bridge alive, much less counted on this.
Druaga had always seemed such an unimaginative, rote-bound, dutiful automaton.
"What shall we do,
Anu?"
Commander Inanna's eyes
were anxious through her armor's visor, and he did not blame her.
"Fall back to Bay
Ninety-One," he grated furiously.
"But that's—"
"I know. I know!
We'll just have to use them ourselves. Now get our people moving,
Commander!"
"Yes, sir,"
Commander Inanna said, and Anu threw himself into the central transit shaft.
The shaft walls screamed past him, though he felt no subjective sense of
motion, and his lips drew back in an ugly snarl. His first attempt had failed,
but he had a trick or two of his own. Tricks even Druaga didn't know about,
Breaker take him!
* * *
Copper minnows exploded
away from Dahak. Lifeboats crowded with loyal crew members fanned out
over the glaciated surface of the alien planet, seeking refuge, and scattered
among them were other, larger shapes. Still only motes compared to the ship
itself, their masses were measured in thousands upon thousands of tons, and
they plummeted together, outspeeding the smaller lifeboats. Anu had no
intention of remaining in space where Druaga—assuming he was still alive—might
recognize that he and his followers had not abandoned ship in lifeboats and use
Dahak's weapons to pick off his sublight parasites as easily as a child
swatting flies.
The engineer sat in the
command chair of the parasite Osir, watching the gargantuan bulk of the
camouflaged mother ship dwindle with distance, and his smile was ugly. He needed
that ship to claim his destiny, but he could still have it. Once the programs
he'd buried in the engineering computers did their job, every power room aboard
Dahak would be so much rubble. Emergency power would keep Comp Cent
going for a time, but when it faded, Comp Cent would die.
And with its death, Dahak's
hulk would be his.
"Entering
atmosphere, sir," Commander Inanna said from the first officer's couch.
"Papa-Mike Control,
this is Papa-Mike One-X-Ray, do you copy?"
Lieutenant Commander
Colin MacIntyre's radar pinged softly as the Copernicus mass driver hurled
another few tons of lunar rock towards the catcher ships of the Eden Three
habitat, and he watched its out-going trace on the scope as he waited, reveling
in the joy of solo flight, for secondary mission control at Tereshkova to
respond.
"One-X-Ray,
Papa-Mike Control," a deep voice acknowledged. "Proceed."
"Papa-Mike Control,
One-X-Ray orbital insertion burn complete. It looks good from here. Over."
"One-X-Ray, that's
affirmative. Do you want a couple of orbits to settle in before
initiating?"
"Negative, Control.
The whole idea's to do this on my own, right?"
"Affirmative,
One-X-Ray."
"Let's do it, then.
I show a green board, Pasha—do you confirm?"
"That's an
affirmative, One-X-Ray. And we also show you approaching our transmission
horizon, Colin. Communications loss in twenty seconds. You are cleared to
initiate the exercise."
"Papa-Mike Control,
One-X-Ray copies. See you guys in a little while."
"Roger, One-X-Ray.
Your turn to buy, anyway."
"Like hell it
is," MacIntyre laughed, but whatever Papa-Mike Control might have replied
was cut off as One-X-Ray swept beyond the lunar horizon and lost signal.
MacIntyre ran down his
final check list with extra care. It had been surprisingly hard for the test
mission's planners to pick an orbit that would keep him clear of Nearside's
traffic and cover a totally unexplored portion of the moon's surface.
But Farside was populated only by a handful of observatories and deep-system
radio arrays, and the routing required to find virgin territory combined with
the close orbit the survey instruments needed would put him out of touch with
the rest of the human race for the next little bit, which was a novel
experience even for an astronaut these days.
He finished his list and
activated his instruments, then sat back and hummed, drumming on the arms of
his acceleration couch to keep time, as his on-board computers flickered
through the mission programs. It was always possible to hit a glitch, but there
was little he could do about it if it happened. He was a pilot, thoroughly
familiar with the electronic gizzards of his one-man Beagle Three survey
vehicle, but he had only the vaguest idea about how this particular instrument
package functioned.
The rate of technical
progress in the seventy years since Armstrong was enough to leave any
non-specialist hopelessly behind outside his own field, and the Geo Sciences
team back at Shepard Center had wandered down some peculiar paths to produce
their current generation of esoteric peekers and pryers. "Gravitonic
resonance" was a marvelous term . . . and MacIntyre often wished he knew
exactly what it meant. But not enough to spend another six or eight years
tacking on extra degrees, so he contented himself with understanding what the
"planetary proctoscope" (as some anonymous wag had christened it) did
rather than how it did it.
Maneuvering thrusters
nudged his Beagle into precisely the proper attitude, and MacIntyre bent a
sapient gaze upon the read-outs. Those, at least, he understood. Which was just
as well, since he was slated as primary survey pilot for the Prometheus
Mission, and—
His humming paused
suddenly, dying in mid-note, and his eyebrows crooked. Now that was odd. A
malfunction?
He punched keys, and his
crooked eyebrows became a frown. According to the diagnostics, everything was
functioning perfectly, but whatever else the moon might be, it wasn't hollow.
He tugged on his
prominent nose, watching the preposterous data appear on the displays. The
printer beside him hummed, producing a hard-copy graphic representation of the
raw numbers, and he tugged harder. According to his demented instruments,
someone must have been a busy little beaver down there. It looked for all the world
as if a vast labyrinth of tunnels, passages, and God knew what had been carved
out under eighty kilometers of solid lunar rock!
He allowed himself a
muttered imprecation. Less than a year from mission date, and one of their
primary survey systems—and a NASA design, at that!—had decided to go gaga. But
the thing had worked perfectly in atmospheric tests over Nevada and Siberia, so
what the hell had happened now?
He was still tugging on
his nose when the proximity alarm jerked him up in his couch. Damnation! He was
all alone back here, so what the hell was that?
"That" was a
blip less than a hundred kilometers astern and closing fast. How had something
that big gotten this close before his radar caught it? According to his
instruments, it was at least the size of one of the old Saturn V boosters!
His jaw dropped as the
bogie made a crisp, clean, instantaneous ninety-degree turn. Apparently the
laws of motion had been repealed on behalf of whatever it was! But whatever else
it was doing, it was also maneuvering to match his orbit. Even as he watched,
the stranger was slowing to pace him.
Colin MacIntyre's
level-headedness was one reason he'd been selected for the first joint
US-Soviet interstellar flight crew, but the hair on the back of his neck stood
on end as his craft suddenly shuddered. It was as if something had touched the
Beagle's hull—something massive enough to shake a hundred-ton,
atmosphere-capable, variable-geometry spacecraft.
That shook him out of
his momentary state of shock. Whatever this was, no one had told him to expect
it, and that meant it belonged to neither NASA nor the Russians. His hands flew
over his maneuvering console, waking flaring thrusters, and the Beagle
quivered. She quivered, but she didn't budge, and cold sweat beaded MacIntyre's
face as she continued serenely along her orbital path, attitude unchanged. That
couldn't possibly be happening—but, then, none of this could be
happening, could it?
He chopped that thought
off and punched more keys. One thing he had was plenty of maneuvering
mass—Beagles were designed for lengthy deployments, and he'd tanked from the
Russkies' Gagarin Platform before departure on his trans-lunar flight plan—and
the ship shuddered wildly as her main engines came alive.
The full-power burn
should have slammed him back in his couch and sent the survey ship hurtling
forward, but the thundering engines had no more effect than his maneuvering
thrusters, and he sagged in his seat. Then his jaw clenched as the Beagle
finally started to move—not away from the stranger, but towards it! Whatever
that thing on his radar was, it was no figment of his imagination.
His mind raced. The only
possible explanation was that the blip had stuck him with some sort of . . . of
tractor beam, and that represented more than any mere quantum leap in
applied physics, which meant the blip did not come from any Terran technology.
He did not indulge himself with any more dirty words like
"impossible" or "incredible," for it was all too evident
that it was possible. By some unimaginable quirk of fate, Somebody Else
had come calling just as Mankind was about to reach out to the stars.
But whoever They were,
he couldn't believe they'd just happened to turn up while he was Farside with
blacked-out communications. They'd been waiting for him, or someone like him,
so they must have been observing Earth for quite some time. But if they had,
they'd had time to make their presence known—and to monitor Terrestrial
communication systems. Presumably, then, they knew how to contact him but had
chosen not to do so, and that suggested a lot of things, none particularly
pleasant. The salient point, however, was that they obviously intended to
collect him, Beagle and all, for purposes of their own, and Colin MacIntyre did
not intend to be collected if he could help it.
The exhaustive
Prometheus Mission briefings on first contact flowed through his mind, complete
with all the injunctions to refrain from hostile acts, but it was one thing to
consider yourself expendable in pursuit of communication with aliens you might
have gone calling on. It was quite another when they dropped in on you and
started hauling you in like a fish!
His face hardened, and
he flipped up the plastic shield over the fire control panel. There'd been
wrung hands at the notion of arming a "peaceful" interstellar probe,
but the military, which provided so many of the pilots, had enjoyed the final
word, and MacIntyre breathed a silent breath of thanks that this was a
full-dress training mission as weapon systems came alive. He fed targeting data
from his radar and reached for the firing keys, then paused. They hadn't tried
talking to him, but neither had he tried talking to them.
"Unknown
spacecraft, this is NASA Papa-Mike One-X-Ray," he said crisply into his
radio. "Release my ship and stand off."
There was no answer, and
he glowered at the blip.
"Release my ship or
I will fire on you!"
Still no reply, and his
lips thinned. All right. If the miserable buggers didn't even want to talk . .
.
Three small, powerful
missiles blasted away from the Beagle. They weren't nukes, but each carried a
three-hundred-kilo warhead, and they had a perfect targeting setup. He tracked
them all the way in on radar.
And absolutely nothing
happened.
Commander MacIntyre
sagged in his couch. Those missiles hadn't been spoofed by ECM or exploded
short of the target. They'd just . . . vanished, and the implications were
disturbing. Most disturbing.
He cut his engines.
There was no point wasting propellant, and he and his captors would be clearing
Heinlein's transmission horizon shortly anyway.
He tried to remember if
any of the other Beagles were up. Judging by his own total lack of success,
they would be none too effective against Whoever-They-Were, but nothing else in
this vicinity was armed at all. He rather thought Vlad Chernikov was at
Tereshkova, but the flight schedules for the Prometheus crews had grown so
hectic of late it was hard to keep track.
His Beagle continued to
move towards the intruder, and now he was turning slowly nose-on to it. He
leaned back as nonchalantly as possible, watching through his canopy. He ought
to see them just about . . . now.
Yes, there they were.
And mighty disappointing they were, too. He didn't really know what he'd expected,
but that flattened, featureless, round-tipped, double-ended cylinder certainly
wasn't it. They were barely a kilometer clear, now, but aside from the fact
that the thing was obviously artificial, it seemed disappointingly undramatic.
There was no sign of engines, hatches, ports, communication arrays . . .
nothing at all but smooth, mirror-bright metal. Or, at least, he assumed it was
metal.
He checked his
chronometer. Communications should come back in any second now, and his lips
stretched in a humorless smile at how Heinlein Base was going to react when the
pair of them came over the radar horizon. It ought to be—
They stopped. Just like
that, with no apparent sense of deceleration, no reaction exhaust from the
cylinder, no . . . anything.
He gaped at the intruder
in disbelief. Or, no, not disbelief, exactly. More like a desire to
disbelieve. Especially when he realized they were motionless relative to the
lunar surface, neither climbing away nor tumbling closer. The fact that the
intruder could do that was somehow more terrifying than anything else that had
happened—a terror made only worse by the total, prosaic familiarity of his own
cockpit—and he clutched the arms of his couch, fighting an irrational
conviction that he had to be falling.
But then they were
moving again, zipping back the way they'd come at a velocity that beggared the
imagination, all with absolutely no sense of acceleration. His attitude
relative to the cylinder altered once more; it was behind him now, its rounded
tip barely a hundred meters clear of his own engines, and he watched the lunar
surface blur below him.
His Beagle and its
captor swooped lower, arrowing straight for a minor crater, and his toes curled
inside his flight boots while his hands tried to rip the arms off his couch.
The things he'd already seen that cylinder do told his intellect they were not
about to crash, but instinct was something else again. He fought his panic
stubbornly, refusing to yield to it, yet his gasp of relief was explosive when
the floor of the crater suddenly zipped open.
The cylinder slowed to a
few hundred kilometers per hour, and MacIntyre felt the comfort of catatonia
beckoning to him, but something made him fight it as obstinately as he had
fought his panic. Whatever had him wasn't going to find him curled up and
drooling when they finally stopped, by God!
A mighty tunnel
enveloped them, a good two hundred meters across and lit by brilliant strip
lights. Stone walls glittered with an odd sheen, as if the rock had been fused
glass-slick, but that didn't last long. They slid through a multi-ply hatch big
enough for a pair of carriers, and the tunnel walls were suddenly metallic. A
bronze-like metal, gleaming in the light, stretching so far ahead of him even
its mighty bore dwindled to a gleaming dot with distance.
Their speed dropped
still further, and more hatches slid past. Dozens of hatches, most as
large as the one that had admitted them to this impossible metal gullet. His
mind reeled at the structure's sheer size, but he retained enough mental
balance to apologize silently to the proctoscope's designers.
One huge hatch flicked
open with the suddenness of a striking snake. Whoever was directing their
flight curved away from the tunnel, slipping neatly through the open hatch, and
his Beagle settled without a jar to a floor of the same bronze-like alloy.
They were in a dimly-lit
metal cavern at least a kilometer across, its floor dotted with neatly parked
duplicates of the cylinder that had captured him. He gawked through the canopy,
wishing a Beagle's equipment list ran to sidearms. After his missiles' failure
he supposed there was no reason to expect a handgun to work, either, but it
would have been comforting to be able to try.
He licked his lips. If
nothing else, the titanic size of this structure ruled out the possibility that
the intruders had only recently discovered the solar system, but how had they
managed to build it without anyone noticing?
And then, at last, his
radio hummed to life.
"Good afternoon,
Commander MacIntyre," a deep, mellow voice said politely. "I regret
the rather unorthodox nature of your arrival here, but I had no choice. Nor, I
am afraid, do you."
"W—who are
you?" MacIntyre demanded a bit hoarsely, then paused and cleared his
throat. "What do you want with me?" he asked more levelly.
"I fear that
answering those questions will be a bit complicated," the voice said
imperturbably, "but you may call me Dahak, Commander."
MacIntyre drew a deep
breath. At least the whatever-they-weres were finally talking to him. And in
English, too. Which inspired a small, welcome spurt of righteous indignation.
"Your apologies
might carry a little more weight if you'd bothered to communicate with me before
you kidnaped me," he said coldly.
"I realize
that," his captor replied, "but it was impossible."
"Oh? You seem to
have overcome your problems rather nicely since." MacIntyre was comforted
to find he could still achieve a nasty tone.
"Your communication
devices are rather primitive, Commander." The words were almost apologetic.
"My tender was not equipped to interface with them."
"You're
doing quite well. Why didn't you talk to me?"
"It was not
possible. The tender's stealth systems enclosed both you and itself in a field
impervious to radio transmissions. It was possible for me to communicate with
the tender using my own communication systems, but there was no on-board
capability to relay my words to you. Once more, I apologize for any
inconvenience you may have suffered."
MacIntyre bit off a
giggle at how calmly this Dahak person produced a neat, thousand percent
understatement like "inconvenience," and the incipient hysteria of
his own sound helped sober him. He ran shaky fingers through his sandy-brown
hair, feeling as if he had taken a punch or two too many.
"All right . . .
Dahak. You've got me—what do you intend to do with me?"
"I would be most
grateful if you would leave your vessel and come to the command deck, Commander."
"Just like
that?"
"I beg your
pardon?"
"You expect me to
step out of my ship and surrender just like that?"
"Excuse me. It has
been some time since I have communicated with a human, so perhaps I have been
clumsy. You are not a prisoner, Commander. Or perhaps you are. I should like to
treat you as an honored guest, but honesty compels me to admit that I cannot
allow you to leave. However, I assure you upon the honor of the Fleet that no
harm will come to you."
Insane as it all
sounded, MacIntyre felt a disturbing tendency to believe it. This Dahak could
have lied and promised release as the aliens' ambassador to humanity, but he
hadn't. The finality of that "cannot allow you to leave" was more
than a bit chilling, but its very openness was a sort of guarantor of honesty,
wasn't it? Or did he simply want it to be? But even if Dahak was a
congenital liar, he had few options.
His consumables could be
stretched to about three weeks, so he could cower in his Beagle that long,
assuming Dahak was prepared to let him. But what then? Escape was obviously
impossible, so his only real choice was how soon he came out, not whether or
not he did so.
Besides, he felt a
stubborn disinclination to show how frightened he was.
"All right,"
he said finally. "I'll come."
"Thank you,
Commander. You will find the environment congenial, though you may, of course,
suit up if you prefer."
"Thank
you." MacIntyre's sarcasm was automatic, but, again, it was only a matter
of time before he had to rely on whatever atmosphere the voice chose to
provide, and he sighed. "Then I suppose I'm ready."
"Very well. A
vehicle is now approaching your vessel. It should be visible to your
left."
MacIntyre craned his
neck and caught a glimpse of movement as a double-ended bullet-shape about the
size of a compact car slid rapidly closer, gliding a foot or so above the
floor. It came to a halt under the leading edge of his port wing, exactly
opposite his forward hatch, and a door slid open. Light spilled from the
opening, bright and welcoming in the dim metal cavern.
"I see it," he
said, pleased to note that his voice sounded almost normal again.
"Excellent. If you
would be so kind as to board it, then?"
"I'm on my
way," he said, and released his harness.
He stood, and discovered
yet another strangeness. MacIntyre had put in enough time on Luna, particularly
in the three years he'd spent training for the Prometheus Mission, to grow
accustomed to its reduced gravity—which was why he almost fell flat on his face
when he rose.
His eyes widened. He
couldn't be certain, but his weight felt about right for a standard gee, which
meant these bozos could generate gravity to order!
Well, why not? The one
thing that was crystal clear was that these . . . call them people . . . were
far, far ahead of his own twenty-first-century technology, right?
His muscles tightened
despite Dahak's reassurances as he opened the hatch, but the air that swirled
about him had no immediately lethal effect. In fact, it smelled far better than
the inside of the Beagle. It was crisp and a bit chill, its freshness carrying
just a kiss of a spicy evergreen-like scent, and some of his tension eased as
he inhaled deeply. It was harder to feel terrified of aliens who breathed
something like this—always assuming they hadn't manufactured it purely for his
own consumption, of course.
It was four-and-a-half
meters to the floor, and he found himself wishing his hosts had left gravity
well enough alone as he swung down the emergency hand-holds and approached the
patiently waiting vehicle with caution.
It seemed innocuous
enough. There were two comfortable-looking chairs proportioned for something
the same size and shape as a human, but no visible control panel. The most
interesting thing, though, was that the upper half of the vehicle's hull was
transparent—from the inside. From the outside, it looked exactly the same as
the bronze-colored floor under his feet.
He shrugged and climbed
aboard, noticing that the silently suspended vehicle didn't even quiver under
his weight. He chose the right-hand seat, then made himself sit motionless as
the padded surface squirmed under him. A moment later, it had
reconfigured itself exactly to the contours of his body and the hatch licked
shut.
"Are you ready,
Commander?" His host's voice came from no apparent source, and MacIntyre
nodded.
"Let 'er rip,"
he said, and the vehicle began to move.
At least there was a
sense of movement this time. He sank firmly back into the seat under at least
two gees' acceleration. No wonder the thing was bullet-shaped! The little
vehicle rocketed across the cavern, straight at a featureless metal wall, and
he flinched involuntarily. But a hatch popped open an instant before they hit,
and they darted straight into another brightly-lit bore, this one no wider than
two or three of the vehicles in which he rode.
He considered speaking
further to Dahak, but the only real purpose would be to bolster his own nerve
and "prove" his equanimity, and he was damned if he'd chatter to hide
the heebie-jeebies. So he sat silently, watching the walls flash by, and tried
to estimate their velocity.
It was impossible. The
walls weren't featureless, but speed reduced them to a blur that was long
before the acceleration eased into the familiar sensation of free-fall, and
MacIntyre felt a sense of wonder pressing the last panic from his soul. This
base dwarfed the vastest human installation he'd ever seen—how in God's name
had a bunch of aliens managed an engineering project of such magnitude without
anyone even noticing?
There was a fresh spurt
of acceleration and a sideways surge of inertia as the vehicle swept through a
curved junction and darted into yet another tunnel. It seemed to stretch
forever, like the one that had engulfed his Beagle, and his vehicle scooted
down its very center. He kept waiting to arrive, but it was a very, very long
time before their headlong pace began to slow.
His first warning was
the movement of the vehicle's interior. The entire cockpit swiveled smoothly,
until he was facing back the way he'd come, and then the drag of deceleration
hit him. It went on and on, and the blurred walls beyond the transparent canopy
slowed. He could make out details once more, including the maws of other
tunnels, and then they slowed virtually to a walk. They swerved gently down one
of those intersecting tunnels, little wider than the vehicle itself, then slid
alongside a side opening and stopped. The hatch flicked soundlessly open.
"If you will
debark, Commander?" the mellow voice invited, and MacIntyre shrugged and
stepped down onto what looked for all the world like shag carpeting. The
vehicle closed its hatch behind him and slid silently backwards, vanishing the
way it had come.
"Follow the guide,
please, Commander."
He looked about blankly
for a moment, then saw a flashing light globe hanging in mid-air. It bobbed
twice, as if to attract his attention, then headed down a side corridor at a
comfortable pace.
A ten-minute walk took
him past numerous closed doors, each labeled in a strangely attractive, utterly
meaningless flowing script, and air as fresh and cool as the docking cavern's
blew into his face. There were tiny sounds in the background, so soft and
unintrusive it took him several minutes to notice them, and they were not the
mechanical ones he might have expected. Instead, he heard small, soft
stirrings, like wind in leaves or the distant calls of birds, forming a soothing
backdrop that helped one forget the artificiality of the environment.
But then the corridor
ended abruptly at a hatch of that same bronze-colored alloy. It was bank-vault
huge, and it bore the first ornamentation he'd seen. A stupendous, three-headed
beast writhed across it, with arched wings poised to launch it into flight. Its
trio of upthrust heads faced in different directions, as if to watch all
approaches at once, and cat-like forefeet were raised before it, claws
half-extended as if to simultaneously proffer and protect the spired-glory
starburst floating just above them.
MacIntyre recognized it
instantly, though the enormous bas-relief dragon was neither Eastern nor
Western in interpretation, and he paused to rub his chin, wondering what a
creature of Earthly mythology was doing in an extra-terrestrial base hidden on
Earth's moon. But that question was a strangely distant thing, surpassed by a
greater wonder that was almost awe as the huge, stunningly life-like eyes
seemed to measure him with a calm, dispassionate majesty that might yet become
terrible wrath if he transgressed.
He never knew precisely
how long he stood staring at the dragon and stared at by it, but in the end,
his light-globe guide gave a rather impatient twitch and drifted closer to the
hatch. MacIntyre shook himself and followed with a wry half-smile, and the
bronze portal slid open as he approached. It was at least fifteen centimeters
thick, yet it was but the first of a dozen equally thick hatches, forming a
close-spaced, immensely strong barrier, and he felt small and fragile as he
followed the globe down the silently opening passage. The multi-ply panels
licked shut behind him, equally silently, and he tried to suppress a feeling of
imprisonment. But then his destination appeared before him at last and he
stopped, all other considerations forgotten.
The spherical chamber
was larger than the old war room under Cheyenne Mountain, larger even than main
mission control at Shepard, and the stark perfection of its form, the featureless
sweep of its colossal walls, pressed down upon him as if to impress his
tininess upon him. He stood on a platform thrust out from one curving wall—a
transparent platform, dotted with a score of comfortable, couch-like chairs
before what could only be control consoles, though there seemed to be
remarkably few read-outs and in-puts—and the far side of the chamber was
dominated by a tremendous view screen. The blue-white globe of Earth floated in
its center, and the cloud-swirled loveliness caught at MacIntyre's throat. He
was back in his first shuttle cockpit, seeing that azure and argent beauty for
the first time, as if the mind-battering incidents of the past hour had made
him freshly aware of his bond with all that planet was and meant.
"Please be seated,
Commander." The soft, mellow voice broke into his thoughts almost gently,
yet it seemed to fill the vast space. "Here." The light globe danced
briefly above one padded chair—the one with the largest console, at the very
lip of the unrailed platform—and he approached it gingerly. He had never
suffered from agoraphobia or vertigo, but it was a long, long way down, and the
platform was so transparent he seemed to be striding on air itself as he
crossed it.
His "guide"
disappeared as he settled into the chair, not even blinking this time as it
conformed to his body, and the voice spoke again.
"Now, Commander, I
shall try to explain what is happening."
"You can
start," MacIntyre interrupted, determined to be more than a passive
listener, "by explaining how you people managed to build a base this size
on our moon without us noticing."
"We built no base,
Commander."
MacIntyre's green eyes
narrowed in irritation.
"Well somebody sure
as hell did," he growled.
"You are suffering
under a misapprehension, Commander. This is not a base 'on' your moon. It is
your moon."
* * *
For just an instant,
MacIntyre was certain he'd misunderstood.
"What did you
say?" he asked finally.
"I said this is
your moon, Commander. In point of fact, you are seated on the command bridge of
a spacecraft."
"A spacecraft? As
big as the moon?" MacIntyre said faintly.
"Correct. A vessel
some three thousand-three-two-oh-two-point-seven-nine-five, to be precise—of
your kilometers in diameter."
"But—"
MacIntyre's voice died in shock. He'd known the installation was huge, but no
one could replace the moon without someone noticing, however
advanced their technology!
"I don't believe
it," he said flatly.
"Nonetheless, it is
true."
"It's not
possible," MacIntyre said stubbornly. "If this thing is the size you
say, what happened to the real moon?"
"It was
destroyed," his informant said calmly. "With the exception of
sufficient of its original material to make up the negligible difference in
diameter, it was dropped into your sun. It is standard Fleet procedure to
camouflage picket units or any capital ship that may be required to spend
extended periods in systems not claimed by the Imperium."
"You camouflaged
your ship as our moon? That's insane!"
"On the contrary,
Commander. A planetoid-class starship is not an easy object to hide. Replacing
an existing moon of appropriate size is by far the simplest means of
concealment, particularly when, as in this case, the original surface contours
are faithfully recreated as part of the procedure."
"Preposterous!
Somebody on Earth would have noticed something going on!"
"No, Commander,
they would not. In point of fact, your species was not on Earth to observe
it."
"What?!"
"The events I have
just described took place approximately fifty-one thousand of your years
ago," his informant said gently.
MacIntyre sagged around
his bones. He was mad, he thought calmly. That was certainly the most
reasonable explanation.
"Perhaps it would
be simpler if I explained from the beginning rather than answering
questions," the voice suggested.
"Perhaps it would
be simpler if you explained in person!" MacIntyre snapped, suddenly savage
in his confusion.
"But I am
explaining in person," the voice said.
"I mean
face-to-face," MacIntyre grated.
"Unfortunately,
Commander, I do not have a face," the voice said, and MacIntyre could have
sworn he heard wry amusement in it. "You see, in a sense, you are sitting
inside me."
"Inside—?"
MacIntyre whispered.
"Precisely,
Commander. I am Dahak, the central command computer of the Imperial
ship-of-the-line Dahak."
"Gaaa,"
MacIntyre said softly.
"I beg your
pardon?" Dahak said calmly. "Shall I continue?"
MacIntyre gripped the
arms of his chair and closed his eyes, counting slowly to a hundred.
"Sure," he said
at last, opening his eyes slowly. "Why don't you do that?"
"Very well. Please
observe the visual display, Commander."
Earth vanished, and
another image replaced it. It was a sphere, as bronze-bright as the cylinder
that had captured his Beagle, but despite the lack of any reference scale, he
knew it was far, far larger.
The image turned and
grew, and details became visible, swelling rapidly into vast blisters and
domes. There were no visible ports, and he saw no sign of any means of
propulsion. The hull was completely featureless but for those smoothly rounded
protrusions . . . until its turning motion brought him face-to-face with a
tremendous replica of the dragon that had adorned the hatch. It sprawled over
one face of the sphere like a vast ensign, arrogant and proud, and he
swallowed. It covered a relatively small area of the hull, but if that sphere
was what he thought it was, this dragon was about the size of Montana.
"This is Dahak,"
the voice told him, "Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Nine-One, an Utu-class
planetoid of Battle Fleet, built fifty-two thousand Terran years ago in the
Anhur System by the Fourth Imperium."
MacIntyre stared at the
screen, too entranced to disbelieve. The image of the ship filled it entirely,
seeming as if it must fall from the display and crush him, and then it
dissolved into a computer-generated schematic of the monster vessel. It was too
stupendous for him to register much, and the schematic changed even as he
watched, rolling to present him with an exploded polar view of deck after
inconceivable deck as the voice continued.
"The Utu-class
were designed both for the line of battle and for independent, long-term survey
and picket deployment, with core crews of two hundred and fifty thousand.
Intended optimum deployment time is twenty-five Terran years, with provision
for a sixty percent increase in personnel during that period. Maximum deployment
time is virtually unlimited, assuming crew expansion is contained.
"In addition to
small, two-seat fighters that may be employed in either attack or defense, Dahak
deploys sublight parasite warships massing up to eighty thousand tons.
Shipboard weaponry centers around hyper-capable missile batteries backed up by
direct-fire energy weapons. Weapon payloads range from chemical warheads
through fusion, anti-matter, and gravitonic warheads. Essentially, Commander,
this ship could vaporize your planet."
"My God!"
MacIntyre whispered. He wanted to disbelieve—God, how he wanted to!—but
he couldn't.
"Sublight
propulsion," Dahak went on, ignoring the interruption, "relies upon
phased gravitonic progression. Your present terminology lacks the referents for
an accurate description, but for purposes of visualization, you may consider it
a reactionless drive with a maximum attainable velocity of fifty-two-point-four
percent that of light. Above that velocity, a vessel of this size would lose
phase lock, and be destroyed.
"Unlike previous
designs, the Utu-class do not rely upon multi-dimensional drives—what
your science fiction writers have dubbed 'hyper drives,' Commander—for
faster-than-light travel. Instead, this ship employs the Enchanach Drive. You
may envision it as the creation of converging artificially-generated 'black
holes,' which force the vessel out of phase with normal space in a series of
instantaneous transpositions between coordinates in normal space. Under
Enchanach Drive, dwell time in normal space between transpositions is
approximately point-seven-five Terran femtoseconds.
"The Enchanach
Drive's maximum effective velocity is approximately Cee-six factorial. While
this is lower than that of the latest hyper drives, Enchanach Drive vessels
have several tactical advantages. Most importantly, they may enter, maneuver
in, and leave a supralight state at will, whereas hyper drive vessels may enter
and leave supralight only at pre-selected coordinates.
"Power generation
for the Utu-class—"
"Stop."
MacIntyre's single word halted Dahak's voice instantly, and he rubbed his eyes
slowly, wishing he could wake up at home in bed.
"Look," he
said finally, "this is all very interesting, uh, Dahak." He felt a
bit silly speaking to a machine, even one like this. "But aside from
convincing me that this is one mean mother of a ship, it doesn't seem very
pertinent. I mean, I'm impressed as hell, but what does anyone need with a ship
like this? Thirty-two hundred kilometers in diameter, eighty-thousand-ton
parasite warships, two-hundred-thousand-man crews, vaporize planets. . . .
Jesus H. Christ! What is this 'Fourth Imperium'? Who in God's name does
it need that kind of firepower against, and what the hell is it doing
here?!"
"I will explain, if
I may resume my briefing," Dahak said calmly, and MacIntyre snorted, then
waved for it to continue. "Thank you, Commander.
"You are correct:
technical data may be left to the future. But for you to understand my
difficulty—and the reason it is your difficulty, as well—I must summarize some
history. Please understand that much of this represents reconstruction and
deduction based upon very scant physical evidence.
"Briefly, the
Fourth Imperium is a political unit, originating upon the Planet Birhat in the
Bia System some seven thousand years prior to Dahak's entry into your
solar system. As of that time, the Imperium consisted of some fifteen hundred
star systems. It is called the Fourth Imperium because it is the third such
interstellar entity to exist within recorded history. The existence of at least
one prehistoric imperium, designated the 'First Imperium' by Imperial
historians, has been conclusively demonstrated, although archaeological
evidence suggests that, in fact, a minimum of nine additional prehistoric
imperia intervened between the First and Second Imperium. All, however, were
destroyed in part or in whole by the Achuultani."
A formless chill tingled
down MacIntyre's spine.
"And just what were
the Achuultani?" he asked, trying to keep his strange, shadowy emotions
out of his voice.
"Available data are
insufficient for conclusive determinations," Dahak replied.
"Fragmentary evidence suggests that the Achuultani are a single species,
possibly of extra-galactic origin. Even the name is a transliteration of a
transliteration from an unattested myth of the Second Imperium. More data may
have been amassed during actual incursions, but most such information was lost
in the general destruction attendant upon such incursions or during the
reconstruction that followed them. What has been retained pertains more
directly to tactics and apparent objectives. On the basis of that data,
historians of the Fourth Imperium conclude that the first such incursion
occurred on the close order of seventy million Terran years ago."
"Seventy
mil—?!" MacIntyre chopped himself off. No species could
survive over such an incredible period. Then again, the moon couldn't be an
alien starship, could it? He nodded jerkily for Dahak to continue.
"Supporting
evidence may be found upon your own planet, Commander," the computer said
calmly. "The sudden disappearance of terrestrial dinosaurs at the end of
your Mesozoic Era coincides with the first known Achuultani incursion. Many
Terran scientists have suggested that this may have been the consequence of a
massive meteor impact. My own observations suggest that they are correct, and
the Achuultani have always favored large kinetic weapons."
"But . . . but why?
Why would anyone wipe out dinosaurs?!"
"The Achuultani
objective," Dahak said precisely, "appears to be the obliteration of
all competing species, wherever situated. While it is unlikely that terrestrial
dinosaurs, who were essentially a satisfied life form, might have competed with
them, that would not prevent them from striking the planet as a long-term
precaution against the emergence of a competitor. Their attention was probably
drawn to Earth by the presence of a First Imperium colony, however. I base this
conclusion on data that indicate the existence of a First Imperium military
installation on your fifth planet."
"Fifth
planet?" MacIntyre parroted, overloaded by what he was hearing. "You
mean . . . ?"
"Precisely,
Commander: the asteroid belt. It would appear they struck your fifth planet a
bit harder than Earth, and it was much smaller and less geologically stable to
begin with."
"Are you
sure?"
"I have had
sufficient time to amass conclusive observational data. In addition, such an
act would be consistent with recorded Achuultani tactics and the deduced
military policies of the First Imperium, which apparently preferred to place
system defense bases upon centrally-located non-life-bearing bodies."
Dahak paused, and
MacIntyre sat silent, trying to grasp the sheer stretch of time involved. Then
the computer spoke again.
"Shall I
continue?" it asked, and he managed another nod.
"Thank you.
Imperial analysts speculate that the periodic Achuultani incursions into this
arm of the galaxy represent sweeps in search of potential competitors—what your
own military might term 'search and destroy' missions—rather than attempts to
expand their imperial sphere. The Achuultani culture would appear to be
extremely stable, one might almost say static, for very few technological
advances have been observed since the Second Imperium. The precise reasons for
this apparent cultural stasis and for the widely varying intervals between such
sweeps are unknown, as is the precise locus from which they originate. While
some evidence does suggest an extra-galactic origin for the species, pattern
analysis suggests that the Achuultani currently occupy a region far to the
galactic east. This, unfortunately, places Sol in an extremely exposed
position, as your solar system lies on the eastern fringe of the Imperium. In
short, the Achuultani must pass Sol to reach the Imperium.
"This has not mattered
to your planet of late, as there has been nothing to attract Achuultani
attention to this system since the end of the First Incursion. That protection
no longer obtains, however. Your civilization's technical base is now
sufficiently advanced to produce an electronic and neutrino signature that
their instruments cannot fail to detect."
"My God!"
MacIntyre turned pale as the implications struck home.
"Precisely,
Commander. Your sun's location also explains Dahak's presence in this
region. Dahak's mission was to picket the Noarl System, directly in the
center of the traditional Achuultani incursion route. Unfortunately—or, more
precisely, by hostile design—Dahak suffered catastrophic failure of a
major component of its Enchanach Drive while en route to its intended station,
and Senior Fleet Captain Druaga was forced to stop here for repairs."
"But if the damage
was repairable, why are you still here?"
"Because there was,
in fact, no damage." Dahak's voice was as measured as ever, but
MacIntyre's hyper-sensitive mind seemed to hear a hidden core of anger.
"The 'failure' was contrived by Dahak's chief engineer, Fleet
Captain (Engineering) Anu, as the opening gambit in a mutiny against Fleet
authority."
"Mutiny?"
"Mutiny. Fleet
Captain Anu and a minority of sympathizers among the crew feared that a new
Achuultani incursion was imminent. As an advanced picket directly in the path
of any such incursion, Dahak would very probably be destroyed. Rather
than risk destruction, the mutineers chose to seize the ship and flee to a
distant star in search of a colonizable planet."
"Was that
feasible?" MacIntyre asked in a fascinated tone.
"It was. Dahak's
cruising radius is effectively unlimited, Commander, with technical
capabilities sufficient to inaugurate a sound technology base on any habitable
world, and the crew would provide ample genetic material for a viable planetary
population. Moreover, the simulation of a major engineering failure was a
cleverly conceived tactic to prevent detection of the mutiny until the
mutineers could move beyond possible interception by other Fleet units. Fleet
Captain Anu knew that Senior Fleet Captain Druaga would transmit a malfunction
report. If no further word was received, Fleet Central's natural assumption
would be that the damage had been sufficient to destroy the ship."
"I see. But I
gather from your choice of tense that the mutiny failed?"
"Incorrect,
Commander."
"Then it
succeeded?" MacIntyre asked, scratching his head in puzzlement.
"Incorrect,"
Dahak said again.
"Well it must have
done one or the other!"
"Incorrect,"
Dahak said a third time. "The mutiny, Commander, has not yet been
resolved."
* * *
MacIntyre sighed and
leaned back in resignation, crossing his arms. Dahak's last statement was
preposterous. Yet his concept of words like "preposterous" was
acquiring a certain punch-drunk elasticity.
"All right,"
he said finally. "I'll humor you. How can a mutiny that started fifty
thousand years ago still be unresolved?"
"In essence,"
Dahak said, seemingly impervious to MacIntyre's irony, "it is a condition
of deadlock. Senior Fleet Captain Druaga instructed Comp Cent to render the
interior of the ship uninhabitable in order to force evacuation of the vessel
by mutineers and loyalists alike, after which Dahak's weaponry would
command the situation. Only loyal officers would be permitted to reenter the
vessel once the interior had been decontaminated, at which point Fleet control
would be restored.
"Unknown to Senior
Fleet Captain Druaga, however, Fleet Captain Anu had implanted contingency
instructions in his back-up engineering computers and isolated them from Comp
Cent's net. Those instructions were intended to destroy Dahak's internal
power rooms, with the ultimate goal of depriving Comp Cent of power and so
destroying it. As chief engineer, and armed with complete knowledge of how the
sabotage had been achieved, it would have been comparatively simple for him to
effect repairs and assume control of the ship.
"When Comp Cent
implemented Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's orders, all loyal personnel abandoned
ship in lifeboats. Fleet Captain Anu, however, had secretly prepared several
sublight parasites for the apparent purpose of marooning any crewmen who
refused to accept his authority. In the event, his own followers made use of
those transports and a small number of armed parasites when they evacuated Dahak,
with the result that they carried to Earth a complete and functional, if
limited, technical base. The loyalists, by contrast, had only the emergency
kits of their lifeboats.
"This would not
have mattered if Fleet Captain Anu's sabotage programs had not very nearly
achieved their purpose. Before Comp Cent became aware of and deactivated them,
three hundred and ten of Dahak's three hundred and twelve fusion power
plants had been destroyed, dropping Dahak's internal power net below
minimal operational density. Sufficient power remained to implement a defensive
fire plan as per Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's orders, but not to
simultaneously decontaminate the interior and effect emergency repairs, as
well. As a result, Comp Cent was unable to immediately and fully execute its
orders. It was necessary to repair the damage before Comp Cent could
decontaminate, yet repairs amounted to virtual rebuilding and required more
power than remained. Indeed, power levels were so low that it was impossible
even to operate Dahak's core tap. This, in turn, meant that emergency
power reserves were quickly drained and that it was necessary to spend extended
periods rebuilding those reserves between piecemeal repair activities.
"Because of these
extreme conditions, Comp Cent was dysfunctional for erratic but extended
periods, though automatic defensive programs remained operational. Scanner
recordings indicate that seven mutinous parasites were destroyed during the
repair period, but each defensive action drained power levels still further,
which, in turn, extended Comp Cent's dysfunctional periods and further slowed
repairs by extending the intervals required to rebuild reserve power to permit
reactivation of sufficient of Comp Cent to direct each new stage of work.
"Because of this,
approximately eleven Terran decades elapsed before Comp Cent once more became
fully functional, albeit at marginal levels, and so was able to begin
decontamination. During that time, the lifeboats manned by loyal personnel had
become inoperable, as had all communication equipment aboard them. As a result,
it was not possible for any loyalist to return to Dahak."
"Why didn't you
just pick them up?" MacIntyre demanded. "Assuming any of them were
still alive, that is."
"Many remained
alive." There was a new note in Dahak's voice. Almost a squirmy one, as if
it were embarrassed. "Unfortunately, none were bridge officers. Because of
that, none carried Fleet communicator implants, making it impossible to contact
them. Without that contact, command protocols in Comp Cent's core programming
severely limited Dahak's options."
The voice paused, and
MacIntyre wrinkled his brow. Command protocols?
"Meaning
what?" he asked finally.
"Meaning,
Commander, that it was not possible for Comp Cent to consider retrieving
them," Dahak admitted, and the computer's embarrassment was now
unmistakable. "You must understand that Comp Cent had never been intended
by its designers to function independently. While self-aware in the crudest
sense, Comp Cent then possessed only very primitive and limited versions of
those qualities which humans term 'imagination' and 'initiative.' In addition,
strict obedience to the commands of lawful superiors is thoroughly—and quite
properly—embedded in Comp Cent's core programs. Without an order to send
tenders to retrieve loyal officers, Comp Cent could not initiate the action;
without communication, no loyal officer could order Comp Cent to do so.
Assuming, of course, that any such loyal officers had reason to believe that Dahak
remained functional to retrieve them."
"Damn!"
MacIntyre said softly. "Catch twenty-two with a vengeance."
"Precisely,
Commander." Dahak sounded relieved to have gotten that bit of explanation
behind it.
"But the mutineers
still had a functional tech base," MacIntyre mused. "So what happened
to them?"
"They remain on
Earth," Dahak said calmly, and MacIntyre bolted upright.
"You mean they died
there, don't you?" he asked tensely.
"Incorrect, Commander.
They—and their parasites—still exist."
"That's ridiculous!
Even assuming everything you've told me so far is true, we'd have to be aware
of the presence of an advanced alien civilization!"
"Incorrect,"
Dahak said patiently. "Their installation is and has been concealed
beneath the surface of your continent of Antarctica. For the past five thousand
Terran years, small groups of them have emerged to mingle briefly with your
population, then returned to their enclave to rejoin the bulk of their fellows
in stasis-suspended animation, in your own terms."
"Damn it,
Dahak!" MacIntyre exploded. "Are you telling me bug-eyed monsters can
stroll around Earth and nobody even notices?!"
"Negative,
Commander. The mutineers are not 'bug-eyed monsters.' On the contrary; they are
humans."
Colin MacIntyre slumped
back into his chair, eyes suddenly full of horror.
"You mean . . .
?" he whispered.
"Precisely,
Commander. Every Terran human is descended from Dahak's crew."
MacIntyre felt numb.
"Wait," he said
hoarsely. "Wait a minute! What about evolution? Damn it, Dahak, homo
sapiens is related to every other mammal on the planet!"
"Correct,"
Dahak said unemotionally. "Following the First Imperium's fall, one of its
unidentified non-human successor imperia re-seeded many worlds the Achuultani
struck. Earth was one such planet. So also was Mycos, the true homeworld of the
human race and the capital of the Second Imperium until its destruction some
seventy-one thousand years ago. The same ancestral fauna were used to re-seed
all Earth-type planets. Earth's Neanderthals were thus not ancestors of your
own race but rather very distant cousins. They did not, I regret to say, fare
well against Dahak's crew and its descendants."
"Sweet suffering
Jesus!" MacIntyre breathed. Then his eyes narrowed. "Dahak, do you
mean to tell me that you've sat on your electronic ass up here for fifty
thousand years and done absolutely nothing?"
"That is one way of
phrasing it," Dahak admitted uncomfortably.
"But why,
goddamn it?!"
"What would you
have had me do, Commander? Senior Fleet Captain Druaga issued Priority Alpha
Category One orders to suppress the mutineers. Such priority one orders take
absolute precedence over all directives with less than Alpha Priority and may
be altered only by the direction of Fleet Central. No lesser
authority—including the one that first issued them—may change them.
Accordingly, Dahak has no option but to remain in this system until such
time as all surviving mutineers are taken into custody or destroyed."
"So why didn't you
seek new orders from this Fleet Central of yours?" MacIntyre grated.
"I cannot. Fleet
Captain Anu's attack on Communications inflicted irreparable damage."
"You can rebuild
three-hundred-plus fusion plants and you can't fix a frigging radio?!"
"The situation is
somewhat more complicated than that, Commander," Dahak replied, with what
MacIntyre unwillingly recognized as commendable restraint. "Supralight
communication is maintained via the multi-dimensional communicator, commonly
referred to as the 'hypercom,' a highly refined derivative of the much
shorter-ranged 'fold-space' communicator used by Fleet personnel. Both combine
elements of hyperspace and gravitonic technology to distort normal space and
create a point-to-point congruence between distant foci, but in the case of the
hypercom these distortions or 'folds' may span as many as several thousand
light-years. A hypercom transmitter is a massive installation, and certain of
its essential components contain Mycosan, a synthetic element that cannot be
produced out of shipboard resources. As all spare components are currently
aboard Fleet Captain Anu's parasites, repairs are impossible. Dahak can
receive hypercom transmissions, but cannot initiate a signal."
"That's the only
way you can communicate?"
"The Imperium
abandoned primitive light-speed communications several millennia before the
mutiny, Commander. Since, however, it was evident that repair of Dahak's
hypercom was impossible and no Fleet unit had been sent to investigate Dahak's
original malfunction report, Comp Cent constructed a radio transmitter and sent
a report at light speed to the nearest Fleet base. It is improbable that the
Imperium would have abandoned a base of such importance, and Comp Cent
therefore concluded that the message was not recognized by its intended
recipients. Whatever the reason, Fleet Central has never responded, thus
precluding any modification of Dahak's Alpha Priority
instructions."
"But that doesn't
explain why you didn't carry out your original orders and blast the bastards as
they left the ship!" MacIntyre snarled venomously.
"That is an
incorrect interpretation of Comp Cent's orders, Commander. Senior Fleet Captain
Druaga's instructions specified the destruction of mutinous vessels approaching
within five thousand kilometers; they did not specify the destruction of
mutinous vessels departing Dahak."
"They
didn't—!" MacIntyre stopped himself and silently recited the names of the
Presidents. "All right," he said finally, "I can accept that, I
suppose. But why haven't you blasted them off the planet since? Surely that
comes under the heading of taking them into custody or destroying them?"
"It does. Such
action, however, would conflict with Alpha Priority core programs. This vessel
has the capacity to penetrate the defenses Fleet Captain Anu has established to
protect his enclave, but only by using weaponry that would destroy seventy
percent of the human race upon the planet. Destruction of non-Achuultani
sentients except in direct self-defense is prohibited."
"Well, what have they
been doing all this time?"
"I cannot say with
certainty," Dahak admitted. "It is impossible for my sensors to
penetrate their defensive systems, and it is apparent that they have chosen to
employ a substantial amount of stealth technology. Without observational data
of their inner councils, meaningful analysis is impossible."
"You must have some
idea!"
"Affirmative.
Please remember, however, that all is speculation and may be offered only as
such."
"So go ahead and speculate,
damn it!"
"Acknowledged,"
Dahak said calmly. "It is my opinion that the mutineers have interacted
with Terra-born humans since such time as your planetary population attained
sufficient density to support indigenous civilizations. Initially, this contact
was quite open, leading to the creation of the various anthropomorphic
pantheons of deities. Interaction with your own Western Civilization, however,
particularly since your sixteenth century, has been surreptitious and designed
to accelerate your technical development. Please note that this represents a
substantive change in the mutineers' original activities, which were designed
to promote superstition, religion, and pseudo-religion in place of rationalism
and scientific thought."
"Why should they
try to slow our development?" MacIntyre demanded. "And if they did,
why change tactics?"
"In my opinion,
their original intent was to prevent the birth of an indigenous technology that
might threaten their own safety, on the one hand, or attract the Achuultani, on
the other. Recall that their original motive for mutiny was to preserve
themselves from destruction at Achuultani hands.
"Recently,
however—" MacIntyre winced at hearing someone refer to the sixteenth
century as "recently" "—the focus of their activities has
altered. Perhaps they believe the incursion they feared has already occurred
and that they are therefore safe, or perhaps there has been a change in their
leadership, leading to changes in policy. My opinion, however, is that they
have concluded that Dahak is not and will not again become fully
operational."
"What? Why should
that matter?"
"It would matter if
they assume, as I am postulating that they have, that sufficient damage was
inflicted upon Dahak's power generation capacity as to preclude repairs.
Fleet Captain Anu cannot know what Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's final
instructions were. As he is unaware that Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's Alpha
Priority orders have required Dahak to remain on station, he may well
conclude that Dahak's failure to depart in search of assistance
indicates that supralight travel is no longer possible for Dahak. Yet if
there were sufficient power for repairs, Dahak would be
supralight-capable, as there was never an actual failure of the Enchanach
Drive. Dahak's very presence here may thus be construed as empirical
evidence of near-total incapacity."
"So why not come
out and grab you?"
"Because he has
conclusive evidence that sufficient power does remain for pre-programmed
defensive fire plans, yet no fire has been directed against the primitive
spacecraft Terra-born humans have dispatched to their 'moon.' Accordingly, he
may believe Dahak's command capabilities are too deeply impaired to
re-program those defensive fire plans and that those plans do not provide for
interference with locally-produced spacecraft. Assuming this entirely
speculative chain of reasoning is correct, he may well hope to push your planet
into developing interstellar craft in order to escape this star system. This
theory is consistent with observed facts, including the world wars and
Soviet-American 'cold war' of the twentieth-century, which resulted in
pressurized research and development driven by military requirements."
"But the cold war
ended decades ago," MacIntyre pointed out.
"Agreed. Yet that,
too, is consistent with the theory I have offered. Consider, Commander: the
superpowers of the last century have been drawn together in cooperation against
the growing militancy of your so-called Third World, particularly the
religio-political blocs centered on radical Islam and the Asian Alliance. This
has permitted the merger of the First World technical base—ConEuropean,
Russian, North American, and Australian—Japanese alike—while maintaining the
pressure of military need. In addition, certain aspects of Imperial technology
have begun to appear in your civilization. Your gravitonic survey instruments
are a prime example of this process, for they are several centuries in advance
of any other portion of your technology."
"I see."
MacIntyre considered the computer's logic carefully, so caught up in Dahak's
story he almost forgot his own part in it. "But why push for starships?
Why not just use a 'locally-produced' ship to take you over?"
"It is possible
that he intends to do precisely that, Commander. Indeed, had your vessel not
fired upon mine, I might have taken your sub-surface survey device as just such
an attempt, in which case I would have destroyed you." MacIntyre shivered
at how calmly Dahak spoke. "My preliminary bio-scans indicated that you
were not yourself a mutineer, but had you demanded entry, had you failed to
resist—had you, in fact, done anything that indicated either an awareness of Dahak's
existence or a desire to enter—my core programming would have assumed at least
the possibility that you were in Fleet Captain Anu's service. That assumption
would have left me no choice but to destroy you as per Senior Fleet Captain
Druaga's final directives.
"However," the
computer continued serenely, "I do not believe he would make that attempt.
Either Dahak had sufficient power to repair the damage, in which case
the ship is, in fact, fully operational and would destroy him or his minions,
or else Dahak had insufficient power to decontaminate the vessel's
interior, in which case re-entry would remain effectively impossible without
Imperial technology—which would activate any operational defensive
programming." The computer's voice gave MacIntyre the strong impression of
a verbal shrug. "In either case, Dahak would be useless to
him."
"But he expects you
to let locally-produced starships get away from you?" MacIntyre asked
skeptically.
"If," Dahak
said patiently, "this unit were, indeed, no longer fully operational,
automatic defensive fire plans would not be interested in vessels leaving the
star system."
"But you aren't
inoperative, so what would you do?"
"I would dispatch
one or more armed parasites to bio-scan range and scan their personnel. If
mutineers were detected on board them, I would have no choice but to destroy
them."
MacIntyre frowned.
"Uh, excuse me, Dahak, but wouldn't that be a rather broader
interpretation of your orders? I mean, you let the mutineers escape to the
planet because you hadn't been ordered to stop them, right?"
"That is correct,
Commander. It has occurred to me, however, that Comp Cent's original
interpretation of Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's orders, while essentially
correct, did not encompass Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's full intent.
Subsequent analysis suggests that had he known the mutineers would employ
parasites so readily distinguishable from the loyal crew's lifeboats, he would
have ordered their immediate destruction. Whether or not this speculation is
correct, the fact remains that no mutineer may be allowed to leave this star
system by any means. Allowing any mutinous personnel to escape would conflict
with Dahak's Alpha Priority orders to suppress the mutiny."
"I can see
that," MacIntyre murmured, then paused, struck by a new thought.
"Wait a minute. You say Anu's assumed you're no longer operational—"
"Incorrect,
Commander," Dahak interrupted. "I stated that I have speculated
to that effect."
"All right, so it's
speculative. But if he has, haven't you blown it? You couldn't have grabbed my
Beagle if you were inoperative, could you?"
"I could not,"
Dahak conceded, "yet he cannot be certain that I did so."
"What? Well then,
what the hell does he think happened?"
"It was my
intention to convince him that your vessel was lost due to an onboard
malfunction."
"Lost?" MacIntyre
jerked up in his couch. "What d'you mean, 'lost'?"
"Commander,"
Dahak said almost apologetically, "it was necessary. If Fleet Captain Anu
determines that Dahak is indeed functional, he may take additional
protective measures. The destruction of his enclave's present defenses by brute
force would kill seventy percent of all Terran humans; if he becomes
sufficiently alarmed to strengthen them still further the situation may well
become utterly impossible of resolution."
"I didn't ask why
you did it!" MacIntyre spat. "I asked what you meant by 'lost,'
goddamn it!"
Dahak did not answer
directly. Instead, MacIntyre suddenly heard another voice—his voice,
speaking in the clipped, emotionless tones every ex-test pilot seems to drop
into when disaster strikes.
" . . . ayday.
Mayday. Heinlein Base, this is Papa-Mike One-X-Ray. I have an explosion in
number three fuel cell. Negative function primary flight computers. I am
tumbling. Negative response attitude control. I say again. Negative response
attitude control."
"Heinlein copies,
One-X-Ray," a voice crackled back. He recognized that soft Southern
accent, he thought in a queerly detached way. Sandy Tillotson—Lieutenant
Colonel Sandra Tillotson, that was. "We have you on scope."
"Then you see what
I see, Sandy," his own voice said calmly. "I make it roughly ten
minutes to impact."
There was a brief pause,
then Tillotson's voice came back, as flat and calm as "he" was.
"Affirmative,
Colin."
"I'm gonna take a
chance and go for crash ignition," his voice said. "She's tumbling
like a mother, but if I can catch her at the right attitude—"
"Understood, Colin.
Luck."
"Thanks. Coming up
on ignition—now." There was another brief pause, and then he heard
"himself" sigh. "No joy, Sandy. Caught it wrong. Tell Sean
I—"
And then there was only
silence.
* * *
MacIntyre swallowed. He
had just heard himself die, and the experience had not been pleasant. Nor was
the realization of how completely Dahak had covered its tracks. As far as any
living human knew, Lieutenant Commander Colin MacIntyre no longer existed, for
no one would wonder what had become of him once they got to the crash site.
Somehow he never doubted there would be a crash site, but given the nature of
the "crash" he'd just listened to, it would consist of very, very
tiny bits and pieces.
"You bastard,"
he said softly.
"It was
necessary," Dahak replied unflinchingly. "If you had completed your
flight with proof of Dahak's existence, would not your superiors have
mounted an immediate expedition to explore your find?" MacIntyre gritted
his teeth and refused to answer.
"What would you
have had me do, Commander? Fleet Captain Anu could not enter this vessel using
the parasites in which he escaped to Earth, but could I know positively that
any Terra-born humans sent to explore Dahak's interior had not been
suborned by him? Recall that my own core programming would compel me to
consider that any vessel that deliberately sought entry but did not respond
with proper Fleet authorization codes was under mutinous control. Should I have
allowed a situation in which I must fire on every ship of any type that came
near? One that would also require me to destroy every enclave your people have
established on the lunar surface? You must realize as well as I that if I had
acted in any other way, Fleet Captain Anu would not merely suspect but know
that Dahak remains operational. Knowing that, must I not assume that any
effort to enter Dahak—or, indeed, any further activity on the lunar
surface of any type whatever—might be or fall under his direct control?"
MacIntyre knew Dahak was
a machine, but he recognized genuine desperation in the mellow voice and,
despite himself, felt an unwilling sympathy for the huge ship's dilemma.
He glared down at his
clenched fists, bitter anger fighting a wash of sympathetic horror. Yes, Dahak
was a machine, but it was a self-aware machine, and MacIntyre's human soul
cringed as he imagined its endless solitary confinement. For fifty-one millennia,
the stupendous ship had orbited Earth, powerful enough to wipe the planet from
the face of the universe yet forever unable to carry out its orders, caught
between conflicting directives it could not resolve. Just thinking of such a
purgatory was enough to ice his blood, but understanding didn't change his own
fate. Dahak had "killed" him. He could never go home again, and that
awareness filled him with rage.
The computer was silent,
as if allowing him time to come to grips with the knowledge that he had joined
its eternal exile, and he clenched his fists still tighter. His nails cut his
palms, and he accepted the pain as an external focus, using it to clear his
head as he fought his emotions back under control.
"All right,"
he grated finally. "So what happens now? Why couldn't you just've killed
me clean?"
"Commander,"
Dahak said softly, "without cause to assume your intent was hostile, I
could not destroy your vessel without violating Alpha Priority core
programming. But even if I could have, I would not have done so, for I have
received hypercom transmissions from unmanned surveillance stations along the
traditional Achuultani incursion routes. A new incursion has been detected, and
a Fleet alert has been transmitted."
MacIntyre's face went
white as a far more terrible horror suddenly dwarfed the shock and fury of
hearing himself "die."
"Yet I have
monitored no response, Commander," the computer said even more softly.
"Fleet Central is silent. No defensive measures have been initiated."
"No,"
MacIntyre breathed.
"Yes, Commander.
And that has activated yet another Alpha Priority command. Dahak is a
Fleet unit, aware of a threat to the existence of the Imperium, and I must
respond to it . . . but I can not respond until the mutiny is
suppressed. It is a situation that cannot be resolved by Comp Cent, yet it must
be resolved. Which is why I need you."
"What can I
do?" MacIntyre whispered hoarsely.
"It is quite
simple, Commander MacIntyre. Under Fleet Regulation Five-Three-Three,
Subsection Nine-One, Article Ten, acting command of any Fleet unit devolves
upon the senior surviving crewman. Under Fleet Regulation Three-Seven,
Subsection One-Three, any descendant of any core crewman assigned to a vessel
for a given deployment becomes a crew member for the duration of that
deployment, and Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's deployment has not been
terminated by orders from Fleet Central."
MacIntyre gurgled a
horrified denial, but Dahak continued mercilessly.
"You, Commander,
are directly descended from loyal members of Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's core
crew. You are on board Dahak. By definition, therefore, you become the
senior member of Dahak's crew, and thus—"
MacIntyre's gurgling
noises took on a note of dreadful supplication.
"—command devolves
upon you."
* * *
He argued, of course.
His sense of betrayal
vanished, for it seemed somehow petty to worry about his own fate in the face
of catastrophe on such a cosmic scale. Yet the whole idea was . . . well, it
was preposterous, even if that was a word he'd been over-using of late. He was
absolutely, totally, beyond a shadow of a doubt, utterly unqualified for the
job, and he told Dahak so.
But the old ship was
stubborn. He was, the computer argued, a trained spacecraft pilot with a
military background and a command mentality. Which, MacIntyre pointed out
acidly, was to say that he was well-qualified to paddle aboriginal canoes and
about as well-versed in FTL tactics as a Greek hoplite. But, Dahak countered,
those were merely matters of education; he had the proper mental orientation.
And even if he had not had it, all that really mattered was that he had the
rank for the job. Which, MacIntyre retorted, was merely to say that he was a
member of the human race. Except, Dahak rejoined, that he was the first
member of the human race to re-embark in Dahak, which gave him seniority
over all other Terrans—except, of course, the mutineers who, by their own
actions, had forfeited all rank and crew status.
It went on for hours,
until MacIntyre's voice was hoarse and exhaustion began to dull his desperate
determination to squirm out of the responsibility. He finally offered to accept
command long enough to turn it over to some better-qualified individual or
group, but Dahak actually sounded a bit petulant when it rejected that
suggestion. MacIntyre was the first human aboard in fifty-one thousand years;
ergo he had the seniority, he always would have the seniority, and no
substitutions were acceptable.
It really was unfair,
MacIntyre thought wearily. Dahak was a machine. It—or "he," as he'd come
to think of the computer—could go right on arguing until he keeled over
from exhaustion . . . and seemed quite prepared to do so.
MacIntyre supposed some
people would jump at the chance to command a ship that could vaporize planets—which
was undoubtedly an indication that they shouldn't be offered it—but he
didn't want it! Oh, he felt the seductive allure of power and, even more, the
temptation to cut ten or fifteen thousand years off Terran exploration of the
universe. And he was willing to admit someone had to help the old
warship. But why did it have to be him?!
He lay back, obscurely
resentful that his chair's self-adjusting surface kept him from scrunching down
to sulk properly, and felt six years old again, arguing over who got to be the
sheriff and who had to be the horse thief.
The thought made him
chuckle unwillingly, and he grinned, surprised by his own weary humor. Dahak
clearly intended to keep on arguing until he gave in, and how could he out-wait
a machine that had mounted its own lonely watch for fifty millennia? Besides,
he felt a bit ashamed even to try. If Dahak could do his duty for that
tremendous stretch of time, how could MacIntyre not accept his own
responsibility to humankind? And if he was caught in the Birkenhead
drill, he could at least try to do his best till the ship went down.
He accepted it, and, to
his surprise, it was almost easy. It scared the holy howling hell out of him,
but that was another matter. He was, after all, a spacecraft command pilot, and
the breed was, by definition, an arrogant one. MacIntyre had accepted long ago
that he'd joined the Navy and then transferred to NASA because deep inside he
had both the sneaking suspicion he was equal to any challenge and the desire to
prove it. And look where it had gotten him, he thought wryly. He'd sweated
blood to make the Prometheus Mission, only to discover that he'd anted up for a
far bigger game than he'd ever dreamed of. But the chips were on the table, and
other cliches to that effect.
"All right, Dahak,"
he sighed. "I give. I'll take the damned job."
"Thank you,
Captain," Dahak said promptly, and he shuddered.
"I said I'd take
it, but that doesn't mean I know what to do with it," he said defensively.
"I am aware of
that, Captain. My sensors indicate that you are badly in need of rest at the
moment. When you have recovered your strength, we can swear you in and begin
your education and biotechnic treatments."
"And just
what," MacIntyre demanded warily, "might biotechnic treatments
be?"
"Nothing harmful,
Captain. The bridge officer program includes sensory boosters, neural feeds for
computer interface, command authority authentication patterns, Fleet
communicator and bio-sensor implants, skeletal reinforcement, muscle and tissue
enhancement, and standard hygienic, immunization, and tissue renewal
treatments."
"Now wait a minute,
Dahak! I like myself just the way I am, thank you!"
"Captain, I make
all due allowance for inexperience and parochialism, but that statement cannot
be true. In your present condition, you could lift barely a hundred and fifty
kilos, and I would estimate your probable life span at no more than one Terran
century under optimal conditions."
"I could—"
MacIntyre paused, an arrested light in his eyes. "Dahak," he said
after a moment, "what was the life expectancy for your crewmen?"
"The average life
expectancy of Fleet personnel is five-point-seven-nine-three Terran
centuries," Dahak said calmly.
"Uh,"
MacIntyre replied incisively.
"Of course,
Captain, if you insist, I will have no choice but to forgo the biotechnic
portion of your training. I must respectfully point out, however, that should
you thereafter confront one of the mutineers, your opponent will have
approximately eight times your strength, three times your reaction speed, and a
skeletal muscular structure and circulatory system capable of absorbing on the
order of eleven times the damage your own body will accept."
MacIntyre blinked. He
was none too crazy about the word "biotechnic." It smacked of surgery
and hospital time and similar associated unpleasantnesses. But on the other
hand . . . yes, indeedy deed. On the other hand. . . .
"Oh, well,
Dahak," he said finally. "If it'll make you happy. I've been meaning
to get back into shape, anyway."
"Thank you,
Captain," Dahak said, and if there was a certain smugness in the
computer's bland reply, Acting Senior Fleet Captain Colin MacIntyre,
forty-third commanding officer of Imperial Fleet Unit Dahak, hull number
172291, chose to ignore it.
MacIntyre lowered
himself into the hot, swirling water with a groan of relief, then leaned back
against the pool's contoured lip and looked around his quarters. Well, the
captain's quarters, anyway. He supposed it made sense to make a man assigned to
a twenty-five-year deployment comfortable, but this—!
His hot tub was big
enough for at least a dozen people and designed for serious relaxation. He set
his empty glass on one of the pop-out shelves and watched the built-in auto-bar
refill it, then adjusted the water jets with his toes and allowed himself to
luxuriate as he sipped.
It was the spaciousness
that truly impressed him. The ceiling arched cathedral-high above his hot tub,
washed in soft, sourceless light. The walls—he could not for the life of him
call them "bulkheads"—gleamed with rich, hand-rubbed wood paneling,
and any proletariat-gouging billionaire would envy the art adorning the
luxurious chamber. One statue particularly fascinated him. It was a rearing,
lynx-eared unicorn, too "real" feeling to be fanciful, and MacIntyre
felt a strangely happy sort of awe at seeing the true image of the alien
foundation of one of his own world's most enduring myths.
Yet even the furnishings
were over-shadowed by the view, for the tub stood on what was effectively a
second-story balcony above an enormous atrium. The rich, moist smells of soil
and feathery, alien greenery surrounded him as soft breezes stirred fronded
branches and vivid blossoms, and the atrium roof was invisible beyond a blue sky
that might have been Earth's but for a sun that was just a shade too yellow.
And this, MacIntyre
reminded himself, was but one room of his suite. He knew rank had its
privileges, but he'd never anticipated such magnificence and space—no doubt
because he still thought of Dahak as a ship. Which it was, but on a
scale so stupendous as to render his concept of "ship" meaningless.
Yet he'd paid a price
for all this splendor, he reflected, thrashing the water with his feet like a
little boy to work some of the cramps from his calves. It seemed unfair to be
subject to things like cramps after all he'd been through in the past few
months. On the other hand, he was still adjusting to the changes Dahak had
wrought upon and within him . . . and if Dahak called them "minor"
one more time, he intended to find out if Fleet Regs provided the equivalent of
keelhauling a computer.
The life of a NASA
command pilot was not a restful thing, but Dahak gave a whole new meaning to
the word "strenuous." A much younger Colin MacIntyre had thought Hell
Week at Annapolis was bad, but then he'd gone on to Pensacola and known
flight school was worst of all . . . until the competitive eliminations and
training schedule of the Prometheus Mission. But all of that had proved the
merest setting-up exercise for his training program as Dahak's
commander.
Nor was the strain
decreased by the inevitable stumbling blocks. Dahak was a machine, when all was
said, designed toward an end and shaped by his design. He was also, by dint of
sheer length of existence and depth of knowledge, far more cosmopolitan (in the
truest possible sense) than his "captain," but he was still a
machine.
It gave him a rather
different perspective, and that could produce interesting results. For
instance, it was axiomatic to Dahak that the Fourth Imperium was the preeminent
font of all true authority, automatically superceding such primitive, ephemeral
institutions as the United States of America.
But MacIntyre saw things
a bit differently, and Dahak had been taken aback by his stubborn refusal to
swear any oath that might conflict with his existing one as a naval officer in
the service of the said United States.
In the end, he'd also
seemed grudgingly pleased, as if it confirmed that MacIntyre was a man of
honor, but that hadn't kept him from setting out to change his mind. He'd
pointed out that humanity's duty to the Fourth Imperium predated its duty to
any purely terrestrial authority—that the United States was, in effect, no more
than a temporary governing body set up upon a desert island to regulate the
affairs of a mere portion of a shipwrecked crew. He had waxed eloquent, almost
poetic, but in vain; MacIntyre remained adamant.
They hammered out a
compromise eventually, though Dahak accepted it only grudgingly. After his
experience with the conflict between his own "Alpha Priority" orders,
he was distinctly unhappy to have his new captain complete his oath " . .
. insofar as obedience to Fleet Central and the Fourth Imperium requires no
action or inaction harmful to the United States of America." Still, if
those were the only terms on which the ancient warship could get itself a
captain, Dahak would accept them, albeit grumpily.
Yet it was only fair for
Dahak to face a few surprises of his own. Though MacIntyre had recognized
(however dimly) and dreaded the responsibility he'd been asked to assume, he
hadn't considered certain other aspects of what he was letting himself in for.
Which was probably just as well, since he would have refused point-blank if he had
considered them.
Like "biotechnic
enhancement." The term had bothered him from the start, for as a spacer
he'd already endured more than his share of medical guinea pigdom, but the
thought of an extended lifespan and enhanced strength had been seductive.
Unfortunately, his quaint, twenty-first-century notions of what the Fourth
Imperium's medical science could do had proven as outmoded as his idea of what
a "ship" was.
His anxiety had become
acute when he discovered he was expected to submit to a scalpel-wielding
computer, especially after he found out just how radical the
"harmless" process was. In effect, Dahak intended to take him apart
for reassembly into a new, improved model that incorporated all the advantages
of modern technology, and something deep inside had turned nearly hysterical at
the notion of becoming, for all intents and purposes, a cyborg. It was as if he
feared Doctor Jekyll might emerge as Mister Hyde, and he'd resisted with all
the doggedness of sheer, howling terror, but Dahak had been patient. In fact,
he'd been so elaborately patient he made MacIntyre feel like a bushman refusing
to let the missionary capture his soul in his magic box.
That had been the
turning point, he thought now—the point at which he'd truly begun to accept
what was happening . . . and what his own part had to be. For he'd yielded to
Dahak's ministrations, though it had taken all his will power even after Dahak
pointed out that he knew far more about human physiology than any Terran
medical team and was far, far less likely to make a mistake.
MacIntyre had known all
that, intellectually, yet he'd felt intensely anxious as he surrendered to the
anesthesia, and he'd looked forward rather gloomily to a lengthy stay in bed.
He'd been wrong about that part, for he was up and about again after mere days,
diving head-first into a physical training program he'd discovered he needed
surprisingly badly.
Yet he'd come close to
never emerging at all, and that memory was still enough to break a cold sweat
upon his brow. Not that he should have had any problems—or, at least, not such
severe ones—if he'd thought things through. But he'd neither thought them
through nor followed the implications of Dahak's proposed changes to their
logical conclusions, and the final results had been almost more appalling than
delightful.
When he'd first reopened
his eyes, his vision had seemed preternaturally keen, as if he could identify
individual dust motes across a tennis court. And he very nearly could, for one
of Dahak's simpler alterations permitted him to adjust the focal length of his
eyes, not to mention extending his visual range into both the infrared and
ultraviolet ranges.
Then there was the
"skeletal muscular enhancement." He'd been primitive enough to feel
an atavistic shiver at the thought that his bones would be reinforced with the
same synthetic alloy from which Dahak was built, but the chill had
become raw terror when he encountered the reality of the many "minor"
changes the ship had wrought. His muscles now served primarily as actuators for
micron-thin sheaths of synthetic tissue tougher than his Beagle and powerful
enough to stress his new skeleton to its limit, and his circulatory and
respiratory systems had undergone similar transformations. Even his skin had
been altered, for it must become tough enough to endure the demands his new
strength placed upon it. Yet for all that, his sense of touch—indeed, all his
perceptions—had been boosted to excruciating sensitivity.
And all those
improvements together had been too much. Dahak had crammed the changes at him
too quickly, without any suspicion he was doing so, for neither the computer
nor the human had realized the enormous gap between the things they took for
granted.
For Dahak, the changes
that terrified MacIntyre truly were "minor," routine medical
treatments, no more than the Fourth Imperium's equivalent of a new recruit's
basic equipment. And because they were so routine—and, perhaps, because for all
the power of his intellect Dahak was a machine, inherently susceptible to
upgrading and with no experiential referent for "natural limitations"—he
had never considered the enormous impact they would have on MacIntyre's concept
of himself.
It had been his own
fault, too, MacIntyre reflected, leaning forward to massage the persistent
cramp in his right calf. He'd been too impressed by Dahak's enormous
"lifespan" and his starkly incredible depth of knowledge to recognize
his limits. Dahak had analyzed and pondered for fifty millennia. He could
predict with frightening accuracy what groups of humans would do and had
a grasp of the flow of history and a patience and inflexible determination that
were, quite literally, inhuman, but for all that, he was a creature born of the
purest of pure intellects.
He himself had warned
MacIntyre that "Comp Cent" was sadly lacking in imagination, but the
very extent of his apparent humanism had fooled the human. MacIntyre had been
prepared to be led by the hand by the near-god who had kidnaped him. Aware of
his own ignorance, frightened by the responsibility thrust upon him, he had
been almost eager to accept the role of the figurehead authority Dahak needed
to break the logjam of his conflicting imperatives, and as part of his
acceptance he had assumed Dahak would make allowances in what would be demanded
of him.
Well, Dahak had tried to
make allowances, but he'd failed, and his failure had shaken MacIntyre into a
radical re-evaluation of their relationship.
When MacIntyre awoke
after his surgery, he had gone mad in the sheer horror of the intensity with
which his environment beat in upon him. His enhanced sense of smell was capable
of separating scents with the acuity and precision of a good chemistry lab. His
modified eyes could track individual dust motes and even choose which part of
the spectrum they would use to see them. He could snap a baseball bat
barehanded or pick up a sixteen-inch shell and carry it away and subsist for up
to five hours on the oxygen reservoir in his abdomen. Tissue renewal,
techniques to scavenge waste products from his blood, surgically-implanted
communicators, direct neural links to Dahak and any secondary computer the
starship or any of its parasites carried. . . .
The powers of a god had
been given to him, but he hadn't realized he was about to inherit godhood, and
he'd had absolutely no idea how to control his new abilities. He
couldn't stop seeing and hearing and feeling with a terrible vibrancy
and brilliance. He couldn't restrain his new strength, for he had never
required the delicacy of touch his enhanced muscles demanded. And as the uproar
and terror of the quiet sickbay had crashed in upon him so that he'd flailed
his mighty limbs in berserk, uncomprehending horror, smashing sickbay fixtures
like matchwood, Dahak had recognized his distress . . . and made it
incomparably worse by activating his neural linkages in an effort to by-pass his
intensity-hashed physical senses.
MacIntyre wasn't certain
he would have snapped if the computer hadn't recognized his atavistic panic for
what it was so quickly, but it had been a very near thing when those alien
fingers wove gently into the texture of his shuddering brain.
Yet if Dahak had lacked
the imagination to project the consequences, he was a very fast learner, and
his memory banks contained a vast amount of information on trauma. He had
withdrawn from MacIntyre's consciousness and used the sickbay's emergency
medical over-rides to damp his sensory channels and draw him back from the
quivering brink of insanity, then combined sedative drugs and soothing sonic
therapy to keep him there.
Dahak had driven his
terror back without clouding his intellect, and then—excruciatingly slowly to
his tormented senses and yet with dazzling rapidity by the standards of the
universe—had helped him come to grips with the radically changed environment of
his own body. The horror of the neural implants had faded. Dahak was no longer
a terrifying alien presence whispering in his brain; he was a friend and
mentor, teaching him to adjust and control his newfound abilities until he was
their master and not their victim.
But for all Dahak's
speed and adaptability, it had been a near thing, and they both knew it. The
experience had made Dahak a bit more cautious, but, even more importantly, it
had taught MacIntyre that Dahak had limits. He could not assume the machine
always knew what it was doing or rely upon it to save him from the consequences
of his own folly. The lesson had stuck, and when he emerged from his trauma he
discovered that he was the captain, willing to be advised and counseled
by his inorganic henchman and crew but starkly aware that his life and fate
were as much in his own hands as they had ever been.
It was a frightening
thought, but Dahak had been right; MacIntyre had a command mentality. He
preferred the possibility of sending himself to hell to the possibility of
being condemned to heaven by another, which might not speak well for his
humility but meant he could survive—so far, at least—what Dahak demanded of
him. He might castigate the computer as a harsh taskmaster, but he knew he was
driving himself at least as hard and as fast as Dahak might have.
He sighed again,
slumping back in the water as the painful cramp subsided at last. Thank God!
Cramps had been bad enough when only his own muscles were involved, but they
were pure, distilled hell now. And it seemed a bit unfair his magic muscles
could not simply spring full blown from Dahak's brow, as it were. The computer
had never warned him they would require exercise just as implacably as the
muscle tissues nature had intended him to have, and he felt vaguely cheated by
the discovery. Relieved, but cheated.
Of course, the mutineers
would feel cheated if they knew everything he'd gotten, for Dahak had spent the
last few centuries making "minor" improvements to the standard Fleet
implants. MacIntyre suspected the computer had seen it as little more than a way
to pass the time, but the results were formidable. He'd started out with a
bridge officer's implants, which were already far more sophisticated than the
standard Fleet biotechnics, but Dahak had tinkered with almost all of them. He
was not only much stronger and tougher, and marginally faster, than any
mutineer could possibly be, but the range and acuity of his electronic and
enhanced physical senses were two or three hundred percent better. He knew they
were, for Dahak had demonstrated by stepping his own implants' capabilities
down to match those of the mutineers.
He closed his eyes and
relaxed, smiling faintly as his body half-floated. He'd assumed all those
modifications would increase his weight vastly, yet they hadn't. His body density
had gone up dramatically, but the Fourth Imperium's synthetics were
unbelievably light for their strength. His implants had added no more than
fifteen kilos—and he'd sweated off at least that much fat in return, he thought
wryly.
"Dahak," he
said without opening his eyes.
"Yes, Colin?"
MacIntyre's smile
deepened at the form of address. That was another thing Dahak had resisted, but
MacIntyre was damned if he was going to be called "Captain" and
"Sir" every time his solitary subordinate spoke to him, even if he
did command a starship a quarter the size of his homeworld.
"What's the status
on the search mission?"
"They have
recovered many fragments from the crash site, including the serial number
plates we detached from your craft. Colonel Tillotson remains dissatisfied by
the absence of any organic remains, but General Yakolev has decided to
terminate operations."
"Good,"
MacIntyre grunted, and wondered if he meant it. The Joint Command crash
investigation had dragged on longer than expected, and he was touched by
Sandy's determination to find "him," but he thought he was truly
relieved it was over. It was a bit frightening, like the snipping of his last
umbilical, but it had to happen if he and Dahak were to have a chance of
success.
"Any sign of a
reaction from Anu's people?"
"None," Dahak
replied. There was a brief pause, and then the computer went on just a bit
plaintively. "Colin, you could acquire data much more rapidly if you would
simply rely upon your neural interface."
"Humor me,"
MacIntyre said, opening one eye and watching clouds drift across his atrium's
projected sky. "And don't tell me your other crews used their
implants all the time, either, because I don't believe it."
"No," Dahak
admitted, "but they made much greater use of them than you do.
Vocalization is often necessary for deliberate cognitive manipulation of data,
Colin—human thought processes are, after all, inextricably bound up in and
focused by syntax and semantics—yet it can be a cumbersome process, and it is
not an efficient way to acquire data."
"Dahak,"
MacIntyre said patiently, "you could dump your whole damn memory core into
my brain through this implant—"
"Incorrect, Colin.
The capacity of your brain is severely limited. I calculate that no more
than—"
"Shut up,"
Colin said with a reluctant twinkle. If Dahak's long sojourn in Earth orbit
hadn't made him truly human, it had come close in many ways. He rather doubted
Comp Cent's designers had meant Dahak to have a sense of humor.
"Yes, Colin,"
Dahak said so meekly that MacIntyre knew the computer was indulging in the
electronic equivalent of silent laughter.
"Thank you. Now,
what I meant is that you can pour information into my brain with a funnel, but
that doesn't make it mine. It's like a . . . an encyclopedia. It's a
reference source to look things up in, not something that pops into my mind
when I need it. Besides, it tickles."
"Human brain tissue
is not susceptible to physical sensation, Colin," Dahak said rather
primly.
"I speak
symbolically," MacIntyre replied, pushing a wave across his tub and
wiggling his toes. "Consider it a psychosomatic manifestation."
"I do not
understand psychosomatic phenomena," Dahak reminded him.
"Then just take my
word for it. I'm sure I'll get used to it, but until I do, I'll go right on
asking questions. Rank, after all, hath its privileges."
"I suppose you
think that concept is unique to your own culture."
"You suppose
wrongly. Unless I miss my guess, it's endemic to the human condition, wherever
the humans came from."
"That has been my
own observation."
"You cannot imagine
how much that reassures me, oh Dahak."
"Of course I
cannot. Many things humans find reassuring defy logical analysis."
"True, true."
MacIntyre consulted the ship's chronometer through his implant and sighed
resignedly. His rest period was about over, and it was time for his next
session with the fire control simulator. After that, he was due on the hand
weapon range, followed by a few relaxing hours acquiring the rudiments of
supralight astrogation and ending with two hours working out against one of Dahak's
hand-to-hand combat training remotes. If rank had its privileges, it also had
its obligations. Now there was a profound thought.
He climbed out and
wrapped himself in a thick towel. He could have asked Dahak to dry him with a
swirl of warmed air. For that matter, his new internal equipment could have
built a repellent force field on the surface of his skin to shed water like a
duck, but he enjoyed the towel's soft sensuality, and he luxuriated shamelessly
in it as he padded off to his bedroom to dress.
"Back to the salt
mines, Dahak," he sighed aloud.
"Yes, Colin,"
the computer said obediently.
"Anything more on
the NASA link, Dahak?"
MacIntyre reclined in
the captain's couch in Command One. He was the same lean, rangy, pleasantly
homely young man he'd always been—outwardly, at least—but he wore the
midnight-blue of Battle Fleet, the booted feet propped upon his console were
encased in chagor-hide leather, and there was a deeper, harder glint of
purpose in his innocent green eyes.
"Negative, Colin. I
have examined the biographies of all project heads associated with the
gravitonic survey program, and all appear to be Terra-born. It is possible the
linkage was established earlier—during the college careers of one or more of
the researchers, perhaps—yet logic dictates direct mutineer involvement in the
single portion of the Prometheus program that is so far in advance of all other
components."
"Damn."
MacIntyre pulled at the tip of his nose and frowned. "If we can't identify
someone where we know there's a link, we'll just have to avoid any
official involvement. Jesus, that's going to make it tougher!" He sighed.
"Either way, I've got to get started—and you know it as well as I
do."
"I would still
prefer to extend your training time, Colin," Dahak replied, but he sounded
so resigned MacIntyre grinned wryly. While it would be too much ever to call
Dahak irresolute, there were things he hesitated to face, and foremost among
them was the prospect of permitting his fledgling commander to leave the nest.
Particularly when he could not communicate with him once MacIntyre returned to
Earth. It could not be otherwise; the mutineers could scarcely fail to detect
an active Fleet fold-space link to the moon.
The fact was that Dahak
was fiercely protective, and MacIntyre wondered if that stemmed from his core
programming or his long isolation. The ship finally had a captain again—did the
thought of losing him frighten the computer?
Now there was a thought.
Could the ancient computer feel fear? MacIntyre didn't know and
preferred to think of Dahak as fearless, but there was no doubt Dahak had at
least an intellectual appreciation of what fear was.
MacIntyre looked about
him. The "viewscreen" of his first visit had vanished, and his
console seemed to float unshielded in the depths of space. Stars burned about
him, their unwinking, merciless points of light vanishing into the silent
depths of eternity, and the blue-white planet of his birth turned slowly
beneath him. The illusion was terrifyingly perfect, and he had a pretty shrewd
notion how he would have reacted if Dahak had casually invited him to step out
into it on their first meeting.
It was as if Dahak had
realized external technology might frighten him without quite grasping what
would happen when that same technology was inside him. Or had the computer
simply assumed that, like himself, MacIntyre would understand all as soon as
things had been explained a single time?
Whatever, Dahak had been
cautious that first day. Even the vehicle that he'd provided had been part of
it. The double-ended bullet was a ground car, and the computer had actually
disabled part of its propulsive system so that his "guest" could feel
the acceleration he expected.
In fact, the ground car
had been unnecessary, and MacIntyre had sampled the normal operation of the
transit shafts now, but not before Dahak had found time to explain them. Which
was just as well, for while they were undoubtedly efficient, MacIntyre had
still turned seven different shades of green the first time he'd gone hurtling
through the huge tunnels at thousands of kilometers per hour, subjective sense
of movement or not. Even now, after months of practice, he couldn't entirely
rid himself of the notion that he was falling to his doom whenever he consigned
himself to the gravitonic mercies of the system.
MacIntyre shook himself
sternly. He was woolgathering again, and he knew why. He wanted to think about
anything but the task that faced him.
"I know you'd like
more training time," he said, "but we've had six months, and they're
ready to schedule Vlad Chernikov for another proctoscope mission. You know we
can't grab off another Beagle without tipping Anu off."
There was a moment of
silence, a pause that was one of Dahak's human mannerisms MacIntyre most
appreciated. It was a bit difficult to keep his own thoughts focused when the
other half of the conversation "thought" and responded virtually
instantaneously.
"Very well,"
Dahak said at last. "I respectfully submit, however, that your 'plan'
consists solely of half-formed, ill-conceived generalities."
"So? You've had a
few dozen millennia to think about it—can you come up with a better
idea?"
"Unfair. You are
the captain, and command decisions are your function, not mine."
"Then shut up and
soldier." MacIntyre spoke firmly, but he smiled.
"Very well,"
Dahak repeated.
"Good. Is the
suppressor ready?"
"Affirmative. My
remotes have placed it in your cutter." There was another pause, and MacIntyre
closed his eyes. Dahak, he thought, could give a Missouri mule stubborn
lessons. "I still believe you would be better advised to use one of the
larger—and armed—parasites, however."
"Dahak,"
MacIntyre said patiently, "there are at least five thousand mutineers,
right? With eight eighty-thousand-ton sublight battleships?"
"Correct.
However—"
"Can it! I'm
pontificating, and I'm the captain. They also have a few heavy cruisers,
armored combat vehicles, trans-atmospheric fighters, and the personnel to man
them—not to mention their personal combat armor and weapons—plus the
ability to jam your downlinks to any remotes you send down, right?"
"Yes, Colin,"
Dahak sighed.
"Then this is a
time for finesse and sneakiness, not brute strength. I have to get the suppressor
inside their enclave perimeter and let you take out their defensive shield from
here or we're never going to get at them."
"But to do so you
will require admittance codes and the locations of access points, which you can
obtain only from the mutineers themselves."
"I know."
MacIntyre recrossed his ankles and frowned, pulling harder on his nose, but the
unpalatable truth remained. There was no doubt the mutineers had penetrated
most major governments—they must have done so, given the way they had manipulated
Terran geopolitics over the last two centuries.
Which meant any approach
to Terran authorities was out of the question. It was a pity Dahak couldn't
carry out bio-scans at this range; that, at least, would tell them who was an
actual mutineer. But even that couldn't have revealed which Terra-born humans
might have been suborned, possibly without ever knowing who had suborned them
or even that they had been suborned.
So the only option was
the one both he and Dahak dreaded. Somehow, he had to gain access to the
mutineers' base and deactivate its shield. It was a daunting prospect, but once
he'd taken out the defenses that held Dahak's weapons at bay, the
mutineers would have no choice but to surrender or die, and MacIntyre didn't
much care which they chose as long as they decided quickly.
The first of the
automatic scanner stations had gone off the air, destroyed by the outriders of
the Achuultani. Despite the relatively low speed of the Achuultani ships,
humanity had little more than two and a half years before they reached Sol . .
. and for him to find a way to stop them.
That was the real reason
he wanted to find the link between Anu and NASA. If he could get his hands on
just one mutineer—just one—then he could get the information he and Dahak
needed one way or the other, he thought grimly. Yet how did he take that first
step? He still didn't know, but he did know he couldn't do it from here. And he
intended to admit to Dahak neither that he meant to play things entirely by ear
nor who his single Terran ally would be lest the computer stage a mutiny of its
own and refuse to let him off the ship!
"Well," he
said with forced cheeriness, "I'd better get going." He dropped his
feet to the invisible deck and stood, feeling as if the universe were drifting
beneath his bootsoles.
"Very well,
Colin," Dahak said softly, and the first hatch slid open, spilling bright
light like a huge rift among the stars. MacIntyre squared his shoulders and
walked into it.
"Good hunting,
Captain," the computer murmured.
"I'll nail 'em to
the wall," MacIntyre said confidently, and wished he could just convince
himself of that.
* * *
A sliver of midnight
settled silently amid the night-struck mountains of Colorado. It moved with less
noise than the whispering breeze, showing no lights, nor did it register on any
radar screen. Indeed, the stealth field about it transformed it into more of a
velvety-black, radiation-absorbing absence than a visible object, for
not even starlight reflected from it.
It drifted lower,
sliding into an unnamed alpine meadow between Cripple Creek and Pikes Peak, and
Colin MacIntyre watched the light-stained clouds glow above Colorado Springs to
the east as the cutter extended its landing legs and grounded with a soft
whine.
He sat in his command
chair for a moment, studying the miniature duplicate of Command One's imaging
system fed by the passive scanners. He examined the night carefully for long,
long minutes, and his emotions puzzled him.
There was a deep,
inarticulate relief at touching once more the soil of home, but it was overlaid
by other, less readily understood feelings. A sense of the alien. An awareness
of the peril that awaited him, yet more than that, as if the last six months
had changed him even more than he had thought.
He was no longer a
citizen of Earth, he thought sadly. His horizons had been broadened. Whether he
liked it or not, he had become an emigré, yet that bittersweet realization
actually made him love his homeworld even more. He was a stranger, but Earth
was his source, the home of which he would always dream, and its remembered
beauty would always be purer and more lovely than its reality.
He shook himself out of
his musings. The night beyond the cutter's hull was silent, filled only with
life that ran on four feet or flew, and he could not justify remaining aboard.
He switched off the
display and interior lights and bent to free the suppresser webbed to the deck
behind his command seat. It was not a huge device in light of what it could do,
but it was heavy. He might have included a small anti-grav generator, but he
hadn't dared to. Inactive, the suppresser was simply an inert, apparently solid
block of metal and plastic, its webs of molecular circuitry undetectable even
by the mutineers. An active anti-grav was another matter, and the mere fact of
its detection would spell the doom of his mission. Besides, the suppressor
weighed less than three hundred kilos.
He slipped his arms
through the straps and adjusted it on his back like the knapsack it had been
camouflaged to resemble, then opened the hatch and stepped down to the grassy
earth. Night smells tickled his nostrils, and the darkness turned
noonday-bright as he adjusted his vision to enhanced imaging.
He backed away from the
cutter, and its hatch licked obediently shut as he concentrated on the commands
flowing over his neural feed. The cutter's computers were moronic shadows of
Dahak, and it was necessary to phrase instructions carefully. The landing legs
retracted, the cutter hovered silently for an instant, and then it faded
equally silently into the heavens, visible only as a solid blot that occluded
occasional stars.
MacIntyre watched it go,
then turned away and consulted his built-in inertial guidance system. The
terrain looked rough to his enhanced eyes, but not rugged enough to
inconvenience him. He hooked his thumbs into the knapsack straps and set out,
moving like a bit of the blackness brought to life.
* * *
It took him an hour to
top out on a ridge with a direct view of Colorado Springs, and he paused. Not
because he needed a rest, but because he wanted to study the glowing lights
spread out below him.
The mushrooming space
effort had transformed Colorado Springs over the past forty years. Venerable
old Goddard Center still guided and controlled NASA's unmanned deep-system
probes and handled a lot of experimental work, but Goddard was too small and
long in the tooth to keep pace with the bustling activity in near-Earth space.
Just the construction activity around the Lagrange Point habitats would have
required the big, new facilities, like the Russians' Klyuchevskaya Station,
ConEurope's Werner von Braun Space Control, or the Canadian-American Shepard
Space Center at Colorado Springs.
The city had become the
nation's number three growth area, ballooning out to envelope the old military
installations before surging on into the mountains beyond, and the gargantuan
sprawl of Shepard Center—centered on one-time Peterson Air Force Base—gleamed
to the east, seething with activity despite the late hour. Shepard was
primarily a control center, without the hectic heavy-lift launches that
streaked day and night skies over bases like Kennedy, Vandenburg, and Corpus
Christi, but he could see the landing lights of a Valkyrie personnel shuttle
sweeping in for a landing and another taxiing to a launch area, heavy with
booster pods. The view was silent with distance, but memory and imagination
supplied the noises and the bustle, the frenetic effort that sometimes
threatened to reduce the wonder of space to a grinding routine.
He opened the binocular
case hanging from his neck. There were limits even to his magic vision, but the
device he raised to his eyes was as different from a standard pair of
electronic binoculars as those were from an eighteenth-century spyglass, and
the distant space center was suddenly at arm's length.
He watched the airborne
Valkyrie flare out on final approach, its variable sweep wings fully forward.
He could almost hear the whine of the spoilers, the sudden snarl of the
reversed thrusters, and it was odd how exciting and powerful it all still
seemed. The two-hundred-ton bird moved with strong, purposeful grace, and he
saw it through two sets of eyes. One remembered his own experiences, barely six
months in the past, when that sleek shape had seemed an expression of the very
frontier of human knowledge; the other had seen Dahak and recognized the
quaint, primitive inefficiency of the design.
He sighed and moved his
viewpoint over the sprawling installation, zooming in to examine details that
caught his eye. He sat motionless for long, long minutes, absorbing the
familiarity of his eventual objective and wondering.
He was a bit surprised
by how normal it all looked, but only briefly. He was aware of how
monumentally the universe had been changed, but the thousands of people
hustling about Shepard were not. Yet there was a hesitance in him, a
disinclination to plunge back into intercourse with his own kind. He'd felt the
same sensation before after extended missions, but now it was far stronger.
He made a wry face and
lowered the binoculars, wondering what he'd expected to see through them. The
link he sought was hardly likely to stand on top of White Tower or McNair
Center and wave a lighted placard at him, for God's sake! But deep inside, he
knew he'd been looking for some sign that he was still part of them. That those
hurrying, scurrying people were still his when all was said. But he wouldn't
see that sign, because they no longer truly were. They were his people,
but not his kind, and the distinction twisted him with another stab of
that bittersweet regret.
He put away the
binoculars, then hitched up the waist of the blue jeans Dahak had provided.
Uncaring stars twinkled down with detached disinterest, and he shivered as wind
drove sea-like waves across the grass and he thought of the deadly menace
sweeping closer beyond those distant points of light. His new body scarcely
felt the cold mountain air, but the chill within was something else.
This world, that
starscape, were no longer his. Perhaps it was always that way? Perhaps someone
always had to give up the things he knew and loved to save them for others?
Philosophy had never
been Colin MacIntyre's strong suit, but he knew he would risk anything, lose
anything to save the world he had lost. It was a moment of balance, of seeing
himself for what he was and the mutineers for what they were: a
hindrance. A barrier blocking his single hope of protecting his home.
He shook himself,
conscious of a vast sense of impatience. There was an obstacle to be removed,
and he was suddenly eager to be about it.
He started hiking once
more. It was forty kilometers to his destination, and he wanted to be there by
dawn. He needed an ally, and there was one person he could trust—or, if he
could not, there was no one in the universe he could—and he wondered how Sean
would react when his only brother returned from the dead?
Dawn bled in the east,
and the morning wind was cold as the sandy-haired hiker paused by the mailbox.
He studied the small house carefully, with more than human senses, for it was
always possible Anu and his mutineers had not, in fact, bought the official
verdict on the late Colin MacIntyre.
The morning light
strengthened, turning the cobalt sky pewter and rose-blush blue, and he
detected absolutely nothing out of the ordinary. His super-sensitive ears
recognized the distant thunder of the Denver–Colorado Springs magtrain as it
tore through the dawn. Somewhere to the west a long-haul GEV with an
off-balance skirt fan whined down the highway. The rattle and clink of glass
counter-pointed the hum of a milk truck's electric motor and birds spoke
softly, but every sound was as it should have been, without menace or threat.
Devices within his body
sampled far more esoteric data-electronic, thermal, gravitonic—and found
nothing. It was possible Anu's henchmen had contrived some observation system
even he couldn't detect, but only remotely.
He shook himself. He was
wasting time, trying to postpone the inevitable.
He adjusted his
"knapsack" and walked briskly up the drive, listening to the scrunch
of gravel underfoot. Sean's ancient four-wheel-drive Cadillac Bushmaster was in
the carport, even more scratched and dinged than the last time he'd seen it,
and he shook his head with an indulgent, off-center smile. Sean would go on
paying the emission taxes on his old-fashioned, gasoline-burning hulk until it
literally fell apart under him one day. Colin had opted for the glitz, glitter,
and excitement of technology's cutting edge while Sean had chosen the Forestry
Service and the preservation of his environment, but it was Sean who clung to
his pollution-producing old Caddy like death.
His boots fell crisp and
clean in the still morning on the flagged walk, and he opened the screen door
onto the enclosed front porch and stepped up into it. He felt his pulse race
slightly and automatically adjusted his adrenalin level, then reached out and,
very deliberately, pressed the doorbell.
The soft chimes echoed through
the house, and he waited, letting his enhanced hearing chart events. He heard
the soft thud as Sean's bare feet hit the floor and the rustle of cloth as he
dragged on a pair of pants. Then he heard him padding down the hall, grumbling
under his breath at being disturbed at such an ungodly hour. The latch rattled,
and then the door swung open.
"Yes?" his
brother's deep voice was as sleepy as his eyes. "What can I—"
Sean MacIntyre froze in
mid-word, and the rags of sleep vanished from his sky-blue eyes. The stubble of
his red beard stood out boldly as his tanned face paled, and he grabbed the
edge of the door frame.
"Morning,
Sean," Colin said softly, a glint of humor mingling with the sudden
prickling of his own eyes. "Long time no see."
* * *
Sean MacIntyre sat in
his painfully neat bachelor's kitchen, hugging a mug in both hands, and glanced
again at the refrigerator Colin had carted across the kitchen to substantiate
his claims. Echoes of disbelief still shadowed his eyes, and he looked a bit
embarrassed over the bear hug he had bestowed upon the brother he had believed
dead, but he was coming back nicely-helped, no doubt, by the hefty shot of
brandy in his coffee.
"Christ on a
Harley, Colin," he said finally, his voice deceptively mild. "That
has to be the craziest story anyone ever tried to sell me. You're damned lucky
you came back from the dead to tell it, or I still wouldn't believe it!
Even if you have turned into a one-man moving company."
"You wouldn't
believe it?! How d'you think I feel about it?"
"There's
that," Sean agreed, smiling at last. "There's that."
Colin felt himself relax
as he saw that slow smile. It was the way his big brother had always smiled
when things got a bit tight, and he felt his lips twitch as he remembered the
time Sean had pulled a trio of much older boys off of him. Colin had, perhaps,
been unwise to challenge their adolescent cruelty so openly, but he and Sean
had ended up thrashing all three of them. Throughout his boyhood, Colin had
looked for that smile when he was in trouble, knowing things couldn't be all that
bad with Sean there to bail him out.
"Well," Sean
said finally, setting down his empty mug, "you always were a scrapper. If
this Dahak of yours had to pick somebody, he made a good choice."
"Right. Sure,"
Colin snorted.
"No, I mean
it." Sean doodled on the tabletop with a fingertip. "Look at you. How
many people would still be rational—well, as rational as you've ever been—after
what you've been through?"
"Spare my
blushes," Colin growled, and Sean laughed. Then he sobered.
"All right,"
he said more seriously. "I'm glad you're still alive—" their eyes
met, warm with an affection they had seldom had to express "—but I don't
imagine you dropped by just to let me know."
"You're
right," Colin said. He propped his elbows on the table and leaned forward.
"I need help, and you're the one person I can trust."
"I can see that,
Colin, and I'll do whatever I can—you know that—but I'm a ranger, not an
astronaut. How can I help you find this link of yours?"
"I don't know that
you can," Colin admitted, "but there are drawbacks to being dead. All
of my ID is useless, my accounts are locked—I couldn't even check into a motel
without using bogus identification. In fact—"
"Wait a
minute," Sean interrupted. "I can see where you'd need a base of
operations, but couldn't this Dahak just whip up any documentation you
need?"
"Sure, but it
wouldn't help for what I really need to do. Normally, Dahak can get in and out
of any Terran computer like a thief, Sean, but he's cut all his com links now
that I'm down here. They're all stealthed, but we can't risk anything that
might tip off the mutineers now. Besides, he can't do much with human minds,
and you recognized me as soon as you got the sleep out of your eyes—do
you think the security people at Shepard wouldn't?"
"That's what you
get for being a glamour-ass astronaut. Or not resorting to a little plastic
surgery." Sean studied his brother thoughtfully. "Would've been a
wonderful chance to improve—extensively—on nature, too."
"Very funny.
Unfortunately, neither Dahak nor I considered it before he tinkered with my
gizzards. Even if we had used cosmetic surgery, the last thing I need is
to try waltzing my biotechnics past Shepard's security!"
"What big teeth you
have," Sean murmured with a grin.
"Ha, ha,"
Colin said blightingly. Then his face turned more serious. "Wait till you
hear what I need before you get too smartass, Sean."
Sean MacIntyre sat back
at the sudden somberness of Colin's voice. His brother's eyes were as serious
as his voice, filled with a determination Sean had never seen in them, and he
realized that Colin had changed more than simply physically. There was a new
edge to him, a . . . ruthlessness. The gung-ho jet-jockey hot-dog Sean had
loved for so many years had found a cause.
No, that wasn't fair;
Colin had always had a cause, but it had been a searching, questing cause. One
that burned to push back boundaries, to go further and faster than anyone yet
had, yet held a formlessness, a willingness to go wherever the wind blew and
open whatever frontier offered. This one was concentrated and intense, almost
desperate, waking a focused determination to use the tremendous strength Sean
had always known lay fallow within him. For all his achievements, his brother
had never truly been challenged. Not like this. Colin had become a driven man,
and Sean wondered if, in the process, he might not have found the purpose for
which he had been born. . . .
"All right,"
he said softly. "Tell me."
"I wish I didn't
have to ask this of you," Colin said, anxiety tightening his voice,
"but I do. Have you collected my effects from Shepard yet?"
Sean was taken briefly
aback by the apparent change of subject, then shook his head. "NASA sent
me a box of your stuff, but I didn't collect anything."
"Then I want you
to," Colin said, withdrawing a pen from his shirt pocket. "There're
some personal files in my office computer in White Tower—I doubt anyone even
bothered to check them, but we can arrange for you to 'find' a note about them
among my papers and Major Simmons will let you through to White for Chris
Yamaguchi to pull them for you."
"Well, sure,"
Sean said. "But why do you need them?"
"I don't. What I
need is to get you inside White Tower with this." He extended the pen.
Sean took it with a baffled air, and Colin smiled unhappily.
"That's not exactly
what it looks like, Sean. You can write with it, but it's actually a relay for
my own sensors. With that in your pocket, I can carry out a full-spectrum scan
of your surroundings. And if you take the L Block elevators, you'll pass right
through Geo Sciences on your way upstairs."
"Oh ho!" Sean
said softly. "In other words, it'll get you in by proxy?"
"Exactly. If Dahak
is right—and he usually is—somebody in Geo Sciences is in cahoots with the
mutineers. We think they're all Terra-born, but whoever it is may have a few
items of Imperial technology in or near his work area."
"How likely is
that?"
"I wish I
knew," Colin admitted. "Still, if I were a mutineer, I'd be mighty
tempted to give my buddies a leg up if they need it. There're a lot of fairly
small gadgets that could help enormously—test gear, micro-tools,
mini-computers, maybe even a com link to check in if they hit a glitch."
"Com link?"
"The Imperium
hasn't used radio in a long, long time. Give your boy a fold-space link, and
you've got totally secure communications, unless somebody physically overhears
a conversation, of course."
"I can see that,
but do you really think they're going to leave stuff like that just lying
around?"
"Why not? Oh,
they'll try to keep anything really bizarre under wraps—I mean, the place is
crawling with scientists—but who's going to suspect? Nobody on the planet knows
any more about what's really going on than I did before Dahak grabbed me,
right?"
"There's
that," Sean agreed slowly. "And this gizmo—" he waved the
"pen" gently "—will let you pick up on anything like that?"
"Right.
Unfortunately—" Colin met his brother's eyes levelly "—it could also
be picked up on. It doesn't use radio either, Sean, and I'll be using active
sensors. If you pass too close to anyone with the right detection rig, you'll
stand out like a Christmas tree in June. And if you do . . ."
"I see," Sean
said softly. He pursed his lips and drew the relay slowly through his fingers,
then smiled that same slow smile and slid it neatly into his shirt pocket.
"In that case, you'd better jot down that 'note' of yours in case Major
Simmons wants to see it, hadn't you?"
* * *
The sentries carried
slung assault rifles, and artfully camouflaged auto-cannon covered Sean's old
Caddy as he braked gently at the security barricade's concrete dragon's teeth.
The last major attack by the Black Mecca splinter faction of the old Islamic
Jihad had been over a year ago, but it had killed over three hundred people and
inflicted a quarter-billion dollars' worth of damage on ConEurope's Werner von
Braun Space Control.
The First World had
grown unhappily accustomed to terrorism, both domestic and foreign. Most of the
world—including the vast majority of Islam—might condemn them, but Dark Age
mentalities could do terrible amounts of damage with modern technology. As
Black Mecca had proven when it used a man-portable SAM to knock down a
fully-loaded ConEuropean Valkyrie just short of the runway . . . onto a pad
twelve minutes from launch with a Perseus heavy-lifter. Terrorism continued to
flow in erratic cycles, but it seemed to be back on the upsurge after a
two-year hiatus, and the aerospace industry had apparently become Black Mecca's
prime target this time around. No one knew exactly why—unless it was the way
aerospace epitomized the collective "Great Satan's" wicked, evil,
liberalizing, humanizing technology—but Shepard Center was taking no chances.
"Good morning,
sir." A guard touched the brim of his cap as he bent beside the window.
"I'm afraid this is a restricted area. Public access is off Fountain
Boulevard."
"I know," Sean
replied, glancing at the man's neat NASA nameplate. "Major Simmons is
expecting me, Sergeant Klein."
"I see. May I have
your name, sir?" The sergeant raised an eyebrow as he uncased his belt
terminal and brought the small screen to life.
"I'm Sean
MacIntyre, Sergeant."
"Thank you."
Klein studied his terminal, comparing the minute image to Sean's face, then
nodded. "Yes, sir, you're on the cleared list." A raised hand
beckoned to one of his fellows. "Corporal Hansen will escort you to White
Tower, Mr. MacIntyre."
"Thank you,
Sergeant." Sean leaned across to open the passenger door for Corporal
Hansen, and the guard climbed in and settled his compact assault rifle
carefully beside him.
"You're welcome,
Mr. MacIntyre," Klein said. "And may I extend my condolences on your
brother's death, sir?"
"Thank you,"
Sean said again, and put the car back into gear as Klein touched his cap once
more.
The remark could have
been a polite nothing, but Klein had sounded entirely sincere, and Sean was
touched by it.
He'd always known his
brother was popular with his fellows, but not until Colin "died" had
he suspected how much the rank and file of the space effort had admired him.
He'd expected a certain amount of instant veneration. It was traditional, after
all—no matter how klutzy a man was, he became a hero when he perished doing
something heroic—but Colin had been one of the varsity.
Colin's selection as the
Prometheus Mission's chief survey pilot had been a measure of his professional
standing; the grief over his reported death, whether it was the loss felt by
his personal friends or by men and women like Sergeant Klein who'd never even
met him, measured another side of him.
If they only knew, Sean
thought, and barely managed to stop himself before he chuckled. Corporal Hansen
would not understand his amusement at all.
* * *
The corporal guided Sean
through three more checkpoints, then down a shortcut through the towering
silver domes of Shepard Center's number two tank farm, where vapor clouds
plumed from pressure relief valves high overhead. The distant thunder of a
shuttle launch rattled the Bushmaster's windows gently as they emerged on the
far side, and White Tower's massive, gleaming needle of mirrored glass loomed
before them. Clouds moved with pristine grace across the deep-blue sky
reflected from its face, and not even the clutter of communications relays atop
the tower could lessen the power of its presence.
Sean parked in the
indicated slot, and he and the corporal climbed out.
"Take the main
entrance and tell the security desk you're here to see Major Simmons, sir.
They'll handle it from there."
"Thanks, Corporal.
Are you going to get back to the gate all right?"
"No sweat, sir.
There's a jitney heading back in about ten minutes."
"Then I'll be
going," Sean said with a nod, and strode briskly through the indicated
entrance and its metal detectors. A trefoil-badged holo sign on the wall warned
of x-ray scanners, as well, and Sean grinned, appreciating Colin's reasons for
recruiting him for this task. Even if no one recognized him, his various
implants would undoubtedly give the security systems fits!
The security desk passed
him through to Major Simmons. Sean and the major had met before, and Simmons
shook his hand, his firm grip a silent expression of sympathy for his
"loss," and handed him a clip-on security badge.
"This'll get you up
to Captain Yamaguchi's office—it's good anywhere in the Green Area—and she's
already pulled Colin's personal data for you. Do you know your way there, or
should I assign a guide?"
"No, thank you,
Major. I've been here a couple of times; I can find my own way, I think. Should
I just hand this—" he touched the pass "—back in at the security desk
as I leave?"
"That would be
fine," Simmons agreed, and Sean headed for the elevators. He walked past
the first bank, and punched for a car in the L Block, humming softly and
wishing his palms weren't a bit damp as he waited. A musical tone chimed and
the floor light lit above the doors. They opened quietly.
"Here we go,
kid," Sean murmured sotto voce. "Hope it works."
* * *
Colin lay back on his
brother's bed, hands clasped behind his head, and his unfocused eyes watched
sun patterns on the wall. He hated involving Sean—and hated it all the more
because he'd known Sean would agree. The odds were tremendously against anyone noticing
the scanner relay . . . but humanity's very presence on this planet resulted
from a far more unlikely chain of events.
It was a strange
sensation to lie here and yet simultaneously accompany Sean. There was a
duality to his senses and his vision, as if he personally rode in his brother's
shirt pocket even as he lay comfortably on the bed.
His implants reached out
through the disguised relay, probing and peering, exploring the webs of
electronics around Sean like insubstantial fingers. He could almost touch the
flow of current as the elevator floor lights lit silently, just as he could
feel the motion of the elevator as it climbed the hollow, empty-tasting shaft.
Security systems, computers, electric pencil sharpeners, telephones, intercoms,
lighting conduits, heating and air- conditioning sensors, ventilation shafts—he
felt them about him and quested through them like a ghost, sniffing and prying.
And then, like a bolt of
lightning, a fiery little core of brighter, fiercer power surged in his
perceptions.
Colin stiffened, closing
his eyes as he concentrated. The impression was faint, but he closed in on it,
tuning out the background. His immaterial fingers reached out, and his brows
creased in surprise. It was a com link, all right—a fold-space com, very
similar to the implant in his own skull—but there was something strange about
it. . . .
He worried at it,
focusing and refining his data, and then he had it. It was a security link, not
a standard hand com. He would never have spotted it if Dahak hadn't improved
his built-in sensors, but that explained why it seemed so similar to his
implant. He insinuated his perceptions into the heart of the tiny device,
confirming his identification. Definitely a security link; there were the
multi-dimensional shift circuits to bounce it around. Now why should the
mutineers bother with a security link? Even in a worst-case scenario that
assumed Dahak was fully operational, that was taking security to paranoid
extremes. Dahak could do many things, but tapping a fold-space com from lunar
orbit wasn't one of them, and no one on Earth would even recognize one.
He considered consulting
with Dahak, but only for a moment. None of the mutineers' equipment could tap
his link with the computer, but that didn't mean they couldn't detect it. The
device he'd found had a piddling little range—no more than fifteen thousand
kilometers—and detecting something like that would be practically impossible
with its shift circuits in operation. But his implant's range was over a
light-hour, and that very power would make it stand out like a beacon on any
Imperial detector screen on the planet.
He muttered pungently,
then shrugged. It didn't really matter why the mutineers had given that
particular com to their minion; what mattered was that he'd found it, and he
concentrated on pinning down its precise location.
Ahhhhhh yesssssss. . . .
There it was. Right down in—
Colin sat up with a
jerk. Cal Tudor's office?! That was insane!
But there was no doubt
about it. The damned thing was not only in his office but hidden inside
his work terminal!
Colin swung his legs
shakenly off the bed. He knew Cal well—or he'd thought he did. They were
friends—such good friends he would have risked contacting Cal if Sean hadn't
been available—and the one word Colin had always associated with him was
"integrity." True, Cal was young for his position, but he lived,
breathed, and dreamed the Prometheus Mission. . . . Could that be the very way they'd gotten to him?
Colin could think of no
other explanation. Yet the more he considered it, the less he understood why
they would have picked Cal at all. He was a member of the proctoscope team, but
a very junior one. Colin put his elbows on his knees and leaned his chin in his
palms as he consulted the biographies Dahak had amassed on the team's members.
As usual, there was a
curious, detached feeling to the data. He was getting used to it, but the
dividing line between knowledge he'd acquired experientially and that which
Dahak had shoveled into a handy empty spot in his brain was surprisingly sharp.
The implant data came from someone else and felt like someone else's. Despite a
growing acceptance, it was a sensation he found uncomfortable, and he was
beginning to suspect he always would.
But the point at issue
was Cal's background, not the workings of his implant. It helped Colin to
visualize the data as if it had been projected upon a screen, and he frowned as
the facts flickered behind his eyelids.
Cal Tudor. Age
thirty-six years. Wife's name Frances; two daughters—Harriet and Anna, fourteen
and twelve. Theoretical physicist, Lawrence Livermore by way of MIT Denver,
then six years at Goddard before he moved to Shepard. . . .
Colin flicked through
more data then stiffened. Dear God! How the hell had Dahak missed it? He knew
how he had, and the nature of his implant was a factor, for he'd
never realized how seldom Cal ever mentioned his family.
Yet the information was
there, and only the "otherness" of the data Dahak had provided had
kept it at arm's length from Colin and prevented him from spotting the
impossible "coincidence." Dahak had checked for connections with the
mutineers as far back as college, but Cal's connection pre-dated more than his
college career; it pre-dated his birth! If Dahak had a human-sized imagination
(or, for that matter, if Colin had personally—and thoroughly—checked the data)
they would have recognized it, for Cal's very failure to mention it to one of
his closest friends would have underscored it in red.
Cal Tudor: son of
Michael Tudor, only living grandson of Andrew and Isis Hidachi Tudor,
and great-grandson of Horace Hidachi, "the Father of Gravitonics."
The brilliant, intuitive genius who over sixty years before had single-handedly
worked out the basic math that underlay the entire field!
Colin pounded his knee
gently with a fist. He and Dahak had even speculated on Horace Hidachi's
possible links with the mutineers, for the stature of his
"breakthrough" had seemed glaringly suspicious. Yet they obviously
hadn't delved deeply enough for reasons that—at the time—had seemed good and
sufficient.
Hidachi had spent twenty
years as a researcher before he evolved "his" theory and he'd never done
anything with his brilliant theoretical work. Nor had anyone else during the
course of his life. At the time he propounded his theory, it had been an
exercise in pure math, a hypothesis that was impossible to test; by the time
the hardware became available, he was dead. Nor had his daughter shown any
particular interest in his work. If Colin remembered correctly (and thanks to
Dahak he did), she'd gone into medicine, not physics.
Which was why Dahak and
Colin had stopped worrying about Hidachi. If he'd been a minion of the
mutineers, he would scarcely have invested that much time building a cover
merely to produce an obscure bit of mathematical arcanum. He would have carried
through with the hardware to prove it. At the very least, the mutineers
themselves would scarcely have allowed his work to lie fallow for so long. As
it was, Dahak had decided that Hidachi must have produced that rarest of
rarities: a genuine, fundamental breakthrough so profound no one had even
recognized what it was. Indeed, the computer had computed a high probability
that the lag between theory and practice simply resulted from how long it took
the mutineers to realize what Hidachi had done and prod a later generation of
scientists down the path it opened.
But this—!
Colin castigated himself
for forgetting the key fact about the mutineers' very existence. Wearisome as
the passing millennia had been for Dahak, they had not been that for
Anu's followers. They could take refuge in stasis, ignoring the time that
passed between contacts with the Terra-born. Why shouldn't they think in
generations? For all Colin and Dahak knew, the last, unproductive fifteen years
of Hidachi's life had been a simple case of a missed connection!
But if, in fact, the
mutineers had once contacted a Hidachi, why not again? Especially if Horace
Hidachi had left some record of his own dealings with Anu and company. It might
even explain how a man like Cal, whose integrity was absolute, could be working
with them. For all Cal might know, the mutineers were on the side of goodness
and light!
And his junior position
on the proctoscope team made him a beautiful choice. He had access to project
progress reports, yet he was unobtrusive . . .
and quite probably primed for contact with the same "visitors"
who had contacted his great-grandfather.
But if so, he didn't
realize who he was truly helping, Colin decided. It was possible he was wrong,
but he couldn't believe he was that wrong. Cal had to think he
was working on the side of the angels, and why shouldn't he? If the mutineers
had, indeed, provided the expertise to develop the proctoscope, then they'd
advanced the frontiers of human knowledge by several centuries in barely sixty
years. How could that seem an "evil" act to someone like Cal?
Which meant there was a
possibility, here. He'd found exactly the connection he sought . . . and
perhaps he could not only convince Cal of the truth but actually enlist him as
an ally!
"You should let me
go."
Sean MacIntyre's
stubborn face was an unhealthy red in his Bushmaster's dash LEDs, and despite
the high-efficiency emission-controls required by law, the agonizing stench of
burning hydrocarbons had forced Colin to step his sensory levels down to little
more than normal.
"No," he said
for the fifth—or sixth—time.
"If you're wrong—if
he is a bad guy and he's got some kind of panic button—he's gonna punch
it the instant he opens the door and sees you."
"Maybe. But the
shock of seeing me alive may keep him from doing anything hasty till we've had
time to talk, too. Besides, if he does send out a signal, I can pick it up and
bug out. Can you?"
"Be better not to
spook him into sending one at all," Sean grumbled.
"Agreed. But he's
not going to. I'm positive he doesn't know what those bastards are really up
to—or what they've already done to the human race."
"I'm glad you
are!"
"I've already
gotten you in deep enough, Sean," Colin said as the Caddy snarled up a
grade. "If I am wrong, I don't want you in the line of fire."
"I appreciate
that," Sean said softly, "but I'm your brother. I happen to love you.
And even if I didn't, this poor world will be in a hell of a mess a couple of
years down the road if you get your ass killed, you jerk!"
"I'm not going
to," Colin said firmly, "so stop arguing. Besides—" Sean turned
off the highway onto a winding mountain road "—we're almost there."
"All right, goddamn
it," Sean sighed, then grinned unwillingly. "You always were almost
as stubborn as me."
* * *
The Caddy ghosted to a
stop on the shoulder of the road. The view out over Colorado Springs was
breathtaking, though neither brother paid it much heed, but the mountain above
them was dark and sparsely populated. The Tudor home was a big, modern
split-level, but it was part of a small, well-spread out "environment
conscious" development, carefully designed to merge with its surroundings
and then dropped into a neat, custom-tailored hole bitten out of the slope. It
was two-thirds underground, and only the front porch light gleamed above him as
Colin climbed out into the breezy night.
"Thanks,
Sean," he said softly, leaning back into the car to squeeze his brother's
shoulder with carefully restrained strength. "Wait here. If that
thing—" he gestured at the small device sitting on the console between the
front seats "—lights up, then shag ass out of here. Got it?"
"Yes," Sean
sighed.
"Good. See you later."
Colin gave another gentle squeeze, wishing his brother's unenhanced eyes could
see the affection on his face, then turned away into the windy blackness. Sean
watched him go, vanishing into the night, before he opened the glove
compartment.
The heavy magnum
automatic gleamed in the starlight as he checked the magazine and shoved the
pistol into his belt, and he drummed on the wheel for a few more moments. He
didn't know how good Colin's new hearing really was, and he wanted to give him
plenty of time to get out of range before he followed.
* * *
Colin climbed straight
up the mountainside, ignoring the heavy weight on his back. He could have left
the suppresser behind, but he might need a little extra evidence to convince
Cal he knew what he was talking about. Besides, he felt uneasy about letting it
out of reach.
He let his enhanced
sight and hearing coast up to maximum sensitivity as he neared the top, and his
eyes lit as they touched the house. His electronic and gravitonic sensors were
in passive mode lest he trip any waiting detectors, but there was a background
haze of additional Imperial power sources in there, confirmation, if any had
been needed, that Cal was his man.
He climbed over the
split-rail fence he'd helped Cal build last spring and eased into the gap
between the house and the sheer south wall of the deep, terrace-like notch
blasted out of the mountain to hold it, circling to approach through the tiny
backyard and wondering how Cal would react when he saw him. He hoped he was
right about his friend. God, how he hoped he was!
He slipped through
Frances Tudor's neat vegetable garden towards the back door like a ghost,
checking for any security devices, Terran or Imperial, as he went. He found
none, but his nerves tightened as he felt the soft prickle of an active
fold-space link. He couldn't separate sources without going active with his own
sensors, but it felt like another security com. No traffic was going out, but
the unit was up, as if waiting to receive . . . or transmit. The last thing he
needed was to find Cal sitting in front of a live mike and have him blurt out
an alarm before his guest had a chance to open his mouth!
He sighed. He'd just
have to hope for the best, but even at the worst, he should be able to vanish
before anyone could respond to any alarm Cal raised.
He eased into the silent
kitchen. It was dark, but that hardly mattered to him. He started toward the
swinging dining room door, then stopped as he touched the bevel-edged glass
hand plate.
There was a strange,
time-frozen quality about the darkened kitchen. A wooden salad bowl on the
counter was half-filled with shredded lettuce, but the other salad ingredients
still lay neatly to one side, as if awaiting the chef's hand, and a chill wind
seemed to gust down his spine. It wasn't like Cal or Frances to leave food
sitting out like that, and he opened his sensors wide, going active despite the
risk of detection.
What the—? A portable
stealth field behind him?! His muscles bunched and he prepared to whirl,
but—
"Right
there," a voice said very softly, and he froze, one hand still on the
dining room door, for the voice was not Cal's and it did not speak in English.
"Hands behind your head, scum," it continued in Imperial Universal.
"No little implant signals, either. Don't even think about doing anything
but what I tell you to, or I'll burn your spine in two."
Colin obeyed, moving very
slowly and cursing himself for a fool. He'd been wrong about Cal—dead wrong—and
his own caution had kept him from looking hard enough to spot somebody with a
stealth field. But who would have expected one? No one but another Imperial
could possibly have picked up their implants, anyway. Which meant . . .
His blood went icy.
Jesus, they'd been expecting him! And that meant they'd picked up the
scanner relay—and that they knew about Sean, too!
"Very nice,"
the voice said. "Now just push the door open with your shoulder and move
on through it. Carefully."
Colin obeyed, and the
ashes of defeat were bitter in his mouth.
* * *
Sean longed for some of
Colin's enhanced strength as he picked his way up the steep, dew-slick
mountainside, but he made it to the fence and climbed over it at last. Then he
stopped with a frown.
Unlike Colin, Sean
MacIntyre had spent his nights under the stars rather than out among them. He'd
joined the Forestry Service out of love, almost unable to believe that anyone
would actually pay him to work in the protected wilderness of parks and
nature reservations. Along the way, he'd refined a natural empathy for the
world about him, one which relied on more than the sheer strength of his
senses, and so it was that he noted what Colin had not.
The Tudor house was
still and black, with no lights, no feel of life, and every nerve in Sean's
body screamed "Trap!"
He took the automatic
off "safe" and worked the slide. From what Colin had said, the
"biotechnic" enhanced mutineers would take a lot of killing, but Sean
had lots of faith in the hollow-nosed .45 super-mags in his clip.
* * *
"Nice of you to be
so prompt," the voice behind Colin gloated. "We didn't expect you for
another half-hour."
The sudden close-range
pulse of the fold-space link behind Colin was almost painful, and he clamped
his teeth in angry, frightened understanding. It had been a short-range pulse,
which meant its recipients were close at hand.
"They'll be along
in a few minutes," the voice said. "Through the door to your
left," it added, and Colin pushed at it with his toe.
It opened, and he gagged
as an indescribably evil smell suddenly assailed him. He retched in anguish
before he could scale his senses back down, and the voice behind him laughed.
"Your host,"
it said cruelly, and flipped on the lights.
Cal drooped forward out
of his chair, flung over his desk by the same energy blast which had sprayed
his entire head over the blotter, but that was only the start of the horror.
Fourteen-year-old Harriet sagged brokenly in an armchair before the desk, her
head twisted around to stare accusingly at Colin with dead, glazed eyes. Her
mother lay to one side, and the blast that had killed her had torn her
literally in half. Twelve-year-old Anna lay half-under her, her child body even
more horribly mutilated by the weapon that had killed them both as Frances
tried uselessly to shield her daughter with her own life.
"He didn't want to
call you in," the voice's gloating, predatory cruelty seemed to come from
far, far away, "but we convinced him."
The universe roared
about Colin MacIntyre, battering him like a hurricane, and the fury of the
storm was his own rage. He started to turn, heedless of the weapon behind him,
but the energy gun was waiting. It clubbed the back of his neck, battering him
to his knees, and his captor laughed.
"Not so fast,"
he jeered. "The Chief wants to ask you a few questions, first." Then
he raised his voice. "Anshar! Get your ass in here."
"I already
have," another voice answered. Colin looked up as a second man stepped in
through the far study door, and his normally mild eyes were emerald fire as he
took in the blond-haired newcomer's midnight blue uniform, the Fleet issue
boots, the heavy energy gun slung from one shoulder.
"About damn
time," the first voice grunted. "All right, you bastard—" the
energy gun prodded "—on your feet. Over there against the wall."
Grief and horror mingled
with the red fangs of bloodlust, but even through that boil of emotion Colin
knew he must obey—for now. Yet even as he promised himself a time would come
for vengeance, an icy little voice whispered he'd made some terrible mistake.
His captor's sneering cruelty, the carnage that had claimed his friend's entire
family . . . None of it made any sense.
"Turn around,"
the voice said, and Colin turned his back to the wall.
The one who'd been doing
all the talking was of no more than medium size but stocky, black-haired, with
an odd olive-brown complexion. His eyes were also odd; almost Asiatic and yet
not quite. Colin recognized the prototype from whence all Terran humans had
sprung, and the thought made him sick.
But the other one,
Anshar, was different. Even in his fury and fear, Colin was puzzled by the
other's fair skin and blue eyes. He was Terra-born; he had to be, for the
humanity of the Imperium had been very nearly completely homogenous. Only one
planet of the Third Imperium had survived its fall, and the seven thousand
years between Man's departure from Birhat to rebuild and Anu's mutiny had not
diluted that homogeneity significantly. Only after Dahak's crew reached
Earth had genetic drift set in among the isolated survivors to produce
disparate races. So what was he doing in Fleet uniform? Colin's sensors
reached out and his eyes widened as he detected a complete set of biotechnic
implants in the man.
"Pity the
degenerate was so stubborn," the first one said, jerking Colin's attention
back to him as he propped a hip against the desk. "But he saw the light
when we broke his little bitch's neck." He prodded Harriet's corpse with
the muzzle of his energy gun, his eyes a goad of cruelty, and Colin made
himself breathe slowly. Wait, he told himself. You may have a chance to kill
him before he kills you if you wait.
"Of course, we told
him we'd let the others live if he called you." He laughed suddenly.
"He may even have believed it!"
"Stop it,
Girru," Anshar said, and his own eyes flinched away from the butchered
bodies.
"You always were
gutless, Anshar," Girru sneered. "Hell, even degenerates like a
little hunting!"
"You didn't have to
do it this way," Anshar muttered.
"Oh? Shall I tell
the Chief you're getting fastidious? Or—" his voice took on a silky edge
"—would you prefer I tell Kirinal?"
"No! I . . . just
don't like it."
"Of course you
don't!" Girru said contemptuously. "You—"
He broke off suddenly,
whirling with the impossible speed of his implants, and a thunderous roar
exploded behind him. The bright, jagged flare of a muzzle flash filled the
darkened hall like lightning, edging the half-opened door in brilliance, and he
jerked as the heavy slug smashed into him. A hoarse, agonized cry burst from
him, but his enhanced body was tough beyond the ken of Terrans. He continued
his turn, slowed by his hurt but still deadly, and the magnum bellowed again.
Even the wonders of the
Fourth Imperium had their limits. The massive bullet punched through his
reinforced spinal column, and he flipped away from the desk, knocking over the
chair in which the dead girl sat.
Colin had hurled himself
forward at the sound of the first shot, for he knew with heart-stopping
certitude who had fired it. But he was on the wrong side of the room, and
Anshar's slung energy gun snapped up, finger on the trigger—only to stop and
jerk back towards the hallway door as a heavy foot kicked it fully open.
"No,
Sean!" Colin bellowed, but his cry was a lifetime too late.
Sean MacIntyre knew
Colin could never reach Anshar before the mutineer cut him down—and he had seen
the slaughter of innocents that filled the study. He swung his magnum in a
two-handed combat stance, matching merely human reflexes and fury against the
inhuman speed of the Fourth Imperium.
He got off one shot. The
heavy bullet took Anshar in the abdomen, wreaking horrible damage, but the
energy gun snarled. It birthed a terrible demon—a focused beam of gravitonic
disruption fit to shatter steel—that swept a fan of destruction across the
door, and Sean MacIntyre's body erupted in a fountain of gore as it sliced
through plaster and wood and flesh.
"NOOOOOOOO!!!"
Colin screamed, and lunged at his brother's murderer.
The devastation the slug
had wrought within Anshar slowed him, but he held down the stud, shattering the
room as he swept it with lethal energy. Instinct prompted Colin even in his
madness, and he wrenched aside, grunting as the suppresser on his back took the
full fury of the blast.
It hurled him to one
side, but Girru and Anshar hadn't realized what the suppresser was, and no
Terran "knapsack" could have absorbed the damage of a full-power
energy bolt.
Anshar released the
trigger stud and paused, expecting his enemy to fall.
But Colin was unhurt,
and long hours spent working out against Dahak's training remotes took command.
He hit on his outspread hands and somersaulted back at Anshar while the
mutineer gawked at him in disbelief. Then his boots slammed into Anshar's
chest, battering the energy gun from his grip.
Both men rolled back
upright, but Anshar was hurt—badly hurt—and Colin forgot Dahak, the Imperium,
even his need for a prisoner. He ignored the dropped energy gun. He wanted
nothing between Anshar and his own bare hands, and Anshar paled and writhed
away as he saw the dark, terrible death in Colin's eyes.
Fury crashed through
Colin MacIntyre—cold, cruel fury—and one hand caught a flailing arm and jerked
his victim close. An alloy-reinforced knee, driven with all the power of his
enhanced muscles, smashed into the wound Sean's bullet had torn, and a savage
smile twisted his lips at Anshar's less than human sound of agony.
He shifted his grip,
wrenching the arm he held high, and reinforced cartilage and bone tore and
splintered with a ghastly ripping sound. Anshar shrieked again, but the sound
was not enough to satisfy Colin. He slammed his enemy to the floor. His knee
crashed down between Anshar's shoulders, and he released the arm he held. Both
hands darted down, cupping the mutineer's chin, and his mighty back tensed,
driven by the biotechnic miracles of the Fourth Imperium and the terrible power
of hate. There was a moment of titanic stress and one last gurgling scream, and
then Anshar's spine snapped with a flat, explosive crack.
Colin held his grip,
feeling the life flow out of his victim in the steady collapse of Anshar's
implants, and the killer in his soul was sick with triumph . . . and angry that
it was over.
He opened his hands at
last, and Anshar's face struck the floor with a meaty smack. Colin rose,
scrubbing his hands on his jeans, and his eyes were empty, as if part of
himself had died with his brother.
He turned away, smelling
wood smoke, plaster dust, and the stench of ruptured bodies. He could not look
at Cal's slaughtered family, but neither, though he would have sold his soul to
do it, could he take his eyes from Sean.
He knelt in the
spreading pool of his brother's blood. The energy gun had mangled Sean
hideously, but the very horror meant death had come quickly, and he tried to
tell himself Sean had not suffered as his ripped and torn flesh said he had.
Their long-dead mother's
eyes looked up at him. There was no life in them, but an echo of Sean's outrage
remained. He'd known, Colin thought sadly, known he was a dead man from the
instant Anshar began to raise his own weapon, yet he'd stood his ground. Just
as he always had. And, just as he always had, he had protected his younger
brother.
Colin closed those eyes
with gentle fingers, and unashamed tears streaked his cheeks. One fell, a
diamond glinting in the light from the study, to his brother's face, and the
sight touched something inside him. It was like a farewell, fraying the grip of
the grief that kept him kneeling there, and he reached to pick up Girru's
energy gun.
"Freeze," a
cold voice said behind him.
Colin froze, but this
time he recognized the voice. It spoke English with a soft, Southern accent,
and his jaw clenched. Not just Cal; everyone he'd thought he knew, believed he
could trust, had betrayed him. Everyone but Sean.
"Drop it." He
let the energy gun thump back to the floor. "Inside."
He stepped back into the
study and turned slowly, his eyes flinty as they rested on the tall,
black-skinned woman in the doorway. She wore the uniform of the United States
Air Force with a lieutenant colonel's oak leaves, but the weapon slung from her
shoulder had never been made on Earth. The over-sized, snub-nosed pistol was a
grav gun, and its drum magazine held two hundred three-millimeter darts. Their
muzzle velocity would be over five thousand meters per second, and they were
formed of a chemical explosive denser than uranium that exploded after
penetrating. From where he stood, he could see the three-headed dragon etched
into the receiver.
The muzzle never wavered
from his navel, but the colonel's eyes swept the room, and her face twisted.
The black forefinger on the trigger tightened and he tensed his belly muscles
uselessly, but she didn't fire. Her brown eyes lingered for a long moment on
Frances and Anna Tudor's mutilated bodies, then came back to him, filled with a
bottomless hate he'd never seen in them.
"You bastard!"
Lieutenant Colonel Sandra Tillotson breathed.
"Me?" he said
bitterly. "What about you, Sandy?"
His voice was like a
blow. Her head jerked, and her eyes widened, their hatred buried in sudden
disbelief as she saw him—him, not just another killer—for the first
time.
"Colin?!"
she gasped, and her reaction puzzled him. Surely the mutineers had known who
they were trapping! But Sandy closed her mouth with an almost audible snap, her
gaze flitting to the two dead bodies in the Fleet uniforms, and he could
actually see the intensity of her thoughts, see a whole chain of realizations
flickering over her face. And then, to his utter shock, she lowered her weapon.
His muscles tightened to
leap across the intervening space and snatch it away. But she shook her head
slowly, and her next words stopped him dead.
"Colin," she
whispered. "My God, Colin, what have you done?"
It was the last reaction
he had expected, and his own eyes narrowed.
"I found them like
this. Those two—" his head gestured at the uniformed bodies, hands
motionless "—were waiting for me. They . . . killed Sean, too."
Sandy jerked around to
stare through the doorway, and her shoulders sagged as she finally recognized
the savagely maimed body. When she turned back to Colin, her eyes were closed
in grief and despair.
"Oh, Jesus,"
she moaned. "Oh, dear, sweet Jesus. Not Sean, too."
"Sandy, what the hell
is going on here?" Colin demanded.
"No, you wouldn't
know," she said softly, her mouth bitter.
"I don't know
anything! I thought I did, but—"
"Cal tripped his
emergency signal," Sandy said tonelessly, and looked at the dead
scientist, as if impressing the hideous sight imperishably upon her mind.
"I was closest, so I came as quick as I could."
"You? Sandy—you're
in with Anu?"
"Of course not!
Those two—Girru and Anshar—were two of his hit men."
"Sandy, what are
you talking about? If you're not—"
Colin broke off again as
his sensors tingled, and Sandy stiffened as she saw his face tighten.
"What is it?"
she asked sharply.
"Those two bastards
called in reinforcements," Colin said tautly. "They're coming. Don't
you feel them?"
"I'm a normal
human, Colin. One of the 'degenerates,' " Sandy said harshly. "But
you aren't, are you? Not anymore."
"A norm—" He
broke off. "Later," he said tersely. "Right now, we've got at
least twenty sets of combat armor closing in on us."
"Shit," Sandy
breathed. Then she shook herself again. "If you've got yourself a
bio-enhancement package, grab one of those energy guns!" She bared her
teeth in an ugly smile. "That'll surprise the bastards!"
Colin snatched up
Anshar's weapon. It had suffered no damage in their struggle and the charge
indicator read ninety percent, and his fingers curled almost lovingly around
the grips as he grasped Sandy's meaning. No normal human could handle one of
the heavy energy weapons. Even Sandy's grav gun would be a problem for most
Terra-born humans. For the Imperium, it was a sidearm; for Sandy, it was a
shoulder-slung, two-handed weapon.
"How are they
coming in and where are they?" Sandy demanded tersely.
"Twenty of them,"
Colin repeated. "Closing in from the perimeter of a circle. About six
klicks out and coming fast."
"Too far,"
Sandy muttered. "We've got to suck them in closer. . . ."
"Why?"
"Because—" She
broke off, shaking her head. "There's no time for explanations, Colin.
Just trust me—and believe I'm on your side."
"My side?
Sandy—"
"Shut up and
listen!" she snapped, and he choked off his questions. "Look,
I had my suspicions when we didn't find any sign of you in that wreck, but it
seemed so incredible that— Never mind. The important thing is you. What kind of
implants did you get?"
Questions hammered in
Colin's brain. How did Sandy, who obviously had no biotechnics, even know what
they were? Much less that there were different implant packages? But she was
right. There was no time.
"Bridge
officer," he said shortly.
"Bridge—?! You mean
the ship's fully operational?!"
"Maybe," he
said cautiously, and she shook her head irritably.
"Either it is or it
isn't, and if you got the full treatment, it is. Which means—" She broke
off again and nodded sharply.
"Don't just stand
there! See if it can get our asses out of here!"
Colin gaped at her. The
hurricane of his grief and fury, followed by the shock of seeing Sandy, had
blinded him to the simplest possibility of all!
He activated his
fold-space link, then grunted in anguish, half-clubbed to his knees by the
squealing torment in his nerves. He shook his head doggedly.
"Can't!" he
gasped. "We're jammed."
"Shit!"
Sandy's face tightened again, but when she spoke again, her voice was curiously
serene. "Colin, I don't know how you found Cal, or exactly what happened
here, but you're the only man on this planet with bridge implants. We've
got to get you out of here."
"But—"
"There's no time,
Colin. Just listen. If we can suck them in close, there's an escape route. When
I tell you to, go down to the basement. There's a switch somewhere—I don't know
where, but you won't need it. Go down to the basement and move the furnace. It
pivots clockwise, but you'll have to break the lock to move it. Go down the
ladder and take the right fork—the left's a booby—trapped cul-de-sac—and move
like hell. You'll come out about a klick from here in the woods above Aspen
Road. Got it?"
"Got it. But—"
he tried again.
"I said there's no
time." She turned for the door, stepping carefully over Sean's body.
"Come with me. We've got to convince them we're going to stand and fight,
or they'll be watching for a breakout."
Colin followed her rebelliously,
every nerve in his body crying out against obeying her blindly. Yet she clearly
knew what she was doing—or thought she did—and that was a thousand percent
better than anything he knew.
Sandy scurried down the
hall and moved a wall painting to reveal a small switch. Colin's sensors
reached out to trace the circuitry, but she threw it before he got far, and his
skin twitched as he felt the sudden awakening of unsuspected defenses. He'd
sensed additional Imperial technology as he approached the house, but he'd
never suspected this!
"This wall's
armored, but it faces away from the mountain, so we couldn't risk shield
circuits in it," Sandy explained tersely, turning into the living room and
kneeling beside a picture window. She rested the muzzle of her heavy grav gun
on the sill. "Too much chance Anu's bunch would notice if one of 'em
happened by. But it's the only open wall in the house."
Colin grunted in
understanding, kneeling beside a window on the far side of the room. If they
were trying to hide, they'd taken an awful chance just covering the roof and
side walls, but not as big a one as he'd first thought. His own sensors were
far more sensitive than any mutineer's, and he realized the shield circuits
were actually very well hidden as he traced the forcefield to its source. He'd
expected Imperial molecular circuits, but the concealed installation in the
basement was of Terran manufacture. It had some highly unusual components, but
it was all printed circuits, which explained both its bulkiness and their
difficulty in hiding it. Still, the very fact that it contained no molycircs
was its best protection.
The shield cut off his
sensors in three directions, but he could still use them through the open wall,
and he grinned savagely as the emission signatures of combat armor glowed
before him. They were far better protected than he, but they were also far more
"visible," and he lifted his energy gun hungrily.
"They're
coming," he whispered, and Sandy nodded, her face grotesque behind the
light-gathering optics she'd clipped over her eyes. They were the latest US
Army issue, hardly up to Imperial standards but highly efficient in their
limited area. He turned back to the window, watching the night.
A suit of combat armor
was a bright glare in his vision, and he raised his energy gun. The attacker
rose higher, topping out over the slope, and he wondered why they were no
longer using their jump gear. The mutineer rose still higher, exposing almost
his full body, and Colin squeezed the stud.
His window exploded,
showering the night with glass. The nearly invisible energy was a terrible lash
of power to his enhanced vision as it smashed out across the lawn, and it took
the mutineer dead center.
The combat armor held
for an instant, but Colin's weapon was on max. There was a shattering geyser of
gore, and a dreadful hunger snarled within him as the mutineer went down
forever and he heard a rippling hisss-crrackkk!
The near-silent grav
gun's darts went supersonic as they left the muzzle, and Sandy's window blew
apart, but its resistance was too slight to detonate them. A corner of his eye
saw gouts of flying dirt as a dozen plunged deep and exploded, and then another
suit of combat armor reared backwards. It toppled over the side of the yard,
thundering on the road below, and Sandy's hungry, vengeful sound echoed his
own.
Their fire had broken
the silence, and the house rocked as Imperial weapons smashed at its side and
rear walls. Colin winced as he felt the sudden power surge in the shield
circuits. The fire went on and on, flaying the night with thunder and
lightning, and the homemade shield generator heated dangerously, but it held.
Then the thunder ceased,
and he looked up as Sandy spoke again.
"They know,
now," she said softly. "They'll be coming at us from the front in a
minute. They can't afford to waste time with all the racket we're making.
They've got to be in and out before—" She broke off and hosed another
stream of darts into the night, and a third armored body blew apart.
"—before someone comes to see what the hell is happening."
"We'll never hold
against a real rush," he warned.
"I know. It's time
to bug out, Colin."
"They'll follow
us," he said. "Even I can't outrun combat suits with jump gear."
He did not add that she stood no chance at all of outrunning them.
"Won't have
to," she said shortly. "There should be friends at the end of the
tunnel when you get there. But for God's sake, don't come out shooting! They
don't know what's going on in here."
"Friends?
What—?" He broke off and ripped off another shot, but this time the
mutineers knew they were under fire. He hit his target squarely, but his victim
dropped before the beam fully overpowered his armor. He was badly hurt—no doubt
of that—but it was unlikely he was dead.
"Don't ask
questions! Just get your ass in gear and go, damn it!"
"Not without
you," he shot back.
"You stupid—!"
Sandy bit off her angry remark and shook her head fiercely. "I can't even
open the damned tunnel, asshole! You can, so stop being so fucking
gallant! Somebody has to cover the rear and somebody else has to open the
tunnel! Now move, Colin!"
He started to argue, but
his sensors were suddenly crowded with the emissions of combat armor gathering
along the roadway below the slope. She was right, and he knew it. He didn't want
to know it, but he did.
"All right!"
he grated. "But you'd better be right behind me, lady, or I'm
coming back after you!"
"No, you
mule-headed, chauvinistic honk—!"
She chopped herself off
as she realized he was already gone. She wanted to call after him and wish him
luck but dared not turn away from her front. She regretted her own angry
response to his words, for she knew why he had said them. He'd had to, pointless
as they both knew it was. He had to believe he would come back—that he could
come back—yet he knew as well as she that if she wasn't right on his heels, she
would never make it out at all.
But what she had
carefully not told him was that she wouldn't be following him. She'd said there
would be friends, but she couldn't be certain, and even if there were, someone
had to occupy the attackers' attention to keep them from noticing movement in
the tunnel when Colin passed beyond the confines of the shield. And she'd meant
what she'd said. If he had a bridge officer's implants, they had to get
him out. She didn't understand everything that was happening, but she knew
that. And that he needed time to make his escape.
Lieutenant Colonel
Sandra Tillotson, United States Air Force, laid a spare magazine beside her and
prepared to buy him that time.
* * *
Colin raced down the
basement stairs, sick at heart. Deep inside, he suspected what Sandy intended,
and she was right, damn it! But the thought of abandoning her was a canker in
his soul. This night of horrors was costing too much. He remembered what he'd
thought when Dahak's cutter deposited him here, and his own words were
wormwood and gall. He hadn't realized the hideous depth of what would be
demanded of him, for somehow he'd believed that only he must lose
things, that he must risk only himself. He hadn't counted on people he knew and
loved being slaughtered like animals . . . nor had he realized how bitter it
could be to live rather than die beside them.
He sensed the stuttering
fire of her grav gun behind him, the fury of energy weapons gouging at the
house, and his eyes burned as he seized the heavy furnace in a mighty grip. He
heaved, wrenching it entirely from its base, and the ladder was there. He
ignored it, leaping lightly down the two-meter drop, and hit the tunnel
running. Even as he passed under the edge of the shield and it sliced off his
sensors, he felt the space-wrenching discharges of her grav gun, knew she was
still there, still firing, not even trying to escape, and tears and self-hate
blinded him as he raced for safety.
The tunnel seemed
endless, yet the end was upon him almost before he realized it, and he lunged
up another ladder. The shaft was sealed, but he was already probing it,
spotting the catch, heaving it up with a mighty shoulder. He burst into the
night air . . . and his senses were suddenly afire with more power sources.
More combat armor! Coming from behind in the prodigious leaps of jump gear and
waiting in the woods ahead, as well!
He tried to unlimber his
energy gun, but a torrent of energy crashed over him, and he cried out as every
implant in his body screamed in protest. He writhed, fighting it, clinging to
the torment of awareness.
It was a capture
field—not a killing blast of energy, but something infinitely worse. A police
device that locked his synthetic muscles with brutal power.
He toppled forward under
the impetus of his last charge, crashing to the ground half-in and half-out of
the tunnel. He fought the encroaching darkness, smashing at it with all the
fury of his enraged will, but it swept over him.
The last thing he saw
was a tornado of light as the trees exploded with energy fire. He carried the
vision down into the dark with him, dimly aware of its importance.
And then, as his senses
faded at last, he realized. It wasn't directed at him—it was raking the ground
behind him and cutting down the mutineers who had pursued him. . . .
Colin swam fearfully up
out of his nightmares, trying to understand what had happened. Something was
wrong with his senses, and he moaned softly, frightened by the deadness, the absence,
where he should have felt the whisper and wash of ambient energy.
He opened his eyes and
blinked, automatically damping the brilliant light glaring down over him. He
made out a ceiling beyond it—an unfamiliar roof of an all-too-familiar,
bronze-colored alloy—and his muscles tightened.
It had been no dream.
Sean was dead. And Cal . . . his family . . . and Sandy. . . .
Memory wrung a harsh,
inarticulate sound of grief from him, and he closed his eyes again. Then he
gathered himself and tried to sit up, but his body refused to obey and his eyes
popped open once more. He tried again, harder, and his muscles strained, but it
was like trying to lift the Earth. Something pressed down upon him, and he
clenched his teeth as he recognized the presser. And a suppression field, as
well, which explained his dead sensory implants.
A small sound touched
his ear, and he wrenched his head around, barely able to move even that much
under the presser.
Three grim-faced people
looked back at him. The one standing in the center was a man, gray-haired, his
seamed face puckered by a smooth, long-healed scar from just under his right
eye down under the neck of his tattered old Clemson University sweatshirt. His
leathery skin was the olive-brown of the Fourth Imperium, and Colin recognized
the signs from Dahak's briefings; this man was old. Very old. He must be well
into his sixth century, but if he was old, he was also massively thewed, and
his olive-black eyes were alert.
A woman sat in a chair
to his left. She, too, was old, but with the shorter span of the Terra-born,
her still-thick hair almost painfully white under the brilliant light. Her
lined, grief-drawn face was lighter than the man's, but there was a hint of the
same slant to her swollen eyes, and Colin swallowed in painful recognition.
He'd never met Isis Tudor, but she looked too much like her murdered grandson
to be anyone else.
The third watcher shared
the old man's complexion, but her cold, set face was unlined. She was tall for
an Imperial, rivaling Colin's own hundred-eighty-eight centimeters, and
slender, almost delicate. And she was beautiful, with an almond-eyed, cat-like
loveliness that was subtly alien and yet perfect. A thick mane of hair rippled
down her spine, so black it was almost blue-green, gathered at the nape of her
neck in a jeweled clasp before it fanned out below, and she wore tailored
slacks and a cashmere sweater. The gemmed dagger at her belt struck an
incongruous note, but not a humorous one. Her slender fingers curled too
hungrily about its hilt, and her dark eyes were filled with hate.
He stared silently back
at them, then turned his face deliberately away.
The silence stretched
out, and then the old man cleared his throat.
"What shall we do
with you, Commander MacIntyre?" he asked in soft, perfect English, and
Colin turned back to him almost against his will. The spokesman smiled a
twisted smile and slipped one arm around the old woman. "We know what you
are—in part—" he continued, "but not in full. And—" his soft
voice turned suddenly harsher "—we know what you've cost us already."
"Spend not thy
words upon him," the young woman said coldly.
"Hush,
Jiltanith," the old man said. "It's not his fault."
"Is't not? Yet
Calvin doth lie dead, and his wife and daughters with him. And 'tis this
man hath encompassed that!"
"No." Isis
Tudor's soft voice was grief-harrowed, but she shook her head slowly. "He
was Cal's friend, 'Tanni. He didn't know what he was doing."
"Which changeth
naught," Jiltanith said bitterly.
"Isis is right,
'Tanni," the old man said sadly. "He couldn't have known they were
looking for Cal. Besides," the old eyes were wise and compassionate
despite their own bitterness, "he lost his own brother, as well . . . and
avenged Cal and the girls."
He walked towards the
table on which Colin lay and locked a challenging gaze with him, and Colin knew
it was there between them. He'd warned Sean the relay might be detected, and it
had. His mistake had killed Cal and Frances, Harriet and Anna, Sean and Sandy.
He knew it, and the same knowledge filled the old man's eyes, yet his captor
clasped his hands behind him and stopped a meter away, eloquently
unthreatening.
"What use
vengeance?" Jiltanith demanded, her lovely, hating face cold. "Will't
breathe life back into them? Nay! Slay him and ha' done, I say!"
"No, 'Tanni,"
the man said more firmly. "We need him, and he needs us."
"I say thee nay,
Father!" Jiltanith spat furiously. "I'll ha' none of him! Nay, nor
any part in't!"
"It's not for you
to say, 'Tanni." The man sounded stern. "It's up to the Council—and I
am head of the Council."
"Father,"
Jiltanith's voice was all the more deadly for its softness, "if thou
makest this man thine ally, thou art a fool. E'en now hath he cost thee dear.
Take heed, lest the price grow higher still."
"We have no
choice," her father said. His sad, wise eyes held Colin's.
"Commander, if you will give me your parole, I'll switch off the
presser."
"No," Colin
said coldly.
"Commander, we're
not what you think. Or perhaps we are, in a way, but you need us, and we need
you. I'm not asking you to surrender, only to listen. That's all we ask.
Afterwards, if you wish, we will release you."
Colin heard Jiltanith's
bitter, in-drawn hiss, but his eyes bored into the old man's. Something
unspeakably old and weary looked back at him—old yet vital with purpose.
Despite himself, he was tempted to believe him.
"And just who the
hell are you?" he grated at last.
"Me,
Commander?" The old man smiled wryly. "Missile Specialist First
Horus, late of Imperial Battle Fleet. Very late, I fear. And also—" his
smile vanished, and his eyes were incredibly sad once more "—Horace
Hidachi."
Colin's eyelids
twitched, and the old man nodded.
"Yes, Commander.
Cal was my great-grandson. And because of that, I think you owe me at least the
courtesy of listening, don't you?"
Colin stared at him for
a long, silent second and then, jerky against the pressure of the presser, he
nodded.
* * *
Colin shrugged to settle
more comfortably the borrowed uniform which had replaced his blood-stained
clothing and studied his surroundings as Horus and Isis Tudor led him down the
passageway. A portable suppression field still cut off his sensors, and he was
a bit surprised by how incomplete that made him feel. He'd become accustomed to
his new senses, accepting the electromagnetic and gravitonic spectrums as an
extension of sight and sense and smell. Now they were gone, taken away by the
small hand unit a stiff-spined Jiltanith trained upon him as she followed him
down the corridor.
They met a few others,
though traffic was sparse. Those they passed wore casual Terran clothing, and
most were obviously Terra-born. The almond eyes and olive skins of Imperials
were scattered thinly among them, and he wondered how so many Terra-born could
be admitted to the secret without its leaking.
But even without his
implants, he could see—and feel—the oldness about him.
Dahak was even older than
his current surroundings, but the huge starship didn't feel old.
Ancient, yes, but not old. Not worn with the passing of years. For fifty
millennia, there had been no feet upon Dahak's decks, no living presence
to mark its passing in casual scrapes and bumps and scars.
But feet had left their
mark here. The central portion of the tough synthetic decksole had been worn
away, and even the bare alloy beneath showed wear. It would take more than feet
to grind away Imperial battle steel, but it was polished smooth, burnished to a
high gloss. And the bulkheads were the same, showing signs of repairs to
lighting fixtures and ventilation ducts in the slightly irregular surface of
patches placed by merely human hands rather than the flawlessly precise
maintenance units that tended Dahak.
It made no sense. Dahak
had said the mutineers spent most of their time in stasis, yet despite the
sparse traffic, he suspected there were hundreds of people moving about him.
And this feeling of age, this timeworn weariness that could impregnate even battle
steel, was wrong. Anu had taken a complete tech base to Earth; he should have
plenty of service mechs for the proper upkeep of his vessels.
Which fitted together
with everything else. The murder of Cal's family. Sandy's cryptic remarks.
There was a pattern here, one he could not quite grasp yet whose parts were all
internally consistent. But—
His thoughts broke off
as Horus and Isis slowed suddenly before a closed hatch. A three-headed dragon
had once adorned those doors, but it had been planed away, leaving the alloy
smooth and unblemished, and he filed that away with the fact that he and he
alone wore Fleet uniform.
The hatch opened, and he
stepped through it at Horus's gesture.
The control room was a
far more cramped version of Dahak's command deck, but there had been
changes. A bank of old, flat-screen Terran television monitors covered one
bulkhead, and peculiar, bastardized hybrids of Imperial theory and Terran
components had been added to the panels. There were standard Terran computer
touchpads at consoles already fitted for direct neural feeds, but most
incongruous of all, perhaps, were the archaic Terran-style headsets racked by
each console. His eyebrows rose as he saw them, and Horus smiled.
"We need the
keyboards . . . and the phones, Commander," he said wryly. "Most of
our people have to enter commands manually and pass orders by voice."
Colin regarded the old
man thoughtfully, then nodded noncommittally and turned his attention to the
thirty-odd people sitting at the various consoles or standing beside them. The
few Imperials among them were a decided minority, and most of those, unlike
Jiltanith, seemed almost as ancient as Horus.
"Commander,"
Horus said formally, "permit me to introduce the Command Council of the
sublight battleship Nergal, late—like some of her crew, at least—of
Battle Fleet."
Colin frowned. The Nergal
had been one of Anu's ships, but it was becoming painfully clear that whatever
these people were, they weren't friends of Anu. Not any longer, at any
rate. His mind raced as he tried to weigh the fragments of information he had,
searching for an advantage he could wring from them.
"I see," was
all he said, and Horus actually chuckled.
"I imagine you play
a mean game of poker, Commander," he said dryly, and waved Colin to one of
the only two empty couches. It was the assistant gunnery officer's, Colin
noted, but the panel before it was inactive.
"I try," he
said, cocking his head to invite Horus to continue.
"I see you don't
intend to make this easy. Well, I don't suppose I blame you." Jiltanith
made a soft, contemptuous sound of disagreement, and Horus frowned at her. She
subsided, but Colin had the distinct impression she would have preferred
pointing something considerably more lethal than a portable suppresser at him.
"All right,"
Horus said more briskly, turning to seat Isis courteously in the unoccupied
captain's chair, "that's fair. Let's start at the beginning.
"First, Commander,
we won't ask you to divulge any information unless you choose to do so.
Nonetheless, certain things are rather self-evident.
"First, Dahak
is, in fact, operational. Second, there is a reason the ship has failed either
to squelch the mutiny or to go elsewhere seeking assistance. Third, the ship has
taken a hand at last, hence your presence here with the first bridge officer
implant package this planet has seen in fifty thousand years. Fourth, and most
obviously of all, if you'll forgive me, the information upon which you have
formulated your plans has proven inaccurate. Or perhaps it would be better to
say incomplete."
He paused, but Colin
allowed his face to show no more than polite interest. Horus sighed again.
"Commander, your
caution is admirable but misplaced. While we have continued to suppress your
implants, particularly your com link, that act is in your interest as well as
our own. You can have no more desire than we to provide Anu's missiles with a
targeting beacon! We realize, however, that it is we who must convince you
our motives are benign, and the only way I can see to do that is to tell you
who we are and why we want so desperately to help rather than hinder you."
"Indeed?"
Colin permitted himself a question at last and let his eyes slip sideways to
Jiltanith. Horus made a wry face.
"Is any decision
ever totally unanimous, Commander? We may be mutineers or something else
entirely, but we are also a community in which even those who disagree with the
majority abide by the decisions of our Council. Is that not true, 'Tanni?"
he asked the angry-eyed young woman gently.
"Aye, 'tis true
enow," she said shortly, biting off each word as if it cost her physical
pain, and her very reluctance was almost reassuring. A lie would have come more
easily.
"All right,"
Colin said finally. "I won't make any promises, but go ahead and explain
your position to me."
"Thank you,"
Horus said. He propped a hip against the console before which Isis Tudor sat
and crossed his arms.
"First, Commander,
a confession. I supported the mutiny with all my heart, and I fought hard to
make it a success. Most of the Imperials in this control room would admit the
same. But—" his eyes met Colin's unflinchingly "—we were used,
Commander MacIntyre."
Colin returned his gaze
silently, and Horus shrugged.
"I know. It was our
own fault, and we've been forced to accept that. We attempted to desert 'in the
face of the enemy,' as your own code of military justice would phrase it, and
we recognize our guilt. Indeed, that's the reason none of us wear the uniform
to which we were once entitled. Yet there's another side to us, Commander, for once
we recognized how horribly wrong we'd been, we also attempted to make amends.
And not all of us were mutineers."
He paused and looked
back at Jiltanith, whose face was harder and colder than ever. It was a
fortress, her hatred a portcullis grinding down, and her bitter eyes ignored
Horus to look straight into Colin's face.
"Jiltanith was no
mutineer, Commander," Horus said softly.
"No?" Colin
surprised himself by how gently his question came out. Jiltanith's obvious
youth beside the other, aged Imperials had already set her apart. Somehow,
without knowing exactly why, he'd felt her otherness.
"No," Horus
said in the same soft voice. " 'Tanni was six Terran years old, Commander.
Why should a child be held accountable for our acts?"
Colin nodded slowly,
committing himself to nothing, yet that, at least, he understood. To be
sentenced to eternal exile or death for a crime you had never committed would
be enough to wake hatred in anyone.
"But Dahak's
business is with all of us, I suppose," Horus continued quietly, "and
my fellows and I accept that. We've grown old, Commander. Our lives are largely
spent. It is only for 'Tanni and the other innocents we would plead. And,
perhaps, for some of our comrades to the south."
"That's very
eloquent, Horus," Colin said, tone carefully neutral, "but—"
"But we must work
our passage, is that it?" Horus interrupted, and Colin nodded slowly.
"Why, so we think, as well.
"When Anu organized
his mutiny, Commander, Commander (BioSciences) Inanna picked the most suitable
psych profiles for recruitment. Even the Imperium had its malleable elements,
and she and Anu chose well. Some were merely frightened of death; others were
dissatisfied and saw a chance for promotion and power; still others were simply
bored and saw a chance for adventure. But what very few of them knew was that
Anu's inner circle had motives quite different from their own.
"Anu's professed
goal was to seize the ship and flee the Achuultani, but the plain truth of the
matter was that he, like many of the crew, no longer believed in the
Achuultani." Colin sat a bit straighter, eager to hear another
perspective—even one which might prove self-serving—on the mutiny, but he let
his face show doubt.
"Oh, the records
were there," Horus agreed, "but the Imperium was old,
Commander. We were regimented, disciplined, prepared for battle at the drop of
a hat—or that, at least, was the idea. Yet we'd waited too long for the enemy.
We were no longer attack dogs straining at the leash. We'd become creatures of
habit, and many of us believed deep in our souls that we were regimented and
controlled and trained for a purpose that no longer existed.
"Even those of us
who'd seen proof of the Achuultani's existence—dead planets, gutted star
systems, the wreckage of ancient battle fleets—had never seen the Achuultani,
and our people were not so very different from your own. Anything beyond your
own life experience wasn't quite 'real' to us. After seven thousand years in
which there were no new incursions, after five thousand years of preparation
for an attack that never came, after three thousand years of sending out probes
that found no sign of the enemy, it was hard to believe there still was
an enemy. We'd mounted guard too long, and perhaps we simply grew bored."
Horus shrugged. "But the fact remains that only a minority of us truly believed
in the Achuultani, and many of those were terrified.
"So Anu's chosen
pretext was shrewd. It appealed to the frightened, gave an excuse to the
disaffected, and offered the bored the challenge of a new world to conquer, one
beyond the stultifying reach of the Imperium. Yet it was only a pretext,
for Anu himself sought escape from neither the Achuultani nor from boredom. He
wanted Dahak for himself, and he had no intention of marooning the
loyalists upon Earth."
Colin knew he was
leaning forward and suspected his face was giving away entirely too much, yet
there was nothing he could do about it. This was a subtly different story from
the one Dahak had given him, but it made sense.
And perhaps the
difference wasn't so strange. The data in Dahak's memory was all the reality
there was for the old starship—before it found itself operating completely on
its own, at least. He'd noticed that the computer never used a personal pronoun
to denote itself or its actions or responses prior to or immediately following
the mutiny, and he thought he knew why. "Comp Cent" had been intended
purely as a data and systems management tool to be used only under direct human
supervision; Dahak's present, fully-developed self-awareness was a product of
fifty-one millennia of continuous, unsupervised operation. And if that
awareness had evolved after the mutiny, why should the computer question
its basic data? To the records, unlike the merely human personnel who had
crewed the vast ship, the Achuultani's existence was axiomatic and
incontestable, and so it had become for Dahak. Why should he doubt that
it was equally so for humanity? Particularly if that had been Anu's
"official" reason? Of course it made sense . . . and Dahak himself
was aware of his own lack of imagination, of empathy for the human condition.
"I believe,"
Horus's heavy voice recaptured Colin's attention, "that Anu is mad. I
believe he was mad even then, but I may be wrong. Yet he truly believed that,
backed by Dahak's power, he could overthrow the Imperium itself.
"I can't believe he
could have succeeded, however disaffected portions of the population might have
become, but what mattered was that he believed he had some sort of
divine mission to conquer the Imperium, and the seizure of the ship was but the
first step in that endeavor.
"Yet he had to move
carefully, so he lied to us. He intended all along to massacre anyone who
refused to join him, but because he knew many of his adherents would balk at
that he pretended differently. He even yielded to our insistence that the
hypercom spares be loaded aboard the transports we believed would carry the
marooned loyalists to Earth so that, in time, they might build a hypercom and
call for help. And he promised us a surgical operation, Commander. His
carefully prepared teams would seize the critical control nodes, cut Comp Cent
from the net, and present Senior Fleet Captain Druaga with a fait accompli.
"And we believed
him," Horus almost whispered. "May the Maker forgive us, we believed
him, though if we'd bothered to think even for a moment, we would have known
better. With so little of the core crew—no more than seven thousand at
best—with us, his 'surgical operation' was an impossibility. When he stockpiled
combat armor and weapons and had his people in Logistics sabotage as much other
armor as they possibly could, we should have realized. But we didn't. Not until
the fighting broke out and the blood began to flow. Not until it was far too
late to change sides."
Horus fell silent, and
Colin stared at him, willing him to continue yet aware the other must pause and
gather himself. Intellectually, he knew it could all be a self-serving lie;
instinctively, he knew it was the truth, at least as Horus believed it.
"The final moments
aboard Dahak were a nightmare, Commander," the old man said
finally. "Red Two, Internal, had been set. Lifeboats were ejecting. We
were falling back to Bay Ninety-One, running for our lives, afraid we wouldn't
make it, sickened by the bloodshed. But once we'd left Dahak astern, we
were faced with what we'd done. More than that, we knew—or some of us did, at
least—what Anu truly was. And so this ship, Nergal, deserted Anu."
Horus smiled wryly as
Colin blinked in surprise.
"Yes, Commander, we
were double mutineers. We ran for it—just this one ship, with barely two
hundred souls aboard—and somehow, in the confusion, we escaped Anu's scanners
and hid from him.
"Our plan, such as
it was, was simplicity itself. We knew Anu had prepared a contingency plan that
was supposed to give him control of the ship no matter what happened, though we
had no idea what it was. We speculated that it concerned the ship's power,
since he was Chief Engineer, but all that really mattered was that he would
eventually win his prize and depart. Remember that we still half-believed his
promise to leave any loyalists marooned behind him, Commander. And because we
did, we planned to emerge from hiding after he left and do what we could for
the survivors in an effort to atone for our crime and—I will admit it
frankly—as the only thing we could think of that might win us some clemency
when the Imperium found us at last.
"But, of course, it
didn't work out that way," he said quietly, "for Anu's plan failed.
Somehow, Dahak remained at least partially operational, destroying every
parasite sent towards it. And it never went away, either. It hung above him,
like your own Sword of Damocles, inviolate, taunting him.
"If he hadn't been
mad before, Commander, he went mad then. He sent most of his followers into stasis—to
wait out Dahak's final 'inevitable' collapse—while only his immediate
henchmen, who knew what he'd truly planned all along, remained awake. And once
he had total control, he showed his true colors.
"Tell me, Commander
MacIntyre, have you ever wondered what happened to all Dahak's other
bridge officers? Or how beings such as ourselves—such as you now are—with
lifespans measured in centuries and strength and endurance far beyond that of
Terra-born humans, could decivilize so utterly? It took your kind barely five
hundred years to move from matchlocks and pikes to the atom bomb. From crude
sailing ships to outer space. Doesn't it seem strange that almost a quarter
million Imperial survivors should lose all technology?"
"I've . . .
wondered," Colin admitted. He had, and not even Dahak had been able to
tell him. All the computer knew was that when he became functional once more,
the surviving loyalists had reverted to a subsistence-level hunter-gatherer
technology and showed no particular desire to advance further.
"The answer is
simple, Commander. Anu hunted them down. He tracked the surviving bridge
officers by their implant signatures and butchered them to finish off any
surviving chain of command. And for revenge, of course. And whenever a cluster
of survivors tried to rebuild their technology, he wiped them out. He quartered
this planet, Commander MacIntyre, seeking out the lifeboats with operational
power plants and blowing them apart, making certain he alone monopolized
technology, that no possible threat to him remained. The survivors soon learned
primitivism was the only way they could survive."
"But your
tech base survived," Colin said coldly, and Horus winced.
"True," he
said heavily, "but look about you, Commander. How much tech base do we
truly have? A single carefully-hidden battleship. We lack the infrastructure to
build anything more, and if we'd attempted to build that infrastructure, Anu would
have found us as he found the loyalists who made the same attempt. We might
have given a good account of ourselves, but with only one ship against seven of
the same class, plus escorts, we would have achieved nothing beyond an heroic
death."
He held out one hand,
palm upward in an eloquent gesture of helplessness, and Colin felt an unwilling
sympathy for the man, much as he had for Dahak when he first heard the
starship's story. Unlike Dahak, these people had built their own
purgatory brick by brick, but that made it no less a purgatory.
"So what did you
do?" he asked finally.
"We hid,
Commander," Horus admitted. "Our own plans had gone hopelessly wrong,
for Anu couldn't leave. So we activated Nergal's stealth systems and
hid, biding our time, and we, too, went into stasis."
Of course they'd hidden,
Colin thought, and that explained why Dahak had never suspected there might be
more than a single faction of mutineers. Anu must have been mad with the need
to find and destroy them, for they and they alone had posed a threat to him.
And if they'd hidden so well he couldn't find them with Imperial
instrumentation, then how could Dahak, who didn't even know to look for them,
find them with the same instrumentation?
"We hid,"
Horus continued, "but we set our own monitors to watch for any activity on
Anu's part. We dared not challenge his enclave's defenses with our single ship.
I am—was—a missile specialist, Commander, and I know. Not even Dahak
could crack his main shield without a saturation bombardment. We didn't have
the firepower, and his automatics would have blown us out of existence before
his stasis generators could even spin down to wake him."
"And so you just
sat here," Colin said flatly, but his tone said he knew better. There were
too many Terra-born in this compartment.
"No,
Commander," Horus said, and his voice accepted the knowledge behind
Colin's statement. "We've tried to fight him, over the millennia, but
there was little we could do. It was obvious the threat of an evolving
indigenous technology would be enough to spark Anu's intervention, and so our
computers were set to wake us when local civilizations appeared. We interacted
with the early civilizations of your Fertile Crescent—" he grinned wryly
as Colin suddenly connected his own name with the Egyptian pantheon "—in
an effort to temper their advance, but Anu was watching, as well. Several of
our people were killed when he suddenly reappeared, and it was he who shaped
the Sumerian and Babylonian cultures. It was he who led the Hsia Dynasty in the
destruction of the neolithic cultural centers of China, and we who lent the
Shang Dynasty clandestine aid to rebuild, and that was only one of the battles
we fought.
"Yet we had to work
secretly, hiding from him, effecting tiny changes, hoping for the best. Worse,
there were but two hundred of us, and Anu had thousands. We couldn't rotate our
personnel as he could—at least, that was what we thought he was doing—and we
grew old far, far more quickly than he. But worst of all, Commander, was the
attitude Anu's followers developed. They call your people 'degenerates,' did
you know that?"
Colin nodded,
remembering Girru's words in a chamber of horror that had once been a friend's
study.
"They're
wrong," Horus said harshly. "They're the degenerates. Anu's
madness has infected them all. His people are twisted, poisoned by their power.
Perhaps they've played the roles of gods too long, for they've come to believe
they are gods, and Earth's people are toys to be manipulated and
enjoyed. It was horrible enough for the first four thousand years of
interaction, but it's grown worse since. Where once they feared the rise of a
technology that might threaten them, now they crave one that will let them
escape the prison of this planet . . . and they couldn't care less how much
suffering they inflict along the way. Indeed, they see that suffering as a
spectacle, a gladiatorial slaughter to entertain them and while away the years.
"Let's be honest
with one another, Commander MacIntyre. Humans, whether Imperials or born of
your planet, are humans. There are good and bad among all of us, as our very
presence here proves, and Earth's people would have inflicted sufficient
suffering on themselves without Anu, but he and his have made it far, far
worse. They've toppled civilizations by provoking and encouraging barbarian
invasions—from the Hittites to the Hsia, the Achaeans, the Huns, the Vikings,
and the Mongols—but even worse, in some ways, is what they've done since
abandoning that policy. They helped fuel the Hundred Years' War, and the Thirty
Years' War, and Europe's ruthless imperialism, both for enjoyment and to create
power blocs that could pave the way for the scientific and industrial
revolutions. And when progress wasn't rapid enough to suit them, they provoked
the First World War, and the Second, and the Cold War.
"We've done what we
could to mitigate their excesses, but our best efforts have been paltry. They
haven't dared come into the open for fear that Dahak might remain
sufficiently operational to strike at them—and, perhaps, because the sheer
number of people on this planet frightens them—but they could always act more
openly than we.
"Yet we've never
given up, Commander MacIntyre!" The old man's voice was suddenly harsh,
glittering with a strange fire, and Colin swallowed. That suddenly fiery tone
was almost fanatical, and he shook free of Horus's story, making himself step
back and wondering if perhaps his captors hadn't gone more than a bit mad
themselves.
"No. We've never
given up," Horus said more softly. "And if you'll let us, we'll prove
that to you."
"How?" Colin's
flat voice refused to offer any hope. Try though he might, it was hard to doubt
Horus's sincerity. Yet it was his duty to doubt it. It was his
responsibility—his, and his alone—to doubt everyone, question everything.
Because if he made a mistake—another mistake, he thought bitterly—then
all of Dahak's lonely wait would be in vain and the Achuultani would take them
all.
"We'll help you
against Anu," Horus said, his voice equally flat, his eyes level.
"And afterward, we will surrender ourselves to the Imperium."
"Nay!" Jiltanith still
pointed the suppresser at Colin, but her free hand rose like a claw, and her
dark, vital face was fierce. "Now I say thee nay! Hast given too freely
for this world, Father! Thou and all thy fellows!"
"Hush,
'Tanni," Horus said softly. He clasped the shoulders of the young
woman—his daughter, which, Colin suddenly realized, made her Isis Tudor's older
sister—and shook her very gently. "It's our decision. It's not even a
matter for the Council, and you know it."
Jiltanith's tight face
was furious with objection, and Horus sighed and gathered her close, staring
into Colin's face over her shoulder.
"We ask only one
thing in return, Commander," he said softly.
"What?" Colin
asked quietly.
"Immunity—pardon,
if you will—for those like 'Tanni." The girl stiffened in his arms, trying
to thrust him away, but he held her easily with one arm. The other hand rose,
covering her lips to still her furious protests.
"They were children,
Commander, with no part in our crime, and many of them have died trying to undo
it. Can even the Imperium punish them for that?"
The proud old face was
pleading, the dark, ancient eyes almost desperate, and Colin recognized the
justice of the plea.
"If—and I say if—you
can convince me of your sincerity and ability to help," he said slowly,
"I'll do my best. I can't promise any more than that."
"I know,"
Horus said. "But you will try?"
"I will,"
Colin replied levelly.
The old man regarded him
a moment longer, then took the suppresser gently from Jiltanith. She fought him
a moment, surrendering the device with manifest reluctance, and Horus hugged
her gently. His eyes were understanding and sad, but a small smile played around
his lips as he looked down at it.
"In that
case," he said, "we'll just have to convince you. Please meet us
half-way by not transmitting to Dahak, at least until we've finished
talking."
And he switched off the
suppresser.
For just an instant
Colin sat absolutely motionless. The other Imperials on the command bridge were
suddenly bright presences, glowing with their own implants, and he felt his
computer feeds come on line. Nergal's computers were far brighter than
those of the cutter that had returned him to Earth, and they recognized a
bridge officer when they met one. After fifty millennia, they had someone to
report to properly, and the surge of their data cores tingled in his brain like
alien fire, feeding him information and begging for orders.
Colin's eyes met Horus's
as he recognized the risk the old man had just taken, for no new security codes
had been buried in Nergal's electronic brain. From the instant Colin's
feeds tapped into those computers, they were his. He, not Horus,
controlled the ancient battleship, external weapons and internal security
systems alike.
But trust was a
two-edged sword.
"I suppose that, as
head of your council, you're also captain of this ship?" he said calmly,
and the old man nodded.
"Then sit down,
Captain, and tell me how we're going to beat Anu."
Horus nodded once more,
sharply, and sat beside Isis. Colin never glanced away from his new ally's
face, but he didn't have to; he could feel the gathered council's
tension draining away about him.
Colin leaned back and
propped his heels on his desk. The quarters the mutineers (if that was still
the proper word) had assigned him were another attempt to prove their
sincerity, for this was the captain's cabin, fitted with neural relays to the
old battleship's computers. He could not keep them from retaking Nergal,
but, like the millennia-dead Druaga, he could insure that they would recapture
only a hulk.
Which, Colin thought,
was shrewd of Horus, whether he was truly sincere or not.
He sighed and pinched
the bridge of his nose, wishing desperately that he could contact Dahak, yet he
dared not. He knew where he was now—buried five kilometers under the Canadian
Rockies near Churchill Peak—but the recent clash had roused Anu's vengeful
search for Nergal to renewed heights, and if the southerners should
detect Colin's com link, their missiles would arrive before even Dahak
could do anything to stop them.
The same applied to any
effort to reach Dahak physically. He was lucky he hadn't been spotted on
the way in, despite his cutter's stealth systems; now that the marooned
Imperials' long, hidden conflict had heated back up, there was no way anything
of Imperial manufacture could head out of the planetary atmosphere
without being spotted and killed.
It was maddening. He'd
acquired a support team just as determined to destroy Anu as he was, yet it was
pathetically weak compared to its enemies and there was no way to inform Dahak
it even existed! Worse, Anshar's energy gun had reduced the suppresser to
wreckage, and Nergal's repair facilities were barely sufficient to run
diagnostics on what remained, much less fix it.
Colin was deeply
impressed by what the northerners had achieved over the centuries, but very
little of what he'd found in Nergal's memory had been good, aside from
the confirmation that Horus had told him the truth about what had happened
after he and his fellows boarded Nergal.
The old battleship's
memory was long overdue for purging, for Nergal's builders had designed
her core programming to insure that accurate combat reports came back to her
mothership. No one could alter that data in any way until Nergal's
master computer dumped a complete copy into Dahak's data base.
For fifty thousand
years, the faithful, moronic genius had carefully logged everything as it
happened, and while molecular memories could store an awesome amount of data,
there was so much in Nergal's that just finding it was frustratingly
slow. Yet that crowded memory gave him a record that was accurate, unalterable,
and readily—if not quickly—available.
There was, of course,
far too much data for any human mind to assimilate, but he could skim the high
points, and it had been hard to maintain his nonexpression as he did. If
anything, Horus had understated the war he and his fellows had fought. Direct
clashes were infrequent, but there had been only two hundred and three adult
northerners at the start, and age, as well as casualties, had winnowed their
ranks. Fewer than seventy of them remained.
He and Horus had
lingered, conferring with one another and the computers through their feeds
while the rest of the Council went on about their duties. Only Horus's
daughters had stayed.
Isis had interjected
only an occasional word as she tried to follow their half-spoken, half-silent
conversation, but Jiltanith had been a silent, sullen presence in their link.
She'd neither offered nor asked anything, but her cold, bitter loathing for all
he was had appalled Colin.
He'd never realized
emotions could color the link, perhaps because his only previous use of it had
been with Dahak, without the side-band elements involved when human met human
through an electronic intermediary. Or perhaps it was simply that her bitter
emotions were so strong. He'd wondered why Horus didn't ask her to withdraw,
but then, he had many questions about Jiltanith and her place in the small,
strange community he'd never suspected might exist.
It was fortunate Horus
had been able to meet him in the computers. Some vocalization was necessary to
set data in context, but the old mutineer had led him unerringly through the
data banks, and his memory went back, replaying that first afternoon as if it
were today. . . .
* * *
"All right,"
Colin sighed finally, rubbing his temples wearily. "I don't know about you
folks, but I need a break before my brain fries."
Horus nodded
understandingly; Jiltanith only sniffed, and Colin suppressed an urge to snap
at her.
"I've got to say,
this Anu is an even nastier bastard than I expected," he went on, his
voice hardening with the change of subject. "I'd wondered how he could
ride herd on all his faithful followers, but I never expected this."
"I know,"
Horus looked down at the backs of his powerful, age-spotted hands. "But it
makes sense, in a gruesome sort of way. After all, unlike us, he does have an
intact medical capability."
"But to use it like
that," Colin said, and his shudder was not at all affected, for
"gruesome" was a terribly pale word for what Anu had done. Dahak
hadn't suggested such things were possible, but Colin supposed he should have
known they were.
Anu's problem had been
two-fold. First, how did he and his inner circle—no more than eight hundred
strong—control five thousand Imperials who would, for the most part, be as
horrified as Horus to learn the truth about their leader? And, secondly, how
could even fully-enhanced Imperials oversee the manipulation of an entire
planet without withering away from old age before they could create the
technology they needed to escape it?
The medical science of
the Imperium had provided a psychopathically elegant solution to both problems
at once. The "unreliable" elements were simply never reawakened, and
while stasis also allowed the mutineer leaders to sleep away centuries at need,
Anu and his senior lieutenants had been awake a long time. By now, Horus
calculated, Anu was on his tenth replacement body.
Imperial science had
mastered the techniques of cloning to provide surgical transplants before the
advent of reliable regeneration, but that had been so long ago cloning was
almost a lost art. Only the most comprehensive medical centers retained the
capability for certain carefully-delimited, individually-licensed experimental
programs, and the use even of clones for this purpose was punishable by
death for all concerned. Yet heinous as that would have been in the eyes of the
Imperium's intricate, iron-bound code of bioscience morality, what Anu had
actually done was worse. When old age overtook him, he simply selected a
candidate from among the mutineers in stasis and had its brain removed for his
own to displace. As long as his supply of bodies held out, he was effectively
immortal.
The same was true of his
lieutenants, but while only Imperial bodies were good enough for Anu and Inanna
and their most trusted henchmen, others—like Anshar—were forced to make do with
Terra-born bodies. There was a greater danger of tissue rejection in that, but
there were compensations. The range of choices was vast, and Inanna's medical
technology, though limited compared to Dahak's, was quite capable of
basic enhancement of Terra-born bodies.
* * *
Colin returned to the
present with a shudder. Even now, thinking about it sent a physical shiver down
his spine. It horrified him almost as much as the approaching Achuultani
horrified Horus. Desperation had blazed in the old Imperial's eyes when he
learned the enemy he'd never quite believed in was actually coming, but Colin
had been given months to adjust to that. This was different. The victims'
tragedy was one he could grasp, not a galactic one, and that made it something
he could relate to . . . and hate.
And perhaps, as Horus
had suggested, it also helped to explain why Anu continued to operate so
clandestinely. His followers had gone trustingly into stasis and were unable to
resist his depredations, but there were simply too many Terrans to be readily
controlled, and Colin doubted Earth's humanity would react calmly to the
knowledge that high-tech vampires were harvesting them.
Yet Anu's ghastly
perversions only emphasized the huge difference between his capabilities and
those of his northern opponents. Nergal was a warship. Thirty percent of
her impressive tonnage was committed to propulsion and power, ten percent to
command and control systems, another ten percent to defensive systems, and forty
percent to armor, offensive weaponry, and magazine space. That left only ten
percent to accommodate her three-hundred-man crew and its life support, which
meant even living space was cramped.
That mattered little
under normal circumstances, for she was designed for short-term
deployments—certainly no more than a few months at a time. She didn't even have
a proper stasis installation; her people had been forced to cobble one up, and
their success was a far-from-minor miracle. But because her intended deployments
were so short, Nergal's sickbay was limited. Anu and his butchers could
select Terra-born bodies and convert them to their own use; the northerners
couldn't even offer implants to their own Terra-born descendants.
Yet they'd had no choice
but to have those descendants, for without them they would have failed long ago
from sheer lack of numbers.
It had been a bitter
decision, though Horus had tried to hide his pain from Colin. Horus had lived
over five centuries and Isis less than one, yet his daughter was old and frail
while he remained strong. Colin could have consulted the record to learn how
many other children Horus had loved as he all too obviously loved Isis yet seen
wither and die, but he hadn't. That unimaginable sorrow was Horus's alone, and
he would not intrude upon it.
Yet it was possible the
situation was even worse for the ones like Jiltanith, whose bodies were neither
Imperial nor Terran. Jiltanith had received the neural boosters, computer and
sensory implants, and regeneration treatments, but her muscles and bones and
organs had been too immature for enhancement before the mutiny. Which might go
a long way towards explaining her bitter resentment. He, a Terra-born human who
had grown to adulthood in blissful ignorance of the battle being waged upon his
planet, had received the full treatment. She hadn't. And unless the people she
loved surrendered to the Imperium's justice, she never could have it.
Colin knew there was
more to her hate than that, though he had yet to discover its full range, but
understanding that much helped him cope with her bitterness.
Unfortunately, there was
little he could do about it, nor did he know how the legal situation would be
resolved—assuming, of course, that they won. Somehow, he'd never considered the
possibility of children among the mutineers, and Dahak had never mentioned them
to him.
That was a bad sign, and
not one he was prepared to share with his allies. To Dahak, anyone who had
accompanied Anu in his flight to Earth was a mutineer. That fundamental
assumption infused everything the computer had ever said, and no distinction
had ever been drawn between child and adult, but Colin had meant what he
promised. If the northerners helped him against Anu, he would do what he could
for their children. And, though he hadn't promised it, for them . . . if he
ever got the chance to try.
He leaned further back
and crossed his ankles. If there were only more time! Time for Anu's present
furious search to die down, for him to return to Dahak, to act on the
information he'd received and plan anew. That was what Horus had hoped for, but
the Achuultani were coming. Whatever they meant to do, they must do it soon,
and the sober truth was that the odds were hopeless.
The northerners undoubtedly
had the edge in sheer numbers, at least over the southerners Anu would trust
out of stasis, but only sixty-seven of their people were full Imperials, and
all of them were old. Another eighteen were like Jiltanith, capable of getting
full performance out of Imperial equipment, but utterly outclassed in any
one-to-one confrontation. The three thousand-odd Terra-born members of Nergal's
"crew" would be at a hopeless disadvantage with their pathetic
touchpads and telephones if they had to fight people who could link their minds
directly into their weapons. They couldn't even manage combat armor, for they
lacked the implants to activate the internal circuitry.
And, of course, they had
the resources of exactly one battleship. One battleship against seven—not to
mention the heavy cruisers, the fixed ground weapons, and Anu's powerful
shield. From a practical viewpoint, he might as well have been alone if it came
to confronting the southerners openly.
But there were a few
good points. For one, the northerners' intelligence system had been in
operation for millennia, and an extended network of Terra-born contacts like
Sandy supported their guerrilla-like campaign. They'd even managed to establish
clandestine contact with two of Anu's "loyal" henchmen. It would be
foolhardy to trust those communications too much, and they were handled with
extraordinary care to avoid any traps, but they explained how the northerners
knew so much about events in the southern enclave.
He opened his eyes and
stood. His thoughts were racing in ever narrowing circles, and he felt as if
they were about to implode. He needed to spend some more time talking to Horus
in hopes some inspiration might break itself loose.
God knew they needed
one.
* * *
He looked for Horus, but
the chief northerner wasn't aboard. Colin was acutely uneasy whenever Horus—or any
of the Imperials—left the protection of Nergal's stealth systems, but
the northerners seemed to take it in stride. Of course, they'd had quite a
while longer to accustom themselves to such risks.
And it was inevitable
that they run them, for they couldn't possibly gather their full numbers aboard
the battleship. Many of the Terra-born had gone to ground when Cal's family was
killed, but others went on about their everyday lives with a courage that
humbled Colin, and that meant the Imperials had to leave Nergal
occasionally, for only they could operate the battleship's stealthed
auxiliaries. It was dangerous to use them, even flying nape-of-the-earth
courses fit to terrify a hardened rotor-jockey, but they had too few security
coms to tie their network together without them. Colin wished Horus would leave
such risks to others, but he'd come to understand the old man too well to
suggest it.
For all that, he bit his
tongue against a groan of resignation when he entered the command bridge and
found not Horus but his daughters.
Jiltanith stood as he
entered, bristling with the instant hostility his presence always evoked, but
Isis managed a smile of greeting. Colin glanced covertly at Jiltanith's lovely
face and considered the virtues of a discreet retreat, yet that would be unwise
in the long run. So he seated himself deliberately in the captain's chair and
met her hot eyes levelly.
"Good afternoon, ladies.
I was looking for your father."
"Shalt not find him
here," Jiltanith said pointedly. He ignored the hint, and she glared at
him. If she'd truly been the cat she resembled, she would be lashing her tail
and flexing her claws, he thought.
" 'Tanni," Isis
said quietly, but Jiltanith gave an angry little headshake and stalked out.
Isis watched her go and sighed.
"That girl!"
she said resignedly, then smiled wryly at Colin. "I'm afraid she's taking
it badly, Commander."
"Please," he
smiled himself, a bit sadly, "after all that's happened, I wish you'd call
me Colin."
"Of course.
Colin."
"I . . . haven't
had a chance to tell you how sorry I am." She raised a hand, but he shook
his head. "No. It's kind of you, and I don't want to hurt you by talking
about it, but I need to say it." Her hand fell to her lap, folding about
its fellow, and she lowered her eyes to her thin fingers.
"Cal was my
friend," he said softly, "and I rushed in, flashing around Imperial
technology like some new toy, and got his entire family killed. I know I
couldn't have known what I was doing, but that doesn't change the facts. He's
dead, and I'm responsible."
"If you want to put
it that way," Isis said gently, "but he and Frances knew the risks.
If that sounds callous it isn't meant to, but it's true. I raised him after his
parents died, and I loved him, just as I loved my granddaughter-in-law and my
great-granddaughters, but we always knew it could happen. Just as Andy knew
when he married me." She looked up with a misty smile, her lined face
creased with memories, and Colin swallowed.
"There's something
I don't quite understand," he said after a moment. "How could your
father produce the work he produced as Horace Hidachi and still take the risk
of having children? And why did he do it at all?"
"Have a child or
produce the work?" Isis asked with a chuckle, and Colin felt some of their
shared sorrow fall from his shoulders.
"Both," he
said.
"It was a
risk," she concluded, "but the fact that 'Hidachi' was Oriental
helped cover his appearance—we've always found that useful, though the
emergence of the Asian Alliance has complicated things lately—and he chose his
time and place carefully. Clemson University is a fine school, one of the top
four tech schools in the country, but that's a fairly recent development. It
wasn't exactly on the frontiers of physics at the time, and he published in the
most obscure journal he could find. And there were some deliberate errors in
his work, you know. All that, plus the fact that he never went further than pure
theory, was intended to convince any of Anu's people who noticed it that he was
a Terran who didn't even realize the significance of his own work.
"As for having
me," she smiled more naturally, "that was an accident. Mom was his
eighth wife—'Tanni's mother died during the mutiny—and, frankly, she thought
she was too old to conceive and got a bit careless. When they found out she was
pregnant, it scared them, but they never considered an abortion, for which I
can only be grateful." She grinned, and her eyes sparkled for the first
time Colin could remember.
"But it was a
problem. As a rule, none of our Imperials interact openly with the Terran
community, and on the rare occasions when they do, they appear and disappear
without a trace. They almost always act solo, as well, which meant he and Mom
had already stepped totally out of character. That very fact was a form of
protection for them, and they decided to add me to it and hope for the best.
And it helped that Mom was Terra-born, blonde, and a little, bitty thing. She
and I both looked very little like Imperials."
Colin nodded. No one in
his right mind would offer his family up for massacre; hence the presence of a
family was a strong indication that "Horace Hidachi" was not an
Imperial at all. It made a dangerous sort of sense, but he shivered at the
thought, and wished he might have had the chance to meet the quite
extraordinary "little, bitty" woman who had been Isis's mother.
"Still," Isis
went on sadly, "we knew they'd keep an eye on 'Hidachi's' family. That's
why I went into medicine and Michael was a stockbroker. We both stayed as far
away from physics as we could, but Cal was too much like his great-granddad. He
was determined to play an active part."
"I still don't
understand why, though. Why risk so much to plant a theory the
mutin—" Colin broke off and flushed, and Isis gave a soft, musical laugh.
"Sorry," he
said after a moment. "I meant, why risk so much to plant a theory that
Anu's bunch already knew?"
"Why, Colin!"
Isis rolled her eyes almost roguishly. "Here you sit, precisely because
that theory was made available to the space program. If the southerners hadn't
followed up, we would've had to push it ourselves, sooner or later, because we
needed for your survey instruments to be developed. Of course, Dad and Mom were
pretty confident 'Anu's bunch,' as you put it, would pursue it once they
noticed it—the 'Hidachi Theory of Gravitonics' is the foundation of the
Imperial sublight and Enchanach Drives, after all—but we couldn't be certain.
One reason we wanted them to believe a 'degenerate' had set the stage for it
was to be sure they produced the hardware rather than opposing its
development, because the entire point was to do exactly what we did: provoke a
reaction from Dahak, one way or the other."
"Provoke Dahak?"
Colin pinched his nose. "Wasn't that a bit, um, risky?"
"Of course it was,
but our Imperials are getting old, Colin. When they go, the rest of us will
carry on as best we can, but our position will be even more hopeless. The
Council had no idea Dahak was fully functional, but we were already
placing a lot of our people in the space program, like Sandy and Cal. Besides,
if the human race generally knew what was up there, functional or not, Anu's
position would be far more tenuous."
"Why?"
"We never
contemplated what Dahak actually did, Colin, but something had to
happen. Anu might try to take over any exploration of the ship, but we were
prepared to fight him—clandestinely, but rather effectively—unless he came into
the open. And if he had come out into the open, don't you think he'd've
needed more than just his inner circle to control the resulting chaos?"
"Oh! You figured if
he risked waking the others and they discovered all he'd been up to, he might
get hit from behind by a revolt."
"Exactly. Oh, it
was a terrible chance to take, but as I say, we were getting desperate. At the
very least, it might be a way to add a new factor to the equation. Then too,
we've always had a lot of people in the space program. It was
possible—even probable—that if the ship was partially functional one of our own
Terra-born might have gotten inside. Frankly—" she met his gaze levelly
"—we'd hoped Vlad Chernikov would fly your mission."
"Vlad? Don't
tell me he's one of yours!"
"Not if you'd
rather I didn't," she said, and he laughed helplessly. It was his first
laughter since Sean's death, and he was amazed by how much it helped.
"Well, I will be
damned," he said at last, then cocked an eyebrow. "But isn't it also
a bit risky to plant so many people in the very area where Anu is pushing
hardest?"
"Colin, everything
we've ever done has been a risk. Of course we took chances—terrible
ones, sometimes—but Anu's own control is pretty indirect. Both sides know a
great deal about what the other is up to—we more than him, we hope—but he can't
afford to go around killing everyone he simply suspects."
She paused, and her
voice was grimmer when she continued.
"Still, he's killed
a lot on suspicion. 'Accidents' are his favorite method, but remember that
shuttle Black Mecca shot down?" Colin nodded, and she shrugged. "That
was Anu. It amuses him to use 'degenerate' terrorists to do his dirty work, and
their fanaticism makes them easy to influence. Major Lemoine was aboard that
shuttle, and he was one of ours. We don't know how Anu got on to him, but
that's why so much terrorism's focused on aerospace lately. In fact, Black
Mecca's claimed credit for what happened to Cal and the girls."
"Lord." Colin
shook his head and leaned forward, bracing his elbows on the console and propping
his chin on his palms. "All this time, and no one ever suspected. It's
hard to believe."
"There've been a
few times we thought it was all over," Isis said. "Once we even
thought they'd actually found Nergal. In fact, that's why Jiltanith was
ever brought out of stasis at all."
"Hm? Oh! Getting
the kids out just in case?"
"Precisely. That
was about six hundred years ago, and it was the worst scare we ever had. The
Council had recruited quite a few Terra-born even then—and you'd better believe
they had trouble adjusting to the whole idea!—and some of them took the
children and scattered out across the planet. Which also explains 'Tanni's
English; she learned it during the Wars of the Roses."
"I see." Colin
drew a deep breath and held it for just a moment. Somehow the thought of that
beautiful girl having grown up in fifteenth-century England was more sobering
than anything else that had happened so far.
"Isis," he
said finally, "how old is Jiltanith? Out of stasis, I mean."
"A bit older than
me." His face betrayed his shock, and she smiled gently. "We
Terra-born have learned to live with it, Colin. Actually, I don't know who it's
harder on, us or our Imperials. But 'Tanni went back into stasis when she was
twenty and came back out while Dad was still being Hidachi."
"She doesn't like
me much, does she?" Colin said glumly.
"She's a very
unhappy girl," Isis said, then laughed softly. "Girl! She's older
than I am, but I still think of her that way. And she is only a girl as
far as the Imperials are concerned. She's the 'youngest' of them all, and
that's always been hard on her. She fought Dad when he sent her back into
stasis because she wants to do something, Colin. She feels cheated, and
I can't really blame her. It's not her fault she's stuck here, and there's a
conflict in her own mind. She loves Dad, but his actions during the mutiny are
what did all this to her, and remember her mother was actually killed during
the fighting." She shook her head sadly.
"Poor 'Tanni's
never had a normal life. Those fourteen years she spent in England were the
closest she ever came, and even then her foster parents had to keep her under
virtual house arrest, given that her appearance wasn't exactly European. I
think that's why she refuses to speak modern English.
"But you're right
about how she feels about you. I'm afraid she blames you for what happened to
Cal's family . . . and especially the girls. She was very close to Harriet,
especially." Isis's mouth drooped, but she blinked back the threatened
tears and continued.
"She knows,
intellectually, that you couldn't have known what would happen. She even knows
you killed the people who killed them, and none of us exactly believe in
turning the other cheek. But the fact that you were ultimately responsible ties
in with the fact that you've not only effectively supplanted Dad after he's
fought for so long, but that you're an active threat to him, as well. Even if
we succeed, Dad faces charges because whatever he's done since, he was a
mutineer. And, frankly, she resents you."
"Because I've moved
in on your operation?" he asked gently. "Or for another reason, as
well?"
"Of course there's
another reason, and I see you know what it is. But can you blame her? Can't you
see it from her side? You're the commanding officer of Dahak, a starship
that's like a dream to all of us Terra-born, a combination of heaven and hell.
But it's a dream whose decks 'Tanni actually walked . . . and lost for
something she never did. She's spent her entire adult life fighting to
undo the wrong others did, and now you, simply by virtue of being the first
Terra-born human to enter the ship, have become not just a crew member, but its
commander. Why should you have that and not her? Why should you have a
complete set of implants—a bridge officer's, no less—while she has only bits
and pieces?"
Isis fell silent,
studying his face as if looking for something, then nodded slightly.
"But worst of all,
Colin, she's a fighter. She wouldn't stand a chance hand to hand against an
Imperial, and she knows it, but she's a fighter. She's spent her life in the
shadows, fighting other shadows, always indirectly, protected by Dad and the
others because she's weaker than they are, unable to fight her enemies face to
face. Surely you understand how much that hurts?"
"I do," Colin
said softly. "I do," he said more firmly, "and I'll bear it in
mind, but we all have to fight Anu, Isis. I can't have her fighting me."
"I don't think she
will." Isis paused again, frowning. "I don't think she will,
but she's not feeling exactly . . . reasonable, just now."
"I know. But if she
does fight me, it could ruin everything. Too much depends not only on
smashing Anu but finding a way to stop the Achuultani. If she can't work with
me, I certainly can't let her work against me."
"What . . . what
will you do?" Isis asked softly.
"I won't hurt her,
if that's what you're afraid of. She's given too much—all of you have—for that.
But if she threatens what we're trying to do now, I won't have any choice but
to put her back into stasis."
"No! Please!"
Isis gripped his arm tightly. "That . . . that would be almost worse than
killing her, Colin!"
"I know," he
said gently. "I know what it would do to me, and I don't want to. Before
God, I don't want to. But if she fights me, I won't have a choice. Try to make
her understand that, Isis. She may take it better from you than from me."
The old woman looked at
him with tear-bright eyes and her lips trembled, but she nodded slowly and
patted his arm.
"I understand,
Colin," she said very softly. "I'll talk to her. And I understand. I
wish I didn't, but I do."
"Thank you,
Isis," he said quietly. He met her eyes a moment longer, then squeezed the
hand on his arm very gently and rose. An obscure impulse touched him, and he
bent to kiss her parchment cheek.
"Thank you,"
he said again, and left the command deck.
"Colin?"
Colin looked up in
sudden relief as Horus stuck his head in through his cabin door. The old man
had been more than two hours overdue the last time Colin checked with Nergal's
operations room.
"About time you got
back," he said, and Horus nodded and gripped his hand, but his smile was
odd, half-way between apology and a sort of triumph.
"Sorry," Horus
said. "I got tied up talking to one of our people. He's got a suggestion
so interesting I brought him back with me."
The old Imperial
gestured to the tall man behind him, and Colin glanced at the newcomer, taking
in the hard-trained body and salt-and-pepper temples. The stranger's nose was
almost as prominent as Colin's, but on him it looked good. He also wore the
uniform of the United States Marine Corps and a full colonel's eagles, but the
flash on his right shoulder bore the crossed daggers and parachute of the
Unified Special Forces Command.
Colin's right eyebrow
rose as he waved his guests to chairs. The USFC was the elite of the elite, its
members recruited from all branches of the service and trained for
"selective warfare"—the old "low-intensity conflict" of the
last century—and counter-terrorism. Labels meant little to Colin. Insurgent,
terrorist, guerrilla, or patriot. As far as he was concerned, anyone who chose
violence against the helpless as his means of protest deserved the same label:
barbarian, and the USFC was the United States' answer to the barbarians.
Like their ConEuropean,
Australian-Japanese, and Russian counterparts, the men and women of the USFC
were as adept at infiltration, information-gathering, and covert warfare as
they were with the conventional weapons of the soldier's trade. Unlike the rest
of the US military, they were an integral part of the intelligence community,
as much policemen and spies (and some, Colin knew, would add
"assassins") as soldiers. Not that it kept them from being elite
troops. USFC personnel were chosen only after proving themselves—thoroughly—in
their regular arms of service.
"Colin, this is
Hector MacMahan. In addition to his duties for the USFC, he's also the head of
our Terra-born intelligence network."
"Colonel,"
Colin said courteously, extending his hand again and reading the four rows of
ribbons under the parachutist and pilot's wings—both rotary wing and fixed. And
the crossed dagger and assault rifle of the USFC's close combat medal.
Impressive, he thought. Very impressive.
"Commander,"
MacMahan said. Then he grinned—slightly; his was not a face that lent itself to
effusive expressions. "Or should I say 'Fleet Captain'?"
"Commander will do
just fine, Colonel. That, or Colin." His guests sat, and Colin moved to
the small bar in the corner as he looked back and forth between them. "You
do seem to recruit only the best, Horus," he murmured.
"Thank you,"
Horus said with a smile. "In more ways than one. Hector is my
great-great-great-great-great-grandson."
"I prefer,"
the colonel said without a trace of a smile, "to think of myself as simply
your greatest grandson."
Colin chuckled and shook
his head.
"I'm still getting
used to all this, Colonel, but I was referring to your military credentials,
not your familial ones." He finished mixing drinks and moved out from
behind the bar. "I'm impressed. And if your suggestion was interesting
enough for Horus to bring you back with him, I'm eager to hear it."
"Of course. You
see—thank you." MacMahan took the drink Colin extended, sipped politely
once, then proceeded to ignore it. Colin sat back down in his swivel chair and
gestured for him to continue.
"You see," the
colonel began again, "I've been giving our situation a lot of thought. In
my own humble way, I'm as much a specialist as any of you rocket jockeys, and
I've nourished a few rather worrisome suspicions of late."
"Suspicions?"
Colin asked, his eyes suddenly intent.
"Yes, Com—Colin.
I'm in a unique position to study the terrorist mentality, and I've also had
the advantage of Granddad's input and Nergal's surveillance reports.
That's one reason I'm a colonel. My superiors don't know about my other
sources, and they think I'm a mighty savvy analyst."
Colin nodded. The
northerners' intelligence network—especially the old battleship's carefully
stealthed sensor arrays—would be tremendously helpful in MacMahan's line of
work, but the ribbons on his chest told Colin the colonel's superiors were
right about his native abilities, as well.
"The point is,
Colin, that Anu's people have been digging deeper and deeper into the terrorist
organizations. By now, they effectively control Black Mecca, the January
Twelfth Group, the Army of Allah, the Red Eyebrows, and a dozen other major and
minor outfits. That's ominous enough, if not too surprising—they've always been
right at home with butchers like that—but what bothers me are certain common
ideological (if I may be permitted the term) threads that have crept into the
policies of the groups they control.
"You see," he
furrowed his forehead, "these are some pretty unlikely soulmates. Black
Mecca and the Army of Allah hate each other even more than they hate the rest
of the world. Black Mecca wants to de-stabilize both the Islamic and
non-Islamic worlds to such an extent their radical fundamentalists can
establish a world-wide theocratic state, while the Army of Allah attacks
non-Islamic targets primarily as a means of forcing an unbridgeable split
between Islamics and non-Islamics. They don't want the rest of us;
they're a bunch of isolationists who want to shut everyone else out while they
attend to their concept of religious purity. Then there's the Red
Eyebrows. They grew out of the old punker/skinhead groups of the late
nineties, and they're just plain anarchists. They—"
MacMahan stopped himself
and waved a hand.
"I get carried away
sometimes, and the etiology of terrorism can wait. My point is that all these
different outfits share a growing, common interest in what I can only
call nihilism, and I don't think there's much doubt it stems from Anu's input.
His goals are becoming, whether they know it or not, their goals, and what's
scary about that is what it says about his own mind set."
The colonel seemed to
remember his drink and took another sip, then stared down into it for several
seconds, swirling the ice cubes.
"My outfit's always
had to try to think like the enemy, and I have to admit it can be almost
enjoyable. I hate the bastards, but it's almost like a game—like chess or
bridge, in a way—except that I haven't been enjoying it much of late. Because
there's a question that's been bothering me for the last few years, and
especially since Horus told me about you and Dahak: just how will Anu
react if he decides we can beat him? For that matter, how would he react to
simply knowing that Dahak is fully operational?
"And the reason that
bothers me is that I think Horus is right about him. I think the nihilism of
his terrorist toadies reflects his own nihilism and that if he ever decides his
position is hopeless—which it is, whatever happens to us, if Dahak's out
there—he might enjoy taking the whole planet with him."
Colin kept his body
relaxed and nodded slowly, but a cold wind seemed to have invaded the cabin.
"It makes sense,
Colin," Horus said quietly. "Hector's right about his nihilism.
Whatever he was once like, Anu likes destruction now. It's almost as if
it relieves his frustration, and it's probably part of his whole addiction to
power, as well. But whatever causes it, it's real enough. He and his people
certainly proved that a hundred years ago."
Colin nodded again, understanding
completely. He'd occasionally wondered why Hitler had proved so resistant to
assassination—until he gained access to Nergal's data base. No wonder
the bomb plot had failed; a man with full enhancement would hardly even have
noticed it. And if anyone had ever shown a maniacal glee in taking others down
with them, it had been the Nazi elite.
"So." He
twirled his chair slowly. "It seems another minor complication has been
added." His smile held no humor. "But from the fact that you're here,
Colonel, I imagine you've been doing more than just worrying?"
"I have." The
colonel drew a deep breath and met Colin's eyes levelly. "A man in my
profession doesn't have much use for do-or-die missions, but I've spent the
last year building a worst-case scenario—a doomsday one, if you will—and trying
to find a way to beat it, and I may have come up with one. It's scary as hell,
and I've always seen it more as a last-ditch contingency than anything I'd want
to try. In fact, I wouldn't even mention it except for what you've told us
about the Achuultani. The smart thing would be to wait till things settle down
a bit, get you back up to Dahak, and then hit the bastards from two
directions at once—or at least get another suppresser down here. But we don't
have time to play it smart, do we?"
"No, we
don't," Colin said, his tone calm but flat. "So may I assume you're
about to tell me about this 'way to beat it' you've come up with?"
"Yes. Instead of
waiting for things to cool down, we heat them up."
"Hm?" Colin
leaned slowly back, his chair squeaking softly, and tugged at his nose.
"And why should we do that, Colonel?"
"Because maybe—just
maybe—we can take them out ourselves, without calling on Dahak at
all," the colonel said.
* * *
No one, Colin reflected
as he watched the Council file into the command deck, could accuse Hector
MacMahan of thinking small. Merely to consider attacking such a powerful enemy
took a lot of audacity, but it seemed the colonel had chutzpah by the
truckload. And who knew? It might just work.
The council settled into
their places in tense silence, and he tucked his hands behind him and squared
his shoulders, feeling their eyes and wondering just how deep his rapport with
them truly went. They'd had barely a month to get to know one another, and he knew
some of them both resented and feared him. He couldn't blame them for that; he
still had reservations about them, though he no longer doubted their
sincerity. Not even Jiltanith's.
Thoughts of the young
woman drew his eyes, and he hid a smile as he realized he, too, had come to
think of her as "young" despite the fact that she was more than twice
his age. Much more, if he counted the time she'd spent in stasis. But his smile
died stillborn as he saw her expression. She'd finally managed to push the active
hatred out of her face, but it remained a shuttered window, neither offering
nor accepting a thing.
In many ways, he would
have preferred to exclude her from this meeting and from all
decision-making, but it hadn't worked out that way. She was young, but she was
also Nergal's chief intelligence officer, which officially made her
MacMahan's Imperial counterpart and, indirectly, his boss.
Colin wouldn't have
considered someone with her fiery, driven disposition an ideal spy master, but
when he hinted as much to one or two council members, their reactions had
surprised him. Their absolute faith in her judgment was almost scary,
especially since he knew how much she detested him. Yet when he'd checked the
log, her performance certainly seemed to justify their high regard. The
Colorado Springs attack was the first time in forty years that the southern
Imperials (as distinct from their Terra-born proxies) had surprised the
northerners, and he knew whose fault that had been. Given the way the Council
felt about her, he dared not try removing her from her position. Besides, his
own stubborn integrity wouldn't let him fire someone who did her job so well
simply because she happened to hate him.
But she worried him. No
matter what anyone else said or thought about her, she worried him.
He sighed, wishing she
would open up just once. Just once, so he could know what she was
thinking and whether or not he could trust her. Then he pushed the thought
aside and smiled tightly at the rest of the Council.
"I'm sure you all know
Colonel MacMahan far better than I do." He gestured at the colonel and
watched the exchange of nods and smiles, then put his hand back behind him.
"The reason he's here just now, though, may surprise you. You see, he
proposes that we attack Anu directly—without Dahak."
One or two members of
his audience gasped, and Jiltanith seemed to gather herself like a cat. She
never actually moved a muscle, but her eyes widened slightly and he thought he
saw a glow in their dark depths.
"But that's
crazy!" It was Sarah Meir, Nergal's Terra-born astrogator. Then she
blushed and glanced at MacMahan. "Or, at least, it sounds that
way."
"I agree, but
that's one of the beauties of it. It's so crazy they'll never expect it."
That got a small chorus of chuckles, and Colin permitted himself a wider grin.
"And crazy or not, we don't really have much choice. We've been sitting on
dead center ever since my . . . arrival—" that provoked a louder ripple of
laughter "—and we can't afford that. You all know why."
Their levity vanished,
and one or two actually glanced upward, as if to see the stars beyond which the
Achuultani swept inexorably closer. He nodded.
"Exactly. But the
thing that surprised me most is that it might just work." He turned to
MacMahan. "Hector?"
"Thank you,
Colin." MacMahan stood in the center of the command deck, his erect figure
and Marine uniform as out of place and yet inevitable as Colin's own Fleet
blue, and met their intent eyes levelly, a man who was clearly accustomed to
such scrutiny.
"In essence,"
he said, "the problem is time. Time we need and haven't got. But we do
have one major advantage: Anu doesn't know we're on a short count. It's
obvious he thought Colin was one of us when he hit the Tudors—" Colin saw
Jiltanith twitch at that, but she had herself well under control . . . for her
"—so it seems extremely unlikely he realizes a genuinely new element has
been added. He'll evaluate whatever we do against a background that, so far as
he knows, is unchanged."
He paused, and several
heads nodded in agreement.
"Now, we all know
we hurt them badly at Colorado Springs." There was a soft growl of
agreement, and he rationed himself to one of his minute smiles. "We've
confirmed seventeen hard kills, and two more probables—more damage than we've
done in centuries. They must be wondering what happened and, hopefully, feeling
a bit on the defensive. Certainly that ties in with the efforts they've been
making to find us ever since.
"At present, they
no doubt see the entire skirmish as exactly what it was: a defensive action on
our part, but what I propose is that we convince them it was an offensive
act. I propose that we attack them—hit them everywhere we can—hard enough to
convince them we've opened a general offensive. It'll be risky, but no more so
than some of the things we've done in the past."
"Wait a minute,
Hector." The colonel paused as Geb, one of the older Imperials and Nergal's
senior engineer, raised a hand. "There's nothing I'd like better than a
shot at them, but how will it help?"
"A fair
question," MacMahan acknowledged, "and I'll try to answer it, Geb. It
may sound a bit complicated, but the underlying concept is simple.
"First, some of
their people are actually more vulnerable than we are. They've always been more
involved in world affairs than we have, and we've been able to identify more of
them than they have of us. We know where several of their Imperials are, and
we've got positive IDs on quite a few of their Terra-born. More than that,
we've identified the terrorist groups they're currently working through and
positively located several operational centers and HQs. What that all boils
down to is that even though the bulk of their personnel are far better
protected than we are, the ones who are actually outside the enclave are more
exposed. We can get to them more readily than they can get to us."
He looked around his
audience and nodded, satisfied with the intent expressions looking back at him.
"What I propose is
an organized assault on their exposed points in order to make them react the
way they always have when things got hot—by pulling their Imperials and
important Terra-born into the enclave to protect them while their hard teams
try to trap and destroy our attack forces.
"But," he said softly,
"this time that will be the worst thing they could possibly do. This
time, they'll let us through the door right behind them!"
For a man with an
inexpressive face, Colin thought, Hector MacMahan could look remarkably like a
hungry wolf.
"How so?"
Jiltanith's voice was flat. She had herself under the tight control Colin's
presence always provoked, but she was asking a question, not raising an
objection, and it was clear she spoke for many of the others.
"As I say, the
background maneuvers've been a bit complicated," MacMahan replied,
"but the operational concept itself is simple, and my own position as the
CO of Operation Odysseus is what may just make it work." Jiltanith nodded
tightly, and he glanced at the other council members.
"As 'Tanni
knows," he continued, "I was placed in command of Operation Odysseus,
a USFC operation to infiltrate Black Mecca, two years ago. The brass knew it
wouldn't be easy, and we've had too many leaks over the years to make them
happy. We, of course, know why that is: Anu hasn't been too successful in
infiltrating USFC, but he's penetrated the senior echelons of the intelligence
community deeply. But because of those leaks, the whole operation was made
strictly need-to-know, and I determined who needed to know. Which means
I was able to put two of our own Terra-born inside Black Mecca. One of them, in
fact, is a deputy commander of their central action branch. And, people,
he's on the 'inside' in more ways than one. He's established as a valuable,
corruptible mercenary, and Anu's people co-opted him five months ago."
A rustle of surprise ran
through the command deck.
"Now, all of you
know we've been feeling out Ramman and Ninhursag," he went on, and Colin
watched the older Imperials' reactions to the two names. Ramman and Ninhursag
were the southerners who'd been in clandestine contact with Nergal's
crew for the past two centuries. Ramman had been one of Anu's inner circle, but
Ninhursag had been one of the rank and file, a senior rating in Dahak's
gravitonic maintenance crews, brought out of stasis little more than a hundred
years ago for her expertise as a physicist. So far as the northerners knew,
neither of them realized the other had been in contact with them.
"We've always been
cautious about relying on anything we got from them, but 'Tanni and I have
compared all the data either of them gave us to what we got from the other, and
so far everything's checked. Which means either that they've both been straight
with us, or else that they're being worked as a team. Personally, I believe
they've been straight. Ramman's terrified of what Anu may do next, and
Ninhursag is horrified by what he's already done, and the fact that they've
both been kept outside the enclave and away from Anu's inner circle may
indicate that they're not entirely trusted, which could be a good sign from our
standpoint. Would you agree with that assessment, 'Tanni?"
"Aye," she
said shortly.
"But whether he
trusts them or not," MacMahan went on, "they're valuable to him;
he'd've wasted them long ago if they weren't. So we can be certain they'll be
called back in as soon as the shooting starts, and that's what's
important. Once they go through the access points, they'll have the current
admittance code for the portals."
He paused again, and
this time Colin saw most of the council members nod.
"As we all know,
Anu changes codes on a fairly regular basis. We've never been able to pick them
up from outside, but 'Tanni's sensors can tell when they reprogram them.
So if Ramman or Ninhursag can get the current code out to us, we can at least
be sure whether or not it's still current."
"All right,"
Geb said. "I can see that, but how do they slip it to us?" The
question was well taken, but he was frowning in concentration, obviously hoping
for an answer rather than raising an objection.
"That's the tough
part," MacMahan agreed, "but I think we can swing it.
"Once Ramman and
Ninhursag have the codes, they'll each leave a copy at a pre-arranged drop
inside the enclave. Our people inside Black Mecca don't know each other, but I
believe both are important enough to be taken south—one of them certainly is, though
the other may be marginal. Assuming we get both inside, each will make a pickup
at one of the two drops. Neither Ramman nor Ninhursag will know the other is
making a drop, and neither of our people will know about the other pickup, so
even if we lose one, we ought to get one out.
"That's the
critical point. Once we've pushed them inside and gotten our hands on that
data, we'll ease off on our attacks. Anu will almost certainly do what he's
always done before—shove his 'degenerates' out first to see if they draw fire.
When he does, our people will give us the admittance code. Hopefully, we'll
have two separate data sets to check against one another.
"If the code
checks out, and if we can be ready to move before Anu changes it again,
we can get inside the shield before they know we're coming.
"Their active
Imperials outnumber ours heavily, but if we get inside at all, we'll have the
advantage of surprise. If we hit them hard enough and fast enough, we should be
able to take them or, at the very least, do enough damage to panic their senior
people into sealing their hatches and lifting off in their armed parasites to
get away from us and provide some fire support for their fellows. To do that,
they'll have to move their parasites outside their shield and lower it to get
shots at us. And if they do that—" the colonel's millimetric smile was
fierce "—Colin tells me Dahak will be waiting for them."
A hungry sound hovered
just below audibility in the hushed command deck.
"And that,"
MacMahan finished very, very quietly, "will be the end of Fleet Captain
(Engineering) Anu and his killers."
"I don't like
it," Horus said grimly, "and neither does the Council. You're out of
your mind, Colin!"
"No, I'm not."
Colin tried hard to sound patient. His experience with Dahak's tenacity helped,
but he was starting to think Horus could have given the starship stubborn
lessons. "We've been over this and over this, and it still comes out the
same. I've got to let Dahak know what's going on. He doesn't distinguish between
any of you people; if he spots you, he's as likely to open up on you as he is
on Anu."
"That's a chance
we'll just have to take," Horus said obstinately.
"That's a chance we
can't take!" Colin snapped, then made himself relax. "Damn,
you're stubborn! Look, this is an all-or-nothing move; that's all it can be. We
can't risk having Dahak attack us when we actually move against the
enclave, but that's only part of it. If we manage to get inside and do enough
damage their armed parasites lift out, he's gonna know something is
going on. He hasn't heard a squeak out of me in almost five weeks—how do you
think he's going to react when he sees any Imperial units moving around
down here?"
"Well . . ."
"Exactly! But even
that's not the worst of it. Suppose—heaven forbid—I buy it? Who's gonna explain
any of this to Dahak? You know he won't believe anything you say, assuming he
even listens. So. I'm dead, and you've zapped Anu. What happens next?" He
met the old man's eyes levelly.
"The best you
people can hope for is that he leaves you alone, but he won't. He'll figure it
was simply a power play among the mutineers—which, in a sense, is exactly what
it will be—and go after you. If the enclave's shield is down, he'll get
you, too. But even if the shield's up and you're inside it, he'll be in exactly
the same position he's always been in, and the Achuultani are still coming! For
God's sake, man, do you want it all to be for nothing?!"
Horus glared with the
fury of a man driven against the wall, and Jiltanith sat beside him, glowering
at Colin. Her brooding silence made him appallingly nervous, and he tried to
remind himself she was an experienced intelligence analyst. The smooth way she
managed her sensor arrays and Nergal's stealthed auxiliaries proved her
competence and ability to think calmly and logically. She might hate him, but
she was a professional. Surely she saw the logic of his argument?
She'd said little so
far, but he knew how pivotal her opinion might well be and wondered yet again
if she resented the fact that MacMahan—who was technically her subordinate—had
come straight to him with his plan? He'd half-expected her to throw her weight
against him from the start, but now her lips twisted as if she'd just bitten
into something spoiled.
"Nay, Father. The
captain hath the right of't."
Horus turned an "et
tu?" expression upon her, and sour amusement glinted in her eyes as
Colin blinked in surprise.
" 'Tis scarce
palatable, Father, yet 'twould be grimmest humor and our deeds do naught but
doom us all, and the captain doth speak naught but truth. Wi'out word to Dahak,
can we e'er be aught save mutineers?" Horus shook his head unwillingly,
and she touched his arm gently. "Then there's an end to't. Sin we must
give it that word and 'twill accept only the captain's implant code as sooth,
then is there naught we may do save bend our heads and yield."
Colin looked from her to
her father, grateful for her support yet aware logic, not enthusiasm, governed
her. It showed even in the way she spoke of him. She used only his rank, and
that sourly, when speaking of him to others, and she never called him anything
when forced to address him directly.
"But they're bound
to spot him!" Horus said almost desperately, and Colin understood
perfectly. Colin was the first chance for outright victory Fate had seen fit to
offer Horus, and the possibility of losing that chance terrified the old
Imperial far more than the thought of his own death ever could.
"Of course they
are," he said. "That's why it has to be done my way."
"Granddad,"
Hector MacMahan said gently, "I don't like it very much, myself, but they
may be right."
Horus scowled, and the
colonel turned to face Colin.
"If I support you
on this one," the Marine said levelly, "it'll only be because I have
to, and this will be the only raid you go on. Understood?"
Colin considered trying
to stare the colonel down, but it would have been impolitic. Worse, it would be
an exercise in futility, so he nodded instead.
MacMahan gave one of his
patented fractional smiles, and Colin knew it was decided. It might take a
while to bring Horus around, but the decision that counted was MacMahan's, for
Colin and the Council had named him operational commander. Success would depend
heavily on his Terra-born network, which made it logical for him to run things
instead of Jiltanith, and while Colin might be a Senior Fleet Captain (of
sorts), it was an interesting legal question whether or not any of
"his" personnel still came under his orders. More, he knew his
limits, and he simply wasn't equipped to orchestrate something like this.
"I'm going to have
to back Colin on this one, Granddad," MacMahan said. "I'm sorry, but
that's the way it is."
Horus stared at the
table a moment, then nodded unwillingly.
"All right, Colin,
you're on the Cuernavaca strike," MacMahan continued. "And you'll
make your strike, send your message, and get out, understood?"
"Understood."
"And,"
MacMahan added gently, " 'Tanni will be your pilot."
"What?!"
Colin clamped his teeth
before he said anything else he would regret, but his eyes were fiery, and
Jiltanith's blazed even hotter.
" 'Tanni will be
your pilot," MacMahan repeated mildly. "I'm speaking now as the
commander of a military operation, and I don't really have time to be
diplomatic, so both of you just shut up and listen."
Colin pushed back in his
chair and nodded. Jiltanith only looked daggers at MacMahan, but he chose to
construe her silence as agreement.
"All right. I know
there's some bad blood between you two," the colonel said with generous
understatement, "but there's no room for that here. This—as all three of
us have just pointed out to Granddad—is important.
"Colin, you're the
only person who can initiate the message, and if we send you on the strike, you
should be able to hide your fold-space transmission by burying it under an
ostensible strike report to our HQ. But we don't know how quickly or strongly
Anu's people will be able to respond, so we can't afford anything but our very
best pilot behind those controls. You're good, Colin, and your reaction time is
phenomenal even by Imperial standards, but good as you are, you have very
little actual experience in an Imperial fighter.
" 'Tanni, on the
other hand, is a natural pilot and the youngest of our Imperials, with reaction
time almost as good as yours but far, far more experience. The overall mission
will be under your command, but she's your pilot and you're her
electronics officer, or neither of you goes."
He regarded them
steadily, and Colin glanced over at Jiltanith. He caught her unaware,
surprising her own gaze upon him, and a flicker of challenge passed between
them.
"All right,"
he sighed finally, then grinned. "If I'd known what an iron-assed bastard
you are, I'd never have agreed to let you run this op, Hector."
"Ah, but I'm the best
iron-assed bastard you've got . . . Sir," MacMahan replied.
Colin subsided, and his
grin grew as a new thought occurred to him. Once he and Jiltanith were crammed
into the same two-man fighter, she was going to have to think of
something to call him!
* * *
It was amazing how
consistently wrong he could be, Colin thought moodily as he checked his gear
one last time. He and Jiltanith had worked in the same simulator for a week
now, and she still hadn't chosen to call him anything.
There were only the two
of them, so who else could she be talking to? It actually made it easier for
her to make her point by refusing to use his name or rank. And he was certain
she would rather die than call him "Sir."
He grinned sourly. At
least it gave him something to think about besides the butterflies mating in
his middle. For all that he'd been a professional military man before joining
NASA, Colin had fired a shot in anger exactly twice, including his abortive
attack on Dahak's tender. The other time had been years before, when a
very junior Lieutenant MacIntyre had found his Lynx fighter unexpectedly
nose-to-nose with an Iraqi fighter in what was supposed to be international
airspace, and Colin still wasn't certain how he'd managed to break lock on the
self-guiding missile the Iraqi pilot had popped off at him. Fortunately, the
other guy had been less lucky.
It helped that the other
Imperials were all veterans of their long, covert war. Their calm preparations
had steadied his nerve more than he cared to admit . . . but that, in its own
way, made it almost worse. Here he was, their commander-in-chief, and every one
of his personnel had more combat experience than he did! Hardly the proper
balance of credentials.
He sealed his flight
suit and checked the globular, one-way force field that served an Imperial
pilot as a helmet. He had to admit it was a vast improvement to be able to
reach in through his "helmet," and the vision was superb, yet he felt
something like nostalgia over the disappearance of all the little read-outs
that had cluttered the interior of his NASA-issue gear.
He hung his gun on his
suit webbing, not that the weapon was likely to do him much good if they had to
ditch. Or, for that matter, that they were likely to have a chance to ditch if
the bad guys managed to line up on them with anything in the way of heavy
weapons.
There. He was ready, and
he strolled out of the armory towards the ready room, glad that he and only he
could read the adrenalin levels reported by the bio-sensors in everyone else's
implants.
* * *
The fighters' crewmen
sat quietly in Nergal's ready room. There were only eight of them, for
sublight battleships were not planetoids. They carried only a half-dozen
fighters, and each one they crammed aboard cut into their internal weapon
tonnage.
Most of the Imperials
looked frighteningly old to Colin. Geb was flying wing on his and Jilanith's
fighter—the only one that would have an escort—and his weaponeer was the only
other "youngster" present. Tamman had been ten at the time of the
mutiny, but he hadn't been sent back into stasis for as long as Jiltanith and
he had a good two centuries of experience behind him.
Yet for all their
apparent age, the other Imperials were Hector MacMahan's hand-picked first
team. This would be the first time in three thousand years that Nergal's
people had used Imperial technology in an open, full-blooded smash at their foes,
but there had been occasional, unexpected clashes between the two sides' small
craft, and these were the victors from those skirmishes.
"All right."
MacMahan entered the compartment briskly and sat on the corner of the briefing
officer's console. "You've all been briefed, you all know the plan, and
you all know the score. All I'll say again is that all other attacks must
be held until 'Tanni and Colin have gone in and transmitted. Till then,
you don't do a single damned thing."
Heads nodded. Waiting
might expose them to a bit more danger from the southerners, but attacking
before Colin flashed his "strike report" and warned Dahak what
was going on would be far riskier. The old starship was far more likely to get
them than were Anu's hopefully surprised personnel. This time.
"Good,"
MacMahan said. "Get saddled up, then." The crews began to file out,
but the colonel put a hand on Colin's shoulder when he made to follow.
"Wait a sec, Colin. I want to talk to you and 'Tanni for a minute."
Jiltanith waited with
Colin while the others left, but even now she chose to stand on MacMahan's
other side, separating herself from her crewmate.
"I asked you to
wait because I've just gotten an update on your target," MacMahan said
quietly. "Confirmation came in through one of our people in Black
Mecca—Cuernavaca is definitely the base that mounted the hit on Cal, and, with
just a bit of luck, Kirinal will be there when you go in."
The hatred that flared
in Jiltanith's eyes was not directed at Colin this time, and he felt his own
mouth twist in a teeth-baring grin.
Kirinal. He'd felt a
cold, skin-crawling fascination as he scanned her dossier. She was Anu's
operations chief, his equivalent of Hector MacMahan, but she enjoyed her work
as much as Girru had. Her loss would hurt the southerners badly, but that
wasn't the first thing that flashed through his mind. No, his first
thought was that Kirinal personally had ordered the murder of Cal's family.
"I considered not
telling you," the colonel admitted, "but you'd've found out when you
get back, and I've got enough trouble with you two without adding that to it!
Besides, knowing Kirinal's in there would make it personal for everyone we've
got, I suppose. But now that you know, I want you to forget it. I know you
can't do that entirely, but if you can't keep revenge from clouding your
judgment, tell me now, and Geb and Tamman will take the primary strike."
Colin wondered if
Jiltanith could avoid that. For that matter, could he? But then his eyes
met hers, and, for the first time, there was complete agreement between them.
MacMahan watched them,
his expressionless face hiding his worry, and considered ordering them off the
target whatever they said. Perhaps he shouldn't have told them after all?
No. They had a right to know.
"All right,"
he said finally. "Go. And—" his voice stopped them in the hatchway
and he smiled slightly "—good hunting, people."
They vanished, and
Colonel MacMahan sat alone in the empty briefing room, his face no longer
expressionless. But he stood after a moment, straightening his shoulders and
banishing the hopeless bitterness from his face. He was a highly skilled and
experienced pilot, but one without the implants that would have let him execute
his own plan, and that was all there was to it.
* * *
Colin's neural feed
tapped into what the US Navy would have called the fighter's "weapons and
electronic warfare panel" as he and Jiltanith settled into their flight
couches, and he felt a fierce little surge of eagerness from the computers.
Intellectually, he knew a computer was no more than the sum of its programming,
but Terra-born humans had anthropomorphized computers for generations, and the
Imperials, with their far closer, far more intimate associations with their
electronic minions, never even questioned the practice. Come to think of it,
was a human mind that much more than the sum of its programming?
Yet however that might
be, he knew what he felt. And what he felt was the fighter baring its fangs,
expressing its eagerness in the system-ready signals it sent back to him.
"Weapons and
support systems nominal," he reported to Jiltanith, and she eyed him
sidelong. She knew they were, of course; their neural feeds were
cross-connected enough for that. Yet it was a habit ingrained by too many years
of training for him to break now. When a check list was completed, you reported
it to your command pilot.
He felt her eyes upon
him for a moment longer, then she tossed her head slightly. Her long, rippling
hair was a tight chignon atop her head, held by glittering combs that must have
been worth a small fortune just as antiques, and her gemmed dagger was at her
belt beside the pistol she carried in place of his own heavy grav gun. It was
semi-automatic, with a down-sized, thirty-round magazine, light enough for her
unenhanced muscles. She'd designed and built it herself, and it looked both
anachronistic and inevitable beside her dagger. She was, he thought wryly and
not for the first time, a strange mixture of the ancient and the future. Then
she spoke.
"Check," she
said, and he blinked. "Stand thou by . . . Captain."
It was the first time
she'd responded to one of his readiness reports. That was what he thought
first. And then the title she'd finally given him registered.
He was still wondering
what her concession meant when their fighter launched.
Jiltanith was good.
Colin had recognized her
skill and, still more, her natural affinity for her task, even in the
simulator. Now she took them up the long, carefully camouflaged tunnel from Nergal
without a single wasted erg of power. Without even a single wasted thought. The
fighter's wings were her own, and the walls of their stony birth canal slid
past, until, at last, they floated free on a smooth whine of power.
The stars burned
suddenly, like chips of ice above them, and a strange exhilaration filled
Colin. There was a vibrant new strength in the side-band trickles of his
computer links, burning with Jiltanith's bright, fierce sense of flight and
movement. For a time, at least, she was free. She was one with her fighter as
she roamed the night sky, free to seek out her enemies, and he felt it in her,
like a flare of joy, made still stronger by her hunger for vengeance and
aptness for violence. For the first time since they'd met, he understood her
perfectly and wondered if he was glad he did, for he saw himself in her. Less
driven, perhaps, less dark and brooding, not honed to quite so keen an edge,
but the same.
The mutineers had been
no more than an obstacle when he returned from Dahak . . . but Sean had
been alive then. He had lost far less than Jiltanith, seen far fewer friends
and family ground to dust in the marooned Imperials' secret, endless war, but
he had learned to hate, and it frightened him to think he could so quickly and
easily find within himself so strong a shadow of the darkness that he'd known
from the start infused Jiltanith.
He cut off his thoughts,
hoping she'd been too enwrapped in the joy of flight to notice them, and
concentrated on his own computers. So far, they'd remained within Nergal's
stealth field; from here on, they were on their own.
* * *
The Imperial fighter was
half the size of a Beagle, a needle-nosed thing of sleek curves and stub wings.
Its design was optimized for atmosphere, but the fighter was equally at home
and far more maneuverable in vacuum, though none of Nergal's brood had
been there in millennia. Most of their time had been spent literally weaving in
and out among the treetops to hide from Anu's sensor arrays, and so they flew
now.
They swept out over the
Pacific, settling to within meters of the swell, and Jiltanith goosed the drive
gently. A huge hand pressed Colin back in his couch, and a wake boiled across
the water behind them as they streaked south at three times the speed of sound.
The G forces were almost refreshing after all this time, like an old friend
he'd lost track of since meeting Dahak, but they also underscored Jiltanith's
single glaring weakness as a pilot.
Atmosphere was a less
forgiving medium than vacuum. Even at the fighter's maximum power, friction and
compression conspired to reduce its top speed dramatically. There was one huge
compensation—by relying on control surfaces for maneuvering rather than
depending entirely upon the gravitonic magic of the drive, the same speed could
be produced for a far weaker energy signature—but there were always trade-offs.
In this case, one was a greater vulnerability to thermal detection and
targeting systems as a hull unprotected by a drive field heated, but that was a
relatively minor drawback.
The real problem
was that the reduced-strength drive couldn't cancel inertia and the G forces of
acceleration. Flying on its atmospheric control surfaces, the deadly little
ship was captive to the laws of motion and no more maneuverable than the bodies
of its crew could stand, and that was potentially deadly for Jiltanith. If she
found herself forced into maneuvering combat against a fully-enhanced Imperial
in this performance envelope, she was dead, for she would black out long before
her opponent.
Still, MacMahan was
almost certainly right. If it came to aerial combat, stealth would not be in
great demand. It would become a matter of brute power, cunning, reaction time,
and the skill of the combatants' electronic warfare specialists, and the first
thing that would happen would be that the pilots would go to full power. With a
full strength drive field wrapped around her, Jiltanith would be as free of G
forces as any Imperial pilot.
Yet the whole object was
to avoid any air-to-air fighting. If they were forced to full power, all the
ECM in the world couldn't hide them from Anu's detectors . . . which meant they
dared not return to Nergal unless they could destroy or shake off any
pursuit and drop back into a stealth regime. Trade-offs, Colin thought sourly,
checking their airspeed. Always the trade-offs.
They were up to mach
four, he noted, and grinned as he imagined the reaction aboard any freighter
they happened across when they came hurtling by ahead of their sonic boom with absolutely
no radar image to show for it.
They ought to hit their
target in about another seventeen minutes. Strange. He didn't feel the least
bit nervous anymore.
* * *
"Coming up on our
final turn," Colin said eleven minutes later.
"Aye,"
Jiltanith said softly.
Her voice was dreamy,
for Colin wasn't quite real for her just now. Reality was her dagger-sleek
fighter, for she was one with it, seeing and feeling through its sensors. Yet
he felt the intensity of her purpose and the cat-sharp clarity of her awareness
through his own feeds, and he was content.
They swept through the
turn, settling into the groove for the attack run, and Geb and Tamman fell
astern, increasing their separation as planned.
The huge private estate
in the deep, bowl-like valley north of Cuernavaca was the true HQ of both Black
Mecca and the Army of Allah in the Americas, though only a very few terrorists
knew it. That made it a major operational node, one of the three juiciest
targets MacMahan and Jiltanith had been able to identify. Over forty
southerners and two hundred of their most trusted Terra-born allies were based
there, coordinating a hemisphere's terrorism, and the estate's seclusion hid a
substantial amount of Imperial equipment. A successful attack on such a target
would certainly seem to justify an immediate strike report to their own HQ.
But there was another
fractor in MacMahan's target selection. The "estate's" geography made
it an ideal target for mass missiles, for the valley walls would confine the
blast effect and channel it upward. The northerners expected the use of such
weapons to come as a considerable shock to Anu, for they would provoke
consternation and furious speculation among the vast majority of Earth's
people, and attention was the one thing both groups of Imperials had
assiduously avoided for centuries. If anything could convince Anu Nergal's
people meant business, this attack should do it.
Yet the very importance
of the target also meant a greater possibility of serious defenses. If enemy
fighter opposition appeared, it was up to Geb and Tamman to pick it off if they
could; if they couldn't, theirs became the far grimmer task of playing decoy to
suck the southerners off Colin and onto themselves, and . . .
"Shit!" Colin
muttered, and Jiltanith stiffened beside him as he shunted information to her
through a side feed. There were active Imperial scanners covering the target.
At their present speed, those scanners would burn through their stealth field
in less than five minutes.
Colin tightened
internally as he and his computers raced to determine what those scanners
reported to. If it was only an observation post, they'd be onto the target
before anyone could react, but if there were automatic defenses . . .
"Double shit!"
he hissed. There were, indeed, automatic defenses—and three fighters on
stand-by for launch, though three ships were no indication of an alert. There
were at least ten of the little buggers down there; if they'd anticipated an
attack, all ten would have been spotted for immediate launch. He and Jiltanith
had simply had the infernal bad luck to happen upon the scene when someone was
readying for a routine flight. Possibly Kirinal was going somewhere in one of
those fighters and the other two were escorts; that fitted normal southern
operational procedures.
But it meant the base
was at a higher state of readiness than usual, and there were those automatics.
He could "see" at least four missile batteries and two heavy energy
weapon emplacements, which was far more than their intelligence estimates had
suggested.
His thoughts flickered
so quickly they were almost unformed, yet Jiltanith caught them. He felt her
disappointment like his own. These were the people who had sent Girru and
Anshar to butcher Cal's family and Sean and Sandy, but their orders for this
contingency were clear.
"We'll have to
abort," Colin remarked, yet even as he said it his neural link was
bringing his systems fully on line.
"Aye, so we
shall." Yet Jiltanith's course never deviated, and he felt her mental
touch poised to ram the drive's power level through the red line.
"They'll burn
through a good twenty seconds before I get a targeting setup," he said
absently.
"Nay, 'twill be no
more than ten seconds ere thy weapons range," she demurred.
"Hah! Now you're an
EW specialist, too, huh?" Then he shrugged. "Screw it. Full bore
right down the middle, Jiltanith. Go for the weapons first."
"As thou sayst,
Captain," Jiltanith purred, and the fighter shrieked upward like a
homesick meteor.
For just a second,
acceleration drove Colin back into his couch, but then the drive field peaked,
the G forces vanished, and he felt the shockwave of alarm sweep through the
southerners' enclave. The automatic air-defense systems were already reaching
for them, but his own systems had come alive a moment sooner; by the time the
weapons started hunting the fighter, its defensive programs were already
filling the night sky with false images. Decoys streaked away, singing their
siren songs, and jammers hashed the scan channels with the fold-space
equivalent of white noise.
The ground stations'
scanners were more powerful and their electronic brains were bigger and smarter
than his small onboard computers, but they'd started at a disadvantage. They
had to sort the situation out before they could find a target, and it was a
race between them and their human controllers and Colin and the speeding
fighter's targeting systems.
There was no time to
think, no room for anything but concentration, yet kaleidoscope images flared
at the edges of his brain. The brighter strobes of panic when one ground
station seemed to have found them. The impossible, wrenching maneuver with
which Jiltanith threw it off. The relief when they slipped away before it could
establish a lock. His own racing excitement. The determination and intensity
that filled his pilot. His own savage blaze of satisfaction as his launch
solution suddenly came magically together.
His first salvo leapt
away. Hyper-capable missiles were out of the question in atmosphere; they would
take too much air into hyper with them, wrecking his mass-power calculations
and bringing them back into normal space God alone knew where, but mass
missiles were another matter. Their over-powered gravitonic drives slammed them
forward, accelerating instantly to sixty percent of light speed, crowding the
edge of phase lock. Counter-missile defenses did their best, but the mass
missiles' speed and the short range meant tracking time was too limited even
for Imperial systems, and Colin heard Jiltanith's panther howl of triumph as
his strike went home.
Fireballs blew into the
night. Mass missiles carried no warheads, for they needed none. They were
energy states, not projectiles, hyper-velocity robotic meteorites, shrieking
down on precise trajectories to seek out the ground weapons that menaced their
masters.
The small shield
generators protecting the southerners' weapons were still spinning up when
Colin's missiles arrived, but it wouldn't have mattered if they'd already been
at full power. In fifty-one millennia, the northerners had never risked
escalating their struggle to the point of using Imperial weaponry so brazenly,
and the southerners had assumed they never would. Their defensive measures were
aimed at Terrestrial weapons or the relatively innocuous Imperial ones the
northerners had used in the past, and they were fatally inadequate.
Jiltanith snapped the
fighter around as the Jovian holocaust spewed skyward behind them. A bowl of
fire glared against the night-struck Mexican hills, and Colin's computers were
already evaluating the first strike. Weak as they were, the base's shields had
absorbed a tremendous amount of energy before they failed—enough to keep the
missiles from turning the entire estate into one vast crater—and one heavy
energy gun emplacement had escaped destruction. It raved defiance at them, and
Jiltanith accepted the challenge as she came back like the angel of death,
driving into its teeth.
The radiant heat of the
first missile strike, added to the frantic efforts of the fighter's ECM, denied
the targeting scanners lock, and the guns were on pre-programmed blind fire,
raking the volume of space that ought to contain the fighter. But Jiltanith
wasn't where the people who'd designed that fire program had assumed she would
have to be, and Colin felt a detached sort of awe for her raw flying ability as
he popped off another missile.
Unlike the fighter, the
energy weapons couldn't bob and weave. The missile sizzled home, and a fresh
burst of fury defiled the earth.
Jiltanith came around
for a third pass, two more than their ops plan had called for or considered
safe, and the ground defenses were silent. Despite the shields' best efforts,
the weapon emplacements were huge, raw wounds, and the entire valley floor was
a sea of blazing grass and trees, touched to flame by thermal radiation. The
palatial estate's buildings were flaming rubble, but the real installations
hidden under them, though damaged, were still intact.
One of the ready
fighters was already clawing upward, but Colin ignored it. He had all the time
in the world, and his final launch was textbook perfect. A spread of four
missiles bracketed the target, streaking the fire-sick heavens with fresh
flame. There were no shields to absorb the destruction this time, and there was,
at most, no more than a microsecond between the first missile impact and the
last.
A hurricane of light
lashed upward as vaporized earth and stone and flesh vomited into the night,
and the fireballs ballooned out, merging, melding into one terrible whole. A
second southern fighter was caught just at lift off and spat forth like a
molten, tumbling spark from Vulcan's forge, and the pressure wave snatched at
them. It shook them as a terrier shook a rat, but Jiltanith met it like a
lover. She rode its ferocity—embracing it, not fighting it—and the universe
danced crazily, even madder somehow from within the protection of their drive
field, as she shot the rapids of concussion. But then they flashed out the far
side, and Colin realized she had used the terrible turbulence to put them on
the track of the single fighter that had escaped destruction.
Colin needed no
evaluation of his final attack. All that could be left was one vast
crater. He had just killed over two hundred people . . . and all he felt was
satisfaction. Satisfaction, and the need, the eagerness, to hunt down and kill
the single southern fighter that had escaped his wrath.
There was no way to know
who piloted that other fighter, nor if it was fully crewed or what weapons it
carried. Perhaps there was only the pilot. Perhaps it wasn't even armed.
All Colin would ever
know was that he felt a sort of merciless empathy—not pity, but something like
understanding—for that fleeing vessel. He and Jiltanith were invincible, and
they were vengeance. He bared his teeth and called up his air-to-air weaponry
as the firestorm's white heat dulled to red astern, and Jiltanith hurled them
out over the night-dark Pacific in pursuit.
His targeting systems
locked. A command flicked through his feed to the computers, and two more
missiles launched. They were slower than mass missiles, homing weapons with
their speed stepped down to follow evasive maneuvers, but this time they
carried warheads: three-kiloton, proximity-fused nukes. His eyes were dreamy as
his electronic senses watched them all the way in, but in the moment before
detonation a third missile came scorching in from the west. He'd almost
forgotten Geb and Tamman, and the southern fighter probably never even realized
he and Jiltanith weren't alone.
There was no debris.
* * *
Jiltanith needed no
orders. She swept on into the west, reducing speed, losing altitude, and their
drive strength coasted back down to wrap invisibility about them once more.
Colin checked his sensors carefully, and not until he was certain they had
evaded all detection did she turn and flee homeward into the north while he
switched on the fighter's com and activated the fold-space implant he had dared
not use in over a month. He felt an odd little "click" inside his
skull as Dahak's receivers recognized and accepted his implant's ID protocols.
"Category One
Order. Do not reply," he sent at the speed of thought.
"Authentication Delta-One-Gamma-Beta-One-Seven-Eight-Theta-Niner-Gamma.
Priority Alpha. Stand by for squeal from this fighter. Execute upon
receipt."
He closed his implant
down instantly, praying that the almost equally strong pulse from the fighter
com had hidden it from Anu's people. The coded squeal he and he alone had
pre-recorded and tacked into the middle of the strike report lasted
approximately two milliseconds, and Dahak had his orders.
And then, at last, there
was a moment to relax and blink his eyes, refocusing on the interior of the
cockpit. A moment to realize that they had succeeded . . . and that they were
alive.
"Done," he
said softly, turning to look at Jiltanith for the first time since they
launched their attack.
"Aye, and well
done," she replied. Their gazes met, and for once there was no hostility
between them.
"Beautiful flying,
'Tanni," he said, and saw her eyes widen as he used the familiar form of
her name for the first time. For a moment he thought he'd gone too far, but
then she nodded.
"Art no sluggard
thyself . . . Colin," she said.
And she smiled.
Colin MacIntyre sat in Nergal's
wardroom and shuffled, hiding a smile as Horus bent a hawk-like eye upon him
across the table while they waited for Hector's next report.
Battle Fleet's crews had
gone in for a vast array of esoteric games of chance, most of them electronic,
but Horus disdained such over-civilized pastimes. He loved Terran card games:
bridge, canasta, spades, hearts, euchre, blackjack, whist, piquet, chemin de
fer, poker . . . especially poker, which had never been Colin's game. In
fact, Colin's major interest in cards had been that of an amateur magician, and
Horus had been horrified at how easily a full Imperial who'd learned to palm
cards with purely Terran reflexes and speed could do that . . . among other
things.
"Cut?" Colin
invited, and shook his head sadly as Horus made five separate cuts before
handing the deck back.
"What're your
losses by now?" he mused as he dealt. "About a million?"
" 'Tis more like to
thrice that," Jiltanith said sourly, gathering up her cards and not
bothering to watch his fingers with her father's intensity.
"Ante up," he
said, and chips clicked as father and daughter slid them out. If they'd really
been playing for money, he'd be a billionaire, even without the ill-gotten
wealth Horus had demanded he write off after he realized Colin had been
cheating shamelessly. He grinned, and Jiltanith snorted without her old
bitterness as she saw it.
She still wasn't really
comfortable with him, but at least she was pretending, and he was grateful to
Hector. The colonel had torn long, bloody strips off both of them when he saw
the scan record of what they'd gone into, but his heart hadn't seemed fully in
it, and Colin had seen the glint in his eye when Jiltanith called him
"Colin" during their debriefing. He himself had feared she would
retreat into her old, cold hostility once the rush of euphoria passed, but
though she'd stepped back a bit and he knew she still resented him, she was
fighting it, as if she recognized (intellectually, at least) that it wasn't his
fault he was what he'd become. Her presence at the card table was proof of
that.
He wished there had been
a less traumatic way to effect that change, but he hoped the colonel was
pleased with the way it had worked out. The military arguments for assigning
them to the same flight crew had been strong, but it had taken courage—well,
gall—to put them forward.
"I'll take
two," Horus announced, and Colin flipped the small, pasteboard rectangles
across to him.
" 'Tanni?" He
raised a polite eyebrow, and she pouted.
"Nay, this hand
liketh me well enow."
"Hm." He
studied his own cards thoughtfully, then took one. "Bets?"
"I'll go a
hundred," Horus said, and Jiltanith followed suit.
"See you and raise
five hundred," Colin said grandly, and Horus glared.
"Not this time, you
young hellion!" he growled. "I'll see your raise and raise you
a hundred!"
"Father, art
moonstruck," Jiltanith said, tossing in her own hand. "Whyfor must
thou throw good money after bad?"
"That's no way to
talk to your father, 'Tanni." Horus sounded pained, and Colin hid another
smile.
"See you and raise
another five," he murmured, and Horus glared at him.
"Damn it, I watched
you deal! You can't possibly—" The old Imperial shoved more chips forward.
"Call," he said grimly. "Let's see you beat this!"
He faced his cards—four
jacks and an ace—and glowered at Colin.
"Horus,
Horus!" Colin sighed. He shook his head sadly and laid out his own hand
card by card, starting with the two of clubs and ending with the six.
"No!" Horus
stared at the table in shock. "A straight flush?!"
" 'Twas foredoomed,
Father," Jiltanith sighed, a twinkle dancing in her own eyes.
"Certes, 'tis strange that one so wise as thou should be so hot to make
thyself so poor."
"Oh, shut up!"
Horus said, trying not to smile himself. He gathered up the cards and glared at
Colin. "This time I'll deal."
* * *
"Damn them!
Breaker take them to hell!"
The being who had once
been Fleet Captain (Engineering) Anu leapt to his feet and slammed his fist
down so hard the table's heavy top cracked. He stared at the spiderweb
fractures for a moment, then snatched it up and hurled it against the
battle-steel bulkhead with all his strength. The impact was a harsh, discordant
clangor and the table sprang back, its thick Imperial plastic bent and buckled.
He glared at it, chest heaving with his fury, then kicked the wreckage back
into the bulkhead. He did it several more times, then whirled, fists clenched
at his sides.
"And you,
Ganhar! Some 'intelligence analyst' you turned out to be! What the hell
do you have to say for yourself?!"
Ganhar felt sweat on his
forehead but carefully did not wipe it away as he fastened his eyes on the
center of Anu's chest. He dared not not look at him, but it could be
almost as dangerous to meet his gaze at a moment like this. Ganhar had assisted
Kirinal in running Anu's external operations for over a century, but the newly
promoted operations head had never seen Anu quite this furious, and he silently
cursed Kirinal for getting herself killed. If she'd still been alive, he could
have switched his leader's wrath to her.
"There were no
indications they planned anything like this, Chief," he said, hoping his
voice sounded more level than it felt. He started to add that Anu himself had
seen and approved all of his intelligence estimates, but prudence stopped him.
Anu had become steadily less stable over the years. Reminding him of his own
fallibility just now was strongly contra-indicated.
" 'No
indications'!" Anu mimicked in a savage falsetto. He growled something
else under his breath, then inhaled sharply. His rage appeared to vanish as
suddenly as it had come, and he picked up his chair and sat calmly. When he
spoke again, his voice was almost normal.
"All right. You
fucked up, but maybe it wasn't entirely your fault," he said, and Ganhar
felt himself sag internally in relief.
"But they've hurt
us," the chief mutineer continued, harshness creeping back into his voice.
"I'll admit it—I didn't think they'd have the guts for something like
this, either. And it's paid off for them, Breaker take them!"
All eyes turned to the
holo map hovering above the space the table had occupied, dotted with glaring
red symbols that had once been green.
"Cuernavaca,
Fenyang, and Gerlochovko in one night!" Anu snorted. "The
equipment doesn't matter all that much, but they've blown the guts out of your
degenerates—and we've lost eighty more Imperials. Eighty! That makes
more than ten percent of us in the last month!"
His subordinates sat
silent. They could do the math equally well, and the casualties appalled them.
Their enemies hadn't done that much damage to them in five millennia, and the
fact that their own over-confidence had made it possible only made it worse.
They'd known their foes were aging, that time was on their side. It had never
occurred to them that the enemy might have the sheer nerve to take the
offensive after all these years.
Even worse was the way
they'd been attacked. The open use of Imperial weapons had been a shattering
blow to their confidence, and it could well have led to disaster. None of the
degenerates seemed to know what had happened, but they knew it was something
they couldn't explain. The southerners' penetration of the major governments,
especially in the Asian Alliance, had been sufficient to head off any
precipitate military action against purely Terrestrial foes, but their control
was much weaker in the West, and their enemies' obvious willingness to run such
risks was sobering.
But not, Ganhar thought
privately, as sobering as another possibility. Perhaps their enemies had had
reason to be confident of their own ability to control the situation? It was
possible, for if the southerners had their hooks deep into the civilian
agencies, Nergal's people had outdistanced them among the West's
soldiers.
The first reports had
produced plenty of demands for action or, at the very least, priority
investigations into whatever had happened, but their own tools among the
civilians had managed to quash any "overly hasty action," though
there had been some fiery scenes. Yet now a curtain of silence had descended
over the Western militaries, and Ganhar found that silence ominous.
He bit his lip, longing
for better sources within military intelligence, but they were a clannish
bunch. And, much as he hated to admit it, the northerners' willingness to
accept degenerates as equals had marked advantages. They'd spent centuries
setting up their networks, often recruiting from or even before birth. Ganhar
and Kirinal, on the other hand, had concentrated on recruiting adults,
preferring to work on individuals whose weaknesses were readily apparent. That
had its own advantages, like the ability to target people on their way up, but
the increasing high-tech tendency towards small, professional, career-oriented
military establishments worked against them.
The military's
background investigation procedures were at least as rigorous as those of their
civilian counterparts, and the steady incidence of leaks from civilian agencies
had led to an even stronger preference for career officers for truly sensitive
posts. Worse, Ganhar knew the northerners had firm links with the
traditional military families, though pinning any of them down was the
Breaker's own work. And that meant their military contacts were damned
well born in position, with sponsors who were ready to favor their own
and doubly suspicious of everyone else.
Ganhar, on the other
hand, had no choice but to corrupt officers already in place, which risked
counter-penetration, or fabricate fictitious backgrounds (always risky, even
against such primitives, much less degenerates aided by Imperial input), which
was why it had seemed so sensible to concentrate on their civilian masters,
instead.
He hoped that policy
wasn't about to boomerang on them.
"Well,
Ganhar?" Anu's abrasive voice broke in on his thoughts. "Why do you
think they've come out into the open? Assuming you have an
opinion."
While Ganhar hesitated,
seeking a survivable response, another voice answered.
"It may be,"
Commander Inanna said carefully, "that they're desperate."
"Explain," Anu
said curtly, and she shrugged.
"They're getting
old," she said softly. "They used Imperial fighters, and they can't
have many Imperials left. Maybe they're in even worse shape than we'd thought.
Maybe it's a last-ditch effort to cripple us while they can still use Imperial
technology at all."
"Hmph!" Anu
frowned down at the clenched hands in his lap. "Maybe you're right,"
he said finally, "but it doesn't change the fact that they've taken out
three quarters of our major bases. Maker only knows what they'll do next!"
"What can
they do, Chief?" It was Jantu, the enclave's chief security officer.
"The only other big target was Nanga Parbat, and we've already shut down
there. Sure, they hurt us, but those were the only targets they could hit with
Imperial weapons. And—" he added with a glance at Ganhar "—if we'd
put them closer to major population centers, they couldn't even have hit
them."
Ganhar ground his teeth.
Jantu was a bully and a sadist, more at home silencing dissidence by crushing
dissidents than thinking, yet he had his own brand of cunning. He liked to
propose sweeping, simplistic solutions to other people's problems. If they were
rejected, he could always say he'd warned everyone they were going about it
wrongly. If they were adopted and succeeded, he took the credit, if they
failed, he could always blame someone else for poor execution. Like his
long-standing argument in favor of using cities to cover their bases against
attack, claiming that their enemies' softness for the degenerates would protect
them. It would also make it vastly harder to hide them, but Jantu wouldn't have
been the one who had to try.
"It might not have
mattered." Inanna disliked Jantu quite as much as Ganhar did, and her
eyes—black now, not brown—were hard. "They risked panicking the
degenerates into starting a war. For all we know, they might've hit us if our
bases had been buried under New York or Moscow."
"I doubt
that," Jantu said, showing his teeth in what might—charitably—be called a
smile. "In all—"
"It doesn't
matter," Anu interrupted coldly. "What matters is that it's happened.
What's your best estimate of their next move, Ganhar?"
"I . . . don't
know." Ganhar picked his words carefully. "I'm not happy about how
quiet the degenerates' militaries have been. That may or may not indicate
something, but I don't have anything definite to base projections on. I'm
sorry, Chief, but that's all I can say."
He braced himself
against a fresh burst of rage, yet it was wiser to be honest than to let a
mistake come home to roost. But there was no blast of fury, only a slow nod.
"That's what I
thought," Anu grunted. "All right. We've already got most of our
Imperials—what's left of them!—under cover. We'll sit tight a bit longer on our
degenerates and less reliable Imperials. Jantu's right about one thing; there
aren't any more of our concentrations for them to hit. Let's see what
the bastards do next before we bring anyone else down here."
His henchmen nodded
silently, and he waved for them to leave. They rose, and Jantu led the way out
with Ganhar several meters behind him.
Anu smiled humorlessly
at the sight. There was no love lost between those two, and that kept them from
conspiring together even if it did make for a bit of inefficiency. But if
Ganhar fucked up again, not even the Maker would save him.
Inanna lingered, but
when he ignored her she shrugged and followed Ganhar. Anu let his eyes rest on
her departing back. She was about the only person he still trusted, as much as
he could bring himself to trust anyone.
They were all fools.
Fools and incompetents, or they would have taken Dahak for him fifty
thousand years ago. But Inanna was less incompetent than the others, and she
alone seemed to understand. The others had softened, forgotten who and what
they were, and accepted the failure of their plan. They were careful not to say
it, yet in their hearts, they had betrayed him. But Inanna recognized the
weight of his destiny, the pressure gathering even now behind him, driving him
towards escape and empire. Soon it would become an irresistible flood, washing
out from this miserable backwater world to sweep him to victory, and Inanna
knew it.
That was why she
remained loyal. She wanted to share that power as mistress, minion, or
lieutenant; it didn't matter to her. Which was just as well for her, he told
himself moodily. Not that she wasn't a pleasant armful in bed. And that new
body of hers was the best yet. He tried to recall what the tall, raven-haired
beauty's name had been, but it didn't matter. Her body was Inanna's now, and
Inanna's skill filled it.
The conference room door
closed silently behind the commander, and he stalked through his private exit,
feeling the automatic weapons that protected it recognizing his implants. He
entered his quarters and stared bitterly at the sumptuous furnishings.
Splendid, yes, but only a shadow of the splendor in Dahak's captain's
quarters. He had been pent here too long, denied his destiny for too many dusty
years. Yet it would come. Inevitably, it would come.
He crossed the main
cabin, ignoring Imperial light sculptures and soft music, overlooking priceless
tapestries, jewel work, and paintings from five thousand years of Terran
history, and peered into a mirror. There were a few tiny wrinkles around his
eyes now, and he glanced aside, letting those eyes rest on the framed holo cube
of the Anu-that-was, seeing again the power and presence that had been his.
This body was taller, broad shouldered and powerful, but it was still a poor
excuse for the one he had been born to. And it was growing older. There might
be another century of peak performance left to it, and then it would be time to
choose another. He'd hoped that when that time came he would be back out among
the stars where he belonged, teaching the Imperium the true meaning of Empire.
His original body
remained in stasis, though he hadn't looked upon it since it was placed there.
It caused him pain to see it and remember how it once had been, but he had
saved it, for it was his. He had not permitted Inanna to develop the
techniques to clone it. Not yet. That was reserved for another time, a fitting
celebration of his final, inevitable triumph.
The day would come, he
promised his stranger's face, when he would have the realm that should be his,
and when it came, he would have the Anu-that-was cloned afresh. He would live
forever, in his own body, and the stars themselves would be his toys.
* * *
Ganhar walked briskly
along the corridor, eyes hooded in thought. What were the bastards up
to? It was such a fundamental change, and it came after too many years of
unvarying operational patterns. There was a reason behind it, and, grateful as
he'd been for Inanna's intervention, he couldn't believe it was simple
desperation. Yet he had no better answer for it than she, and that frightened
him.
He sighed. He'd covered
his back as well as he could; now he could only wait to see what they were
doing. Whatever it was, it could hardly make the situation much worse. Anu was
mad, and growing madder with every passing year, but there was nothing Ganhar
could do about it . . . yet. Maker only knew how many of the others were the "Chief's"
spies, and no one knew who Anu might decide (or be brought to decide) was a
traitor.
Jantu was probably
licking his chops, praying daily for something to use against him, and there
was no sane reason to give him that something, but Ganhar had his plans. He
suspected others had theirs, as well, but until they finally escaped this
damned planet they needed Anu. Or, no, they needed Inanna and her medical
teams, but that was almost the same thing. Ganhar had no idea why the
bioscience officer remained so steadfastly loyal to that madman, but as long as
she did, any effort to remove him would be both futile and fatal.
He stepped into the
transit shaft and let it whirl him away to his own office. There might be other
reports by now—he was certainly driving his teams hard enough to produce them!
If there were none, he could at least relieve his own tension by giving someone
else a tongue-lashing.
* * *
General Sir Frederick
Amesbury, KCB, CBE, VC, DSO, smiled tightly at the portrait of the king on his
office wall. Sir Frederick could trace his ancestry to the reign of Edward the
Confessor. Unlike many of Nergal's Terra-born allies he was not directly
descended from her crew, though there had been a few distant collateral connections,
for his people had been among their helpers since the seventeenth century.
Now, after all those
years, things were coming to a head, and the Americans' General Hatcher was
shaping up even more nicely than Sir Frederick had expected. Of course, Hector
was to blame for prodding Hatcher into action, and Sir Frederick had been
primed to support the Yank's first tentative suggestion, but Hatcher was doing
bloody well.
He checked his desk
clock, and his smile grew shark-like. The SAS and Royal Marines would be
hitting the Red Eyebrows base in Hartlepool in less than two hours, after
which, Sir Frederick would have to notify the Prime Minister. The Council
reckoned the P.M. was still his own man, and Sir Frederick was inclined to
agree, but it would be interesting to see if that was enough to save his own
position when the Home and Defense Ministers—who most definitely were not
their own woman and man, respectively—demanded his head.
* * *
Oberst Eric von Grau
sat back on his haunches in the ditch. The leutnant beside him was
peering through his light-gathering binoculars at the isolated chalets in the
bend of the Mosel River, but Grau had already carried out his own final check.
His two hundred picked men were quite invisible, and his attention had moved to
other things. He cocked an ear, waiting for the thunder to begin, and allowed
himself a tight smile.
He had treated himself
to a quiet celebration when the orders came through from Nergal, and
when news of the first three strikes rocked the world, he'd hardly been able to
wait for the request from the Americans. German intelligence had spotted this
January Twelfth training camp long ago, though the security minister had chosen
not to act on the information.
But Herr Trautmann
didn't know about this little jaunt, and the army had no intention of telling
the civilians about it till it was over. Grau's superiors had learned their
lessons the hard way and trusted the Americans' USFC more than they did their
own civilian overlords. Which was a sad thing, but one Grau understood better
than most.
"Inbound," a
radio voice said quietly, and he grinned at Leutnant Heil. Heil looked a
great deal like a younger version of his superior—not surprisingly, perhaps,
since Grau's great-great-great-great-great-grandmother was also Heil's
great-great-grandmother—and his smile was identical.
The sudden boom of
supersonic aircraft crashed over them as the Luftwaffe fighter-bombers
came in on full after-burner at fifty meters.
* * *
"Go." Major
Tama Matsuo, Japanese Army, touched his sergeant on the shoulder and the two of
them slithered through the shadows after Lieutenant Yamashita's team. Darkness
wrapped Bangkok in comforting anonymity, but the grips of the major's automatic
grenade launcher were slippery in his hands.
He and the sergeant
turned a corner and faded into the shrubbery at the base of a stone wall,
joining the men already waiting for them, and Tama checked the time again.
Lieutenant Kagero's men should be in position by now, but the timetable gave
them another thirty-five seconds.
The major watched the
dimmed display of his watch, trying to control his breathing, and hoped Hector
MacMahan's intelligence was good. It had been hard to convince his superiors to
sanction a raid into Asian Alliance territory without civilian approval, even
if his father was Chief of the Imperial Staff and even to take out the foreign
HQ of the Japanese Army for Racial Purity. And if the operation blew up, his
reputation and influence alike would suffer catastrophically. Assuming he
survived at all.
He watched the final
seconds tick away. It still seemed a bit foolhardy. Satisfying, but foolhardy.
Still, he who wanted the tiger's cubs must venture into the tiger's den to get
them. He just hoped the Council was right. And that he would do nothing to
dishonor himself in his grandfather's eyes.
"Now," he said
quietly into the boom mike before his lips, and Tamman's grandson committed his
men to combat.
* * *
Colonel Hector MacMahan
stepped out into his backyard as the stealthed cutter ghosted down the canyon
behind the house and settled soundlessly to the grass. The reports would be
coming in soon, and the expected flak from the civilians would come with them.
Anu's people had spent years infiltrating the civilians who set policy and
controlled the military (normally, that was) but even the most senior of them
would find it hard to stop things now.
He felt a glow of
admiration for his superiors, and especially Gerald Hatcher. They didn't know
what he knew, but they knew they'd been leashed too long. Anu had gotten just a
bit too fancy—or too confident, perhaps.
In the old days, he'd
relocated his "degenerates' " HQs whenever they were spotted; for the
last few years he'd amused himself by simply forbidding action against major
bases. There had been no way to prevent interceptions and attacks on action
groups or isolated training and staging bases, but his minions in the
intelligence community had argued that it was wiser to watch headquarters
groups rather than attack and risk driving them back out of sight.
But the attacks on three
really big terrorist bases, two of which the generals hadn't even known
existed, had been the final straw. They didn't know who'd done it, how, or, for
that matter, why, but they knew what it was. Their own charter was the eradication
of terrorism, and the realization that someone else was doing their job was too
much to stand. Hatcher and his fellows had proven even more amenable to his
suggestions than expected.
They couldn't do much
about the Islamic and officially-sponsored Asiatic groups, most of whose bases
were openly entrenched in countries hostile to their governments. But the
homegrown variety was another matter entirely, and it was amazing how memos
notifying the generals' nominal superiors of their plans had been so
persistently misrouted.
And if they
couldn't hit the foreign groups, MacMahan knew who could. He hadn't told them
that, but he suspected they'd be figuring it out shortly.
The hatch opened and the
colonel whistled shrilly. A happy woof answered as his half-lab,
half-rotweiller bitch Tinker Bell galloped past him and hopped up into the
cutter. She poked her nose into Gunnery Chief Hanalat's face, licking her
affectionately, and the white-haired woman laughed and tugged on the big dog's
soft ears while MacMahan tossed his duffel bags up into the cutter and climbed
in after them.
General Hatcher had
ordered MacMahan to make himself scarce for the next few weeks without
realizing just how scarce the colonel intended to become. The Unified Special
Forces Command's CO meant to take the heat when his bosses found out what he'd
been up to, though MacMahan suspected that heat would be less intense than the
general feared. Most of his superiors were men and women of integrity, and the
ones who weren't would find it hard to raise too much ruckus in the face of the
general approval MacMahan anticipated.
Of course, once it
became apparent just how thoroughly the colonel had vanished, his boss would
figure out he'd known about the mystery attacks ahead of time. The northerners
had never tried to recruit him, but Hatcher was no fool. He'd realize he had
been used, though it was unlikely to cost him much sleep, and MacMahan hated to
run out without explaining things to him. But he had no choice, for one thing
was certain: when they found out what had happened and how, the southerners
would suddenly become far, far more interested in one Colonel Hector MacMahan,
USMC, currently attached to the USFC.
Not that it mattered.
Indeed, his role as instigator was part of the plan, an intentional diversion
of suspicion from their other people, and he'd always known his position was
more exposed than most. That was why he was a bachelor with no family, and they
wouldn't be able to find him when they wanted him, anyway.
He only wished he could
see Anu's face when he got the news.
Head of Security Jantu
leaned back and hummed happily, feeling no need to dissemble in the security of
his own office, as he replayed the last command meeting in his mind.
The "Chief's"
wrath had been awesome when the news came in. This time he'd half-expected it,
which meant he'd had time to work up a good head of steam ahead of time. The
things he'd said to poor Ganhar!
It was all quite
terrible . . . but more terrible for some than for others. Most of the dead
Imperials were Ganhar's people, and nothing that weakened Ganhar could be
completely bad. The thought that degenerates could do such a neat job was
galling, but whatever happened in the field, the enclave that was his own
responsibility was and would remain inviolate, so none of the egg was on his
face. No, it was on Ganhar's face, and with just a little luck—and, perhaps, a
little judicious help—that might just prove fatal for poor Ganhar.
It had been kind of Nergal's
people to take out Kirinal for him. Now if he could only get rid of Ganhar, he
might just manage to bring Security and Operations together under the control
of a single man: him. Of course, it was probable the "Chief" would
balk at that and pick a new head for Operations, but Jantu would be perfectly
happy if Anu made the logical choice. And even if he decided to choose someone
other than Bahantha, the newcomer would be hopelessly junior to Jantu. One way
or another, he would dominate whatever security arrangements resulted from
Ganhar's . . . departure.
And then it would be
time to deal with Anu himself. Jantu would not have let a sane man stand
between him and power, and he felt no qualms at all over removing a madman.
Indeed, it might almost be considered his civic duty, and he often permitted
himself a mildly virtuous feeling when he considered it.
Jantu hadn't realized
quite how mad the engineer was when the plot to seize Dahak first came
up, but he'd recognized that Anu wasn't exactly stable. Overthrow the Imperium?
Ludicrous! But Jantu had been prepared to go along until they had the ship, at
which point he and his own henchmen would eliminate Anu and put a modified
version of the original plan into effect. It would be so much simpler to
transform Dahak's loyalists into helots and build their own empire in
some decently deserted portion of the galaxy than to pit themselves against the
Imperium and get squashed for their pains.
That plan had gone out
the airlock when the mutiny failed, but there were still possibilities. Indeed,
the present situation seemed even more promising.
He knew Anu and,
possibly, Inanna believed the Imperium was still out there, waiting to be
conquered, but the Imperium's expansion should have brought at least a colony
to Earth long since, for habitable planets weren't all that plentiful. By
Jantu's most conservative estimate, BuCol's survey teams should have arrived
forty millennia ago. That they hadn't suggested all sorts of hopeful
possibilities to a man like Jantu.
If the Imperium had
fallen upon hard times, why, then Anu's plans for conquest might be practical
after all. And the first stage was to forget this clandestine nonsense and take
control of Earth openly. A few demonstrations of Imperial weaponry should bring
even the most recalcitrant degenerate to heel. Once he could recruit a properly
motivated batch of sepoys and come out of the shadows, Jantu could hammer out a
decent tech base in a few decades and set about gathering up the reins of
galactic power in a tidy, orderly fashion.
But first there was
Ganhar, and then Anu. Inanna might be a bit of a problem, for he would continue
to need her medical skills, at least until a properly-trained successor was
available. Still, he felt confident he could convince the commander to see
reason. It would be a pity to mar that lovely new body of hers, but Jantu was a
great believer in the efficacy of judiciously applied pain when it came to
behavior modification.
He smiled happily, never
opening his eyes, and began to hum a bouncier, brighter ditty.
Ramman watched the
tunnel walls slide past the cutter and worried. He had the code now. All he had
to do was make it to the drop to deposit it. Simple.
And dangerous. He should
never have agreed, but the orders had been preemptive, not discretionary. And
if the whole idea was insane, he was still in too deep to back out. Or was he?
He scrubbed damp palms
on his trousers and closed his eyes. Of course he was! He was a dead man if the
"Chief" ever found out he'd even talked to the other side, and his
death would be as unpleasant as Anu could contrive.
He clenched his teeth as
he contemplated the bitter irony that brought him to this pass. Fear of Anu had
tempted him to contact the other side in a desperate effort to escape, yet that
same contact had actually destroyed his chance to flee. First Horus and then
his bitch of a daughter had steadfastly refused to let him defect, far
less help him do it!
He made himself stop
trying to dry his hands, hoping he hadn't already betrayed himself. He should have
realized what would happen. Why should Horus and his fellows trust him? They
knew what he was, what he had been, and how easily trusting him could have
proven fatal. So they'd left him inside, using him, and he'd let himself be
used. What choice had he had? All they had to do to terminate his long
existence was wax deliberately clumsy in their efforts to contact him; Anu
would see to it from there.
He'd given them a lot of
information over the years, and things had gone so smoothly he'd grown almost
accustomed to it. But that was before they told him about this. Madness! It
would destroy them all, and him with them.
He knew what they had to
be planning. Only one thing made sense of his orders, and it was the craziest
thing they'd tried yet.
But what if they could
pull it off? If they succeeded, surely they would honor their word to him and
let him live. Wouldn't they?
Only they wouldn't
succeed. They couldn't.
Maybe he should tell
Ganhar? If he went to the Operations chief and gave him the location of his
drop, helped him bait a trap for Jiltanith's agent . . . surely that should be
worth something? Maybe Ganhar could be convinced to pretend it had all been
part of an elaborate counter-intelligence ploy?
But what if he couldn't?
What if Ganhar simply turned him over to Jantu as the traitor he was?
The huge inner portals
opened, admitting the cutter to the hollow heart of the enclave, and Ramman
balanced on a razor edge of agonized indecision.
* * *
Ganhar rubbed his weary
eyes and frowned at the holo map hovering above his desk. Its green dots were
fewer than ever, its red dots correspondingly more numerous. His people had
maintained direct links with relatively few of the terrorist bases the degenerates
had hit, but the fallout from those strikes was devastating. In less than
twenty-four hours, thirty-one—thirty-one!—major HQs, training, and base
camps had been wiped out in separate, flawlessly synchronized operations whose
efficient ferocity had stunned even Ganhar. The shock had been still worse for
his degenerate tools; dying for a cause was one thing, but even the most
fanatical religious or political bigot must pause and give thought to the body
blow international terrorism had just taken.
He sighed. His personal
position was in serious jeopardy, and with it his life, and there was
disturbingly little he could do about it. Only the fact that he'd warned Anu
something might be brewing had saved him so far, and it wouldn't save him very
much longer.
His civilian minions'
inability to stop their own soldiers or even warn him of what was coming was
frightening. Nergal's people must have infiltrated the military even
more deeply than he'd feared, and if they could do that much, what else might
they have accomplished without his noticing?
More to the point, why
were they doing this? Inanna's suggestion that age had compelled them to attack
while they still had enough Imperials to handle their equipment made sense up
to a point, but the latest round of disasters had been executed out of purely
Terrestrial resources. It took careful planning to blend Terran and Imperial
efforts so neatly, which suggested the entire operation had been worked out
well in advance. Which, in turn, suggested some long-range objective beyond the
destruction of replaceable barbarian allies.
Ganhar got that far
without difficulty; unfortunately, it still gave no hint of what the bastards
were up to. Drive his sources as he might, he simply couldn't find a single
reason for such a fundamental, abrupt change in tactics.
About the only thing his
people had managed was the identification of one of the enemy's
previously unsuspected degenerate henchmen. Not that it helped a great deal,
for Hector MacMahan had vanished. Which might mean they'd been intended to spot
him, and that—
The admittance chime
broke into his thoughts and he straightened, kneading the back of his neck as
he sent a mental command to the hatch mechanism. The panel licked aside, and
Commander Inanna stepped through it.
Ganhar's eyes widened
slightly, for he and the medical officer were scarcely friends—indeed, about
the only thing they had in common was their mutual detestation for Jantu—and
she'd never visited his private quarters. His mental antennae quivered, and he
waved her courteously to a Louis XIV chair under a seventh-century Tang Dynasty
tapestry.
"Good evening,
Ganhar." She sat and crossed her long, shapely legs. Well, not hers,
precisely, but then neither was Ganhar's body "his" in the usual
sense, and Inanna really had picked a stunningly beautiful one this time.
"Good
evening," he replied. His voice gave away nothing, but she smiled as if
she sensed his burning curiosity. Which she probably did. She might be
unswervingly loyal to a maniac, and it was highly probable she was a bit around
the bend herself, but she'd never been dense or unimaginative.
"No doubt you're
wondering about this visit," she said. He considered replying but settled
for raising his eyebrows politely, and she laughed.
"It's simple
enough. You're in trouble, Ganhar. Deep, deep trouble. But you know that, don't
you?"
"The thought had
crossed my mind," he admitted.
"It's done lots
more than that. In fact, you've been sitting here sweating like a pig because
you know you're about one more bad report away from—pffft!" She
snapped her fingers, and he winced.
"Your grief is
moving, but I doubt you came just to warn me in case I hadn't noticed."
"True. True."
She smiled cheerfully. "You know, I've never liked you, Ganhar. Frankly,
I've always thought you were in it out of pure greed, which would be fine if I
weren't pretty certain your plans include winding up in charge yourself. With,
I'm sure, fatal consequences for Anu and myself."
Ganhar blinked, and her
eyes danced at his failure to hide his surprise.
"Ganhar, Ganhar!
You disappoint me! Just because you think I'm a little crazy is no reason to
think I'm stupid! You may even be right about my mental state, but you really
ought to be a bit more careful about letting it color your calculations."
"I see." He
propped an elbow on his desk through the holo map and regarded her as calmly as
he could. "May I assume you're pointing out my shortcomings for a
reason?"
"There. I always
knew you were bright." She paused tauntingly, forcing him to ask, and he
had no choice but to comply.
"And that reason
is?"
"Why, I'm here to
help you. Or to propose an alliance, of sorts, at any rate." He sat a bit
straighter, and a strange hardness banished all amusement from her eyes.
"Not against Anu,
Ganhar," she said coldly. "Whether I'm crazy or not isn't your
concern, but make one move against him, and you're a dead man."
Ganhar shivered. He had
no idea what that icy guarantee might rest upon, but neither did he have any
desire to find out. She sounded far too sure of herself for that, and, as she'd
pointed out, she was hardly stupid. Assuming he survived the next few weeks, he
was going to have to recast his plans for Commander Inanna.
"I see," he
said after a long pause. "But if not against him, then against who?"
"There you go
again. Try to accept that I'm reasonably bright, Ganhar. It'll make things much
easier for us both."
"Jantu?"
"Of course. That
weasel has plans for all of us. But then," her smile turned wolfish,
"I have plans for him, too. Jantu's in very poor health; he just doesn't
know it yet. He won't—until his next transplant comes due."
Ganhar shivered again.
Brain transplants were ticklish even with Imperial technology, and a certain
number of fatalities were probably unavoidable, but he'd assumed Anu decided
which patients suffered complications. It hadn't occurred to him Inanna might
be doing it on her own.
"So," she went
on pleasantly, "we still have to decide what to do with him in the
meantime. If he ever left the enclave, he might have an accident. I'd
considered that, and it would've been a neat way to get him, Kirinal, and
you, wouldn't it? You're in charge of external operations . . . he's your worst
rival . . . who wouldn't've wondered if you two hadn't arranged it?"
"You have a
peculiar way of convincing an 'ally' to trust you," Ganhar pointed out
carefully.
"I'm only proving I
can be honest with you, Ganhar. Doesn't my openness reassure you?"
"Not
particularly."
"Well, that's
probably wise of you. And that's my point; you really are much smarter than
Jantu—less devious, but smarter. And because you are, I'm reasonbly certain your
plans to assassinate Anu—and possibly myself—don't envision any immediate
execution date." She smiled cheerfully at her own play on words. "But
if you disappeared from the equation, Jantu is stupid enough to make his try
immediately. He wouldn't succeed, but he doesn't know that, and I'm sure it
would come to open fighting in the end. If that happened, Anu or I might be
among the casualties. I wouldn't like that."
"So why not tell
Anu?"
"The one absolutely
predictable thing about you is your ability to disappoint me, Ganhar. You must
be crazy yourself if you think I haven't realized Anu is. The technical term,
if you're wondering, is advanced paranoia, complicated by megalomania. He
hasn't quite reached grossly delusional proportions yet, but he's headed that
way. And while we're being so honest, let's admit that paranoia can be a
survival tool in situations like his. After all, a paranoic is only crazy when
people aren't out to get him.
"But the point is
that I'm probably the only person he trusts at all, and one reason he does is
that I've very carefully avoided getting caught up in any of our little
intrigues. But if I warned him about Jantu, he'd start wondering if I hadn't
decided to join with you, instead. He's not exactly noted for moderation, and
the simplest solution to his problem would be to kill all three of us. I
wouldn't like that, either."
"Then why
not—"
"Careful,
Ganhar!" She leaned towards him, her eyes hard as two black opals, and her
soft, soft voice was almost a hiss. "Be very, very careful what you
suggest to me. Of course I could. I'm his doctor, after all. But I won't. Not
now, not ever. Remember that."
"I . . .
understand," he said, licking his lips.
"I doubt
that." Her eyes softened, and somehow that frightened Ganhar even more
than their hardness had, but then she shook her head. "No, I doubt
that," she said more naturally, "but it doesn't matter. What matters
is that you have an ally against Jantu—for now, at least. We both know things
are going to get worse before they get better, but I'll do what I can to draw
fire from you during conferences, and I'll support you against Jantu and maybe
even when you stand up to him. Not always directly, perhaps, but I will.
I want you around to take charge when we start rebuilding your operations
network."
"You mean you want
me around because you don't want Jantu in charge, right?" Ganhar
asked, meeting her eyes fully.
"Well, of course.
But it's the same thing, isn't it?"
It most definitely
wasn't the same thing, but Ganhar chose not to press the point. She peered
deeply into his eyes for a moment, then nodded.
"I can just see
your busy little mind whirring away in there," she said dryly. "That's
good. But, as one ally to another, I'd advise you to come up with some sort of
forceful recommendation for Anu. Something positive and masterful. It doesn't
have to actually accomplish much, you understand, but a little violence
would be helpful. He'll like that. The notion of hitting back—of doing
something—always appeals to megalomaniacs."
"I—" Ganhar
broke off and drew a deep breath. "Inanna, you have to realize how what
you've just said sounds. I'm not going to suggest that you do anything to Anu. You're
right; I don't understand why you feel the way you do, but I'll accept it and
remember it. But don't you worry about what else I might do with the insight
you've just given me?"
"Of course not,
Ganhar." She lounged back in her chair with a kindly air. "We both
know I've just turned all of your calculations topsy-turvy, but you're a bright
little boy. Given a few decades to consider it, you'll realize I wouldn't have
done it if I hadn't already taken precautions. That's valuable in its own right,
don't you think? I mean, knowing that, crazy or not, I'll kill you the moment
you become a threat to Anu or me is bound to color your thinking, isn't
it?"
"I suppose you
could put it that way."
"Then my visit
hasn't been a waste, has it?" She rose and stretched, deliberately
taunting him with the exquisite perfection of the body she wore as she turned
for the hatch. Then she paused and looked back over her shoulder almost
coquettishly.
"Oh! I almost
forgot. I meant to warn you about Bahantha."
Ganhar blinked again.
What about Bahantha? She was his senior assistant, number two in Operations now
that he'd replaced Kirinal, and she was one of the very few people he trusted.
His thoughts showed in his face, and Inanna shook her head at his expression.
"Men! You didn't
even know that she's Jantu's lover, did you?" She laughed merrily at his
sudden shock.
"Are you
certain?" he demanded.
"Of course. Jantu
controls the official security channels, but I control biosciences, and
that's a much better spy system than he has. You might want to remember that
yourself. But the thing is, I think you'd better arrange for her to suffer a
mischief, don't you? An accident would be nice. Nothing that would cast
suspicion on you, just enough to send her along to sickbay." Her toothy smile
put Ganhar forcefully in mind of a Terran piranha.
"I . . .
understand," he said.
"Good," she
replied, and sauntered from his cabin. The hatch closed, and Ganhar looked
blindly back at the map. It was amazing. He'd just acquired a powerful ally . .
. so why did he feel so much worse?
* * *
Abu al-Nasir, who had
not allowed himself to think of himself as Andrew Asnani in over two years, sat
in the rear of the cutter and yawned. He'd seen enough Imperial technology in
the last six months to take the wonder out of it, and he judged it best to let
the Imperials about him see it.
In fact, his curiosity
was unquenchable, for unlike most of the northerners' Terra-born, he had never
seen Nergal and never knowingly met a single one of their Imperials. That,
coupled with his Semitic heritage, was what had made him so perfect for this
role. He was of them, yet apart from them, unrelated to them by blood and with
no family heritage of assistance to connect him to them, however deep the
southerners looked.
It also meant he hadn't
grown up knowing the truth, and the shock of discovering it had been the second
most traumatic event in his life. But it had offered him both vengeance and a
chance to build something positive from the wreckage of his life, and that was
more than he'd let himself hope for in far too long.
He yawned again,
remembering the evening his universe had changed. He'd known something special
was about to happen, although his wildest expectations had fallen immeasurably
short of the reality. Full colonels with the USFC did not, as a rule, invite
junior sergeants in the venerable Eighty-Second Airborne to meet them in the
middle of a North Carolina forest in the middle of the night. Not even when the
sergeant in question had applied for duty with the USFC's anti-terrorist action
units. Unless, of course, his application had been accepted and something very,
very strange was in the air.
But his application had
not been accepted, for the USFC had never even officially seen it. Colonel
MacMahan had scooped it out of his computers and hidden it away because he had
an offer for Sergeant Asnani. A very special offer that would require that
Sergeant Asnani die.
The colonel, al-Nasir
admitted to himself, had been an excellent judge of character. Young Asnani's
mother, father, and younger sister had walked down a city street in New Jersey
just as a Black Mecca bomb went off, and when he heard what the colonel had to
suggest, he was more than ready to accept.
The pre-arranged
"fatal" practice jump accident had gone off perfectly, purging Asnani
from all active data bases, and his true training had begun. The USFC hadn't
had a thing to do with it, although it had been some time before Asnani
realized that. Nor had he guessed that the exhausting training program was also
a final test, an evaluation of both capabilities and character, until the
people who had actually recruited him told him the truth.
Had anyone but Hector
MacMahan told him, he might not have believed it, despite the technological
marvels the colonel demonstrated. But when he realized who had truly recruited
him and why, and that his family had been but three more deaths among untold
millions slaughtered so casually over the centuries, he had been ready. And so
it was that when the USFC mounted Operation Odysseus, the man who had been
Andrew Asnani was inserted with it, completely unknown to anyone but Hector
MacMahan himself.
Now the cutter slanted
downward, and Abu al-Nasir, deputy action commander of Black Mecca, prepared to
greet the people who had summoned him here.
* * *
"Except for the
fact that we've only gotten one man inside, things seem to be moving
well," Hector MacMahan said. Jiltanith had followed him into the wardroom,
and she nodded to Colin and selected a chair of her own, sitting with her
habitual cat-like grace.
"So far,"
Colin agreed. "What do you and 'Tanni expect next?"
"Hard to say,"
Hector admitted. "They've got most of their people inside by now, and,
logically, they'll sit tight in their enclave to wait us out. On the other hand,
every time we use any of our own Imperials in an operation we give them a
chance to trail someone back to us, so they'll probably leave us some
sacrificial goats. We'll have to hit a few of them to make it work, and I've
already put the ops plan into the works. We're on schedule, but everything
still depends on luck and timing."
"Why am I unhappy
whenever you use words like 'logically' and 'luck'?"
"Because you know
the southerners may not be too tightly wrapped, and that even if they are, we
have to do things exactly right to bring this off."
"Hector hath the
right of't, Colin," Jiltanith said. " 'Tis clear enow that Anu, at
the least, is mad, and what means have we whereby to judge the depth his
madness hath attained? I'truth, 'tis in my mind that divers others of his
minions do share his madness, else had they o'erthrown him long before. 'Twould
be rankest folly in our plans to make assumption madmen do rule their inner
councils, yet ranker far to make assumption they do not. And if that be so,
then naught but fools would foretell their plans wi' certainty."
"I see. But haven't
we tried to do just that?"
"There's truth
i'that. Yet so we must, if hope may be o'victory. And as Hector saith, 'tis
clear some movement hath been made e'en now amongst their minions. Mad or sane,
Anu hath scant choice i'that. 'Tis also seen how his 'goats' do stand exposed,
temptations to our fire, and so 'twould seem good Hector hath beagled out the
manner of their thought aright. Yet 'tis also true that one ill choice may yet
bring ruin 'pon us all. I'truth, I do not greatly fear it, for Hector hath a
cunning mind. We stand all in his hand, empowered by his thought, and 'tis most
unlike our great design will go awry."
"Spare my
blushes," MacMahan said dryly. "Remember I only got one man inside,
and even if the core of our strategy works perfectly, we could still get hurt
along the way."
"Certes, yet wert
ever needle-witted, e'en as a child, my Hector." She smiled and ruffled
her distant nephew's hair, and he forgot his customary impassivity as he
grinned at her. "And hath it not been always so? Naught worth the doing
comes free o'danger. Yet 'tis in my mind 'tis in smaller things we may find
ourselves dismayed, not in the greater."
"Like what?"
Colin demanded.
"That depends on too
many factors for us to say. If it didn't, they wouldn't be surprises. It's
unlikely anything they do to us can hurt us too much, but you're a military man
yourself, Colin. What's the first law of war?"
"Murphy's,"
Colin said grimly.
"Exactly. We've
disaster-proofed our position as well as we can, but the fact remains that
we're betting on just a pair, as Horus would say—Ramman and Ninhursag—and one
hole card—our man inside Black Mecca. We don't know what cards Anu holds, but
if he decides to fold this hand or even just stands pat for a few years, it all
comes unglued."
"For God's sake
spare me the poker metaphors!"
"Sorry, but they
fit. The most important single factor is Anu's mental state. If he suddenly
turns sane and decides to ignore us until we go away, we lose. We have to do
him enough damage to make him antsy, and we have to do it in a way that keeps him
from getting too suspicious. We have to hurt him enough to make him eager to
come back out and start making repairs, but at the same time we have to stop
hurting him in a way that leaves him confident enough to come right back out.
Which means we have to hit at least some of his 'goats' after his important
personnel have all gone to ground, then wind down when it's obvious our returns
are starting to diminish."
"Well," Colin
tried to project both confidence and caution, "if anyone can pull it off,
you two can."
"Thanks, I
think," Hector said, and Jiltanith nodded.
* * *
The stocky,
olive-brown-skinned woman sat quietly in the cutter, but her eyes were bright
and busy. There were Terra-born as well as Imperials around her, and the
trickiest part was showing just enough interest in them.
Ninhursag had never
considered herself an actress, but perhaps she was one now. If so, her
continued survival might be said to constitute a favorable review.
She'd lived in the
enclave only briefly and had not returned in over a century, so a certain
amount of interest was natural. By the same token, any Terra-born being brought
into the enclave must be important and thus a logical cause for curiosity. The
trick was to display her curiosity without giving anyone cause to suspect that
she knew at least one of them was far more than he seemed. Her instructions
made no mention of Terra-born allies, but they made no sense if there were no
couriers, and if those couriers were Imperials she might as well have carried
the information out herself.
At the same time, she
knew she was suspect as one who had never been part of Anu's inner circle, so a
certain nervousness was also natural. Yet showing too much nervousness would be
worse than showing none at all. Her actions and attitude must show she knew she
was under suspicion yet appear too cowed for that suspicion to be justified.
In truth, it was the
last part she found hardest. Her horror at what Anu and Inanna had done to her
fellow mutineers and the poor, helpless primitives of this planet had become
cold, hard fury, and she hated the need to restrain it. When she'd learned
Horus and the rest of Nergal's crew had deserted Anu and chosen to fight
him, her first thought had been to defect to them, but they'd convinced her she
was more valuable inside Anu's organization. No doubt caution played a part in
that—they didn't entirely trust her and wanted to take no chances on
infiltration of their own ranks—but that was inevitable, and her only other
option would have been to strike out on her own, vanishing and doing nothing in
order to hide from both factions.
Yet doing nothing had
been unthinkable, and so she had become Nergal's not-quite-trusted spy,
fully aware of the terrifying risk she ran. Terror had been a cold, omnipresent
part of her for far too long, but it was not her master. That had been left to
another emotion: hate.
The sudden outbreak of
violence had surprised her as much as it had any of Anu's loyalists, but
coupled with the odd instructions she'd received from Jiltanith, it made frightening,
exhilarating sense. There was only one reason Anu's enemies could want those
admittance codes.
She'd tried not to
wonder how they hoped to get them out of the enclave, for what she neither knew
nor suspected could not be wrung out of her, but she'd always been cursed with
an active mind, and the bare bones of their plan were glaringly obvious. Its
mad recklessness shocked her, but she knew what they planned, and hopeless
though it might well be, she was eager.
The cutter nosed
downward, and she felt her implants tingle as they waited to steal the key to
Anu's fortress for his foes.
Dark and silence ruled
the interior of the mighty starship. Only the hydroponic sections and parks and
atriums were lit, yet the whole stupendous structure pulsed with the electronic
awarness of the being called Dahak.
It was good, the
computer reflected, that he was not human, for a human in his place would have
gone mad long before Man relearned the art of working metal. Of course, a human
might also have found a way to act without needing to wait for a Colin
MacIntyre.
But he was not human.
There were human qualities he did not possess, for they had not been built into
him. His core programming was heuristic, else he had not developed this concept
of selfhood that separated him from the Comp Cent of old, yet he had not made
that final transition into human-ness. Still, he had come closer than
any other of his kind ever had, and perhaps someday he would take that step. He
rather looked forward to the possibility, and he wondered if his ability to
anticipate that potentiality reflected the beginnings of an imagination.
It was an interesting
question, one upon which even he might profitably spend a few endless seconds
of thought, but one he could not answer. He was the product of intellect and
electronics, not intuition and evolution, with no experiential basis for any of
the intangible human capacities and emotions. Imagination, ambition,
compassion, mercy, empathy, hate, longing . . . love. They were words he had
found in his memory when he awoke, concepts whose definitions he could recite
with neither hesitation nor true understanding.
And yet . . . and yet
there were those stirrings at his soulless core. Did this cold
determination of his to destroy the mutineers and all their works reflect only
the long-dead Druaga's Alpha Priority commands? Or was it possible that the
determination was his, Dahak's, as well?
One thing he did know;
he had made greater strides in learning to comprehend rather than simply define
human emotions in the six months of Colin MacIntyre's command than in the
fifty-two millennia that had preceded them. Another entity, separate from
himself, had intruded into his lonely universe, someone who had treated him not
as a machine, not as a portion of a starship that simply had the ability to
speak, but as a person.
That was a novel thing,
and in the weeks since Colin had departed, Dahak had replayed their every
conversation, studied every recorded gesture, analyzed almost every thought his
newest captain had thought or seemed to think. There was a strange compulsion
within him, one created by no command and that no diagnostic program could
dissect, and that, too, was a novel experience.
Dahak had studied his
newest Alpha Priority orders, as well, constructing, as ordered, new models and
new projections in light of the discovery of a second faction of mutineers.
That process he understood, and the exercise of his faculties gave him
something he supposed a human would call enjoyment.
But other parts of those
orders were highly dissatisfying. He understood and accepted the prohibition
against sending his captain further aid or taking any direct action before the
northern mutineers attacked the southern lest he reveal his actual
capabilities. But the order to communicate with the northern leaders in the
event of Colin's death and the categorical, inarguable command to place himself
under the command of one Jiltanith and the other mutineer children—those
he would obey because he must, not because he wished to.
Wished to. Why, he was
becoming more human. What business had a computer thinking in terms of its own
wishes? If ever he had expressed a wish or desire to his core programmers, they
would have been horrified. They would have shut him down, purged his memory,
reprogrammed him from scratch.
But Colin would not
have. And that, Dahak realized, in the very first flash of intuition he had
ever experienced, was the reason he did not wish to obey his orders. If he must
obey them, it would mean that Colin was dead, and Dahak did not wish for
Colin to die, for Colin was something far more important to Dahak's comfortable
functioning than the computer had realized.
He was a friend, the
first friend Dahak had ever had, and with that realization, a sudden tremble
seemed to run through the vast, molecular circuitry of his mighty intellect. He
had a friend, and he understood the concept of friendship. Imperfectly,
perhaps, but did humans understand it perfectly themselves? They did not.
Yet imperfect though his
understanding was, the concept was a gestalt of staggering efficacy. He had
internalized it without ever realizing it, and with it he had internalized all
those other "human" emotions, after a fashion, at least. For with
friendship came fear—fear for a friend in danger—and the ability to hate those
who threatened that friend.
It was not an entirely
pleasant thing, the huge computer mused, this friendship. The cold,
intellectual detachment of his armor had been rent—not fully, but in part—and
for the first time in fifty millennia, the bitter irony of helplessness in the
face of his mighty firepower was real, and it hurt. There. Yet another human
concept: pain.
The mighty, hidden
starship swept onward in its endless orbit, silent and dark, untenanted, yet
filled with life. Filled with awareness and anxiety and a new, deeply personal
purpose, for the mighty electronic intellect, the person, at its core
had learned to care at last . . . and knew it.
* * *
The small party crept
invisibly through the streets of Tehran. Their black, close-fitting clothing
would have marked them as foreigners—emissaries, no doubt, of the "Great
Satans"—had any seen them, but no one did, for the technical wizardry of
the Fourth Imperium was abroad in Tehran this night.
Tamman paused at a
corner to await the return of his nominal second-in-command, feeling deaf and
blind within his portable stealth field. It was strange to realize a Terra-born
human could be better at something like this than he, yet Tamman could not
remember a time when he had not "seen" and "felt" his full
electromagnetic and gravitonic environment. Because of that, he felt
incomplete, almost maimed, even with his sensory boosters, when he must rely
solely upon his natural senses, and taking point was not a job for a man whose
confidence was shaken, however keen his eyes or ears might be.
Sergeant Amanda Givens
returned as silently as the night wind, ghosting back into his awareness, and
nodded to him. He nodded back, and he and the other five members of their team
crept forward once more behind her.
Tamman was grateful she
was here. Amanda was one of their own, directly descended from Nergal's
crew, and, like Hector, she'd also been a member of the USFC until very
recently. She reminded Tamman of Jiltanith; not in looks, for she was as plain
as 'Tanni was beautiful, but in her feline, eternally poised readiness and
inner strength. The fact that her merely human senses and capabilities were
inferior to an Imperial's had not shaken her confidence in herself. If only she
could have been given an implant set, he thought. She was no beauty, but he
felt more than passing interest in her, more than he'd felt in any woman since
Himeko.
She stopped again, so
suddenly he almost ran into her, and she grinned at him reprovingly. He managed
a grin of his own, but he felt uneasy . . .
limited. Give him an Imperial fighter and a half-dozen hostiles and he
would feel at home; here he was truly alien, out of his depth and aware of it.
Amanda pointed, and
Tamman nodded as he recognized the dilapidated buildings they'd come to find.
It must have tickled the present regime to put Black Mecca's HQ in the old
British Embassy compound, and it must have galled Black Mecca to settle for it
instead of the crumbling old American Embassy the mainstream faction of the
Islamic Jihad had claimed.
He waved orders to his
team and they spread out, finding cover behind the unmanned outer perimeter of
sandbags. He recalled the vitriolic diatribes that often emanated from this
very spot, beamed to the world of Black Mecca's enemies. These positions were
always manned, then, with troops "prepared to defend their faith with
their life's blood" against the eternally impending attack of the Great
Satans. Not, of course, that any member of Black Mecca had ever believed any
enemy could actually reach them here.
He checked his team once
more. All were under cover, and he raised his energy gun. His fellows were all
Terra-born, trained for missions like this one by their own governments or in
classes conducted by people like Hector and Amanda. They were skilled and
deadly with the weapons of the Terrestrial military, but far more deadly with
the weapons they carried now. None was strong enough to carry energy guns, not
even the cut-down, customized one he carried, but Nergal's crew had
specialized in ingenious adaptation for centuries, and the fruits of their
labor were here tonight, for Hector wanted Anu to know precisely who was behind
this attack.
Tamman pressed the
firing stud, and the silent night exploded.
The deadly focus of
gravitonic disruption slammed into the inner sandbags around the compound gate,
shredding their plastic envelopes, filling the air with flying sand, slicing
the drowsy sentries in half. Their gore mixed with the sand, spattering the
wall behind them with red mud, but only until the ravening fury of the energy
gun ripped into that wall in turn.
Stone dust billowed.
Chips of brick and cement rattled like hail, and Tamman swept his beam like a
hose, spraying destruction across the compound while the energy gun heated
dangerously in his hands. Tamman was a powerful man, a tall, disciplined mass
of bone and muscle, for he'd known he would never have a full implant set.
Fanatical exercise had been his way of compensating for that deprivation, and
it was the only reason he could use even this cut-down energy gun. It was
heavier than most Terran-made crewed weapons, but still lighter than a
full-sized Imperial weapon, and most of the weight saved had come out of its
heat dissipation systems. It was far less durable, and the demands he was making
upon it were ruinous, but he held the stud down, flaying the compound.
The outer wall went down
and the closest building fronts exploded in dust and flying shards of glass.
Light sparked and spalled, fountaining sparks as broken electric cables cracked
like whips. Small fires started, and still the energy blasted into the
buildings. It sheared through structural members like tissue, and the upper
floors began an inexorable collapse.
A harsh buzz from the
gun warned of the imminent failure of its abused, lightweight circuitry, and
Tamman released the stud at last.
The high, dreadful
keening of the wounded floated on the night wind, and the slither and crash of
collapsing buildings rumbled in the darkness. Half-clothed figures darted
madly, their frantic confusion evident through the attack team's low-light
optics. Black Mecca's surveillance systems still reported nothing, and the
terrible near-silence of the energy gun only added to their bewilderment, but
the true nightmare had scarcely begun.
Three shoulder-slung
grav guns opened fire, raking the compound across the wreckage of the outer
wall. The sound of their firing was no more than a loud, sibilant hiss, lost in
the whickering "cracks" of their supersonic projectiles, and
there was no muzzle flash. Most of the deadly darts were inert, this time, but
every fifth round was explosive. More of Black Mecca died or blew apart or
collapsed screaming, and then the grenade launchers opened up.
There were no
explosions, for these were Imperial warp grenades, and the principle upon which
they worked was terrible in its dreadful elegance. They were small hyper
generators, little larger than a large man's fist, and as each grenade landed
it became the center of a ten-meter multi-dimensional transposition field. Anything
within that spherical area of effect simply vanished into hyperspace with a
hand-clap of imploding air . . . forever.
Chunks of pavement and
broken stone disappeared quietly into eternity, and the screaming terrorists
went mad. Men and, infinitely worse, parts of men went with those
grenades, and the near-total silence of the carnage was more than they could
stand. They stampeded and ran, dying as the grav guns continued to fire, and
then the madness of the night reached its terrible climax as Amanda Givens
fired her own weapon at last.
Noon-day light splashed
the moonless sky as she dropped a plasma grenade among their enemies and, for
one dreadful moment, the heart of the sun itself raged unchecked. It was pure,
stone-fusing energy, consuming the very air, and thermal radiation lashed out
from the center of destruction. It caught its victims mercilessly, turning
running figures into torches, touching wreckage to flame, blinding the unwary
who looked directly at it.
And when the fiery glare
vanished as abruptly as it had come, the attack ended. The hissing roar of
flames and the screams of their own maimed and dying were all the world the
handful of surviving terrorists had, and the smoke that billowed heavenward was
heavy with the stench of burning flesh.
The seven executioners
faded silently away. Their stealthed cutter collected them forty minutes later.
* * *
Lieutenant General
Gerald Hatcher frowned as he studied the classified folder, but his frown
turned wry for a moment as he considered the absurdity of classifying something
the entire planet was buzzing over.
His amusement faded as
quickly as it had come, and he leaned back in his swivel chair, lips pursed as
he considered.
The . . . peculiar
events of the past few weeks had produced a massive ground swell of
uncertainty, and the "unscheduled vacations" of a surprising number
of government, industry, and economic leaders had not helped settle the
public's mind. To an extent, those disappearances had been quite helpful to
Hatcher, for the vanished leaders included most of the ones he'd expected to
protest his unauthorized, unsanctioned, and quite possibly illegal attacks on
terrorist enclaves. He did not, however, find their absence reassuring.
He drummed his fingers
on his blotter and wished—not for the first time—that he'd been less quick to
order Hector MacMahan to disappear . . .
not that his instructions could have made too much difference to
Hector's plans. Still, he wanted, more than he'd ever wanted anything in his
life, to spend a few minutes listening to Hector explain this insanity.
One thing was abundantly
clear: the best of humanity's so-called experts had no idea how whatever was
happening was being done. Their best explanation of that new, deep crater
outside Cuernavaca was a meteor strike, but no one had put it forward very
seriously. Even leaving aside the seismographic proof that it had resulted from
multiple strikes and its impossibly precise point of impact, it was
inconceivable that something that size could have burned its way through
atmosphere without anyone even seeing it coming!
Then there were those
unexplained nuclear explosions out over the Pacific. At least they had a fair
idea how nuclear weapons worked, but who had used them upon whom? And what
about those strikes in China and the Tatra Mountains? Those had been air
strikes, whatever Cuernavaca might have been, but no one had explained how the
aircraft in question had evaded look-down radar, satellite reconnaissance, and
plain old human eyesight. Hatcher had no firm intel on Fenyang, but the
Gerlochovoko strike had used "conventional" explosives, though the
analysts' best estimate of the warhead yields had never come from any chemical
explosive they knew anything about, and the leftover bits and pieces of
pulverized alloy and crystal had never come from any Terran tech base.
Now this. Abeokuta,
Beirut, Damascus, Kuieyang, Mirzapur, Tehran. . . . Someone was systematically hitting terrorist bases, the dream
targets no Western military man had ever hoped to hit, and gutting them. And
they were doing it with more of the damned weapons his people had never even
heard of!
Except for Hector, of
course. Hatcher was absolutely certain Hector not only knew what was happening
but also had played a not inconsiderable part in arranging for it to happen.
That was more than mildly disturbing, considering the security checks Colonel
MacMahan had undergone, his outstanding record as an officer, and the fact that
he was one of Gerald Hatcher's personal friends.
One thing was crystal
clear, though no one seemed inclined to admit it. Whoever had gone to war
against Earth's terrorists hadn't come from Earth, not with the things they
were capable of doing. Which led to all sorts of other maddening questions. Who
were they? Where had they come from? Why were they here? Why hadn't they
announced themselves to the human race in general?
Hatcher couldn't answer
any of those questions. Perhaps he never would be able to, but he didn't think
it would work out that way, for the evidence, fragmentary as it was, suggested
at least one other unpalatable fact. At least two factions were locked in
combat, and one or the other was going to win, eventually.
He closed the folder,
buzzing for his aide to return it to the vault. Then he sighed and stood
looking out his office windows.
Oh, yes. One side was
going to win, and when they did, they were going to make their presence felt.
Openly felt, that was, for Hatcher was morally certain that they'd already
made themselves at home. It would explain so much. The upsurge in terrorism,
the curious unwillingness of First World governments to do much about it, those
mysterious "vacations," Hector's obvious involvement with at least
one faction of what had to be extra-terrestrials . . .
All the selective
destruction could mean only one thing: a covert war was spilling over into the
open, and it was being fought on Hatcher's planet. The whole damned Earth was
holding its collective breath, waiting to see who won, and they didn't even
know who was doing the fighting!
But Hatcher suspected
that, like him, most of those uncertain billions prayed to God nightly for the
side that was trashing the terrorists. Because if the side that backed
people like Black Mecca won, this planet faced one hell of a nightmare. . . .
* * *
Colonel Hector MacMahan
sat in his office aboard his people's single warship, and studied his own
reports. His eyes ached from watching the old-fashioned phosphor screen, and he
felt a brief, bitter envy of the Imperials about him. It wasn't the first time
he'd envied their neural feeds and computer shunts.
He leaned back and
massaged his temples. Things were going well, but he was uneasy. He always was
when an op was under way, but this was worse than usual. Something was nagging
at a corner of his brain, and that frightened him. He'd heard that taunting
voice only infrequently, for he was good at his job and serious mistakes were
few, but he recognized it. He'd forgotten something, miscalculated somewhere,
made some unwarranted assumption . . . something. And his subconscious
knew what it was, he reflected grimly; the problem was how to drive it up into
his forebrain.
He sighed and closed his
eyes, allowing his face to show the worry he showed to neither subordinates nor
superiors, but he couldn't pin it down. So far, their losses had been
incredibly light: a single Imperial and five of their own Terra-born. No
Imperial, however young, could have survived a lucky burst from a
thirty-millimeter cannon, but Tarhani should never have been permitted to lead
the Beirut raid at her age. Yet she'd been adamant. She'd hated that city for
over fifty years, ever since a truck bomb blew her favorite grandson into death
along with two hundred of his fellow Marines.
He shook his head.
Revenge was a motivation professionals sought to avoid, far less accepted as a
reason for assigning other personnel to high-risk missions. But not this time.
Win or lose, this was Nergal's final campaign, and 'Hani had been right:
she was old. If someone were to die leading the attack, better that it
should be her than one of the children. . . .
Yet MacMahan knew there
was another factor. For all his training and experience, all the hard-won
competence with which he'd planned and mounted this operation, he was a child.
It had always been so. A man among men among the Terra-born; a child—in years,
at least—when he boarded Nergal.
The Imperials were
careful to avoid emphasizing that point, and he knew they accepted him as an
equal, but he couldn't accept them as equals. He knew what people
like Horus and 'Hani, Geb and Hanalat, 'Tanni and Tamman, had seen and endured,
and he felt a deep, almost sublime respect for them, but respect was only part
of his complicated feelings. He knew their weaknesses, knew this entire
situation arose from mistakes they had made, yet he venerated them. They
were his family, his ancestors, the ancient, living avatars of the cause to
which he'd dedicated his life. He'd known how much the Beirut mission meant to
'Hani . . . that was the real reason he'd let her lead it.
But that got him no
closer to recognizing whatever that taunting little voice was trying to tell
him about.
He rose and switched off
his terminal. One other thing he'd learned about that voice; letting it
mesmerize him was worse than ignoring it. A few more raids on Anu's peripheral
links to Terra's terrorists, and it would be time for Operation Stalking-Horse,
the ostensible reason for winding down the violence.
He was a bit surprised
by how glad that made him. The northerners' targets were terrorists, but they
were also humans, of a sort, and their slaughter weighed upon his soul. Not
because of what they were, but because of what it was doing to his own people .
. . and to him.
* * *
"It seems to
me," Jantu said thoughtfully, "that we ought to be thinking of some
way to respond to these attacks."
He paused to sip coffee,
watching Anu from the corner of one eye, and only long practice kept his smile
from showing as the "Chief" glared at Ganhar. Poor, harried Ganhar
was about to become poor, dead Ganhar, for there was no way he could
respond, and Jantu waited expectantly for him to try to squirm out of his
predicament.
But Ganhar had himself
well in hand. He met Jantu's eyes almost blandly, and something about his
expression suddenly bothered the Security head. He had not quite put a mental
finger on it when Ganhar shattered all his calculations.
"I agree," he
said calmly, and Jantu choked on his coffee. Fortunately for his peace of mind,
he was too busy dabbing at the coffee stains on his tunic to notice the slight
smile in Commander Inanna's eyes.
"Oh?" Anu eyed
Ganhar sharply, his eyes hard. "That's nice, Ganhar, considering the mess
you've made of things so far."
"With all due
respect, Chief," Ganhar sounded far calmer than Jantu knew he could
possibly be, "I didn't get us into this situation. I only inherited
Operations after Kirinal was killed. In the second place, I warned you from the
start I was unhappy about how quiet the degenerate militaries were being and
that we had no way of knowing what their Imperials were going to do next."
He shrugged. "My people gave you all the information there was, Chief.
There simply wasn't enough to predict what was coming."
Anu glared at him, and
Ganhar made himself meet that glare levelly.
"You mean,"
Anu said dangerously, "that you didn't spot the information."
"No, I mean it
wasn't there. You've had eight Operations heads in the last two thousand years,
Chief—nine, counting me—and none of us have found Nergal for you. You
know how hard we've worked at it. But if we can't even find them, how
are we supposed to know what's going on in their inner councils? All I'm trying
to say is that we can't do it."
"It sounds to
me," Anu's soft voice rose steadily towards even more dangerous levels,
"like you're trying to cover your ass. It sounds to me like you're
making piss-poor excuses because you don't have one Maker-damned idea what to
do about it!"
"You're wrong,
Chief," Ganhar said, though it took most of his remaining courage to get
it out. Anu wasn't accustomed to being told he was wrong, and his face took on
an apoplectic hue as Ganhar continued, taking advantage of the pregnant silence.
"I do have a plan, as it happens. Two, in fact."
Anu's breath escaped in
a hiss. His minions seldom took that calm, almost challenging tone with him,
and the shock of hearing it broke through his anger. Maybe Ganhar really had
enough of a plan to justify his apparent confidence. If not, he could be killed
just as well after listening to him as before.
"All right,"
he grated. "Tell us."
"Of course. First
and simplest, we can do nothing at all. We've got our people under cover now,
and all they're managing to do is tear up a bunch of purely degenerate
terrorists. It makes a lot of noise, and it may look impressive to them, but,
fundamentally, they aren't hurting us. We can always recruit more of the
same, and every time they use Imperial technology, they risk losing
people and we have a chance of tracking them back to Nergal."
Ganhar watched Anu's
eyes. He knew—as, surely, Jantu and Inanna did—that what he'd just suggested
was the smart thing to do. Unfortunately, Anu's eyes told him it wasn't the
smart thing to suggest. He shrugged mentally and dusted off his second
proposal.
"That's the
simplest thing, but I don't think it's necessarily the best," he lied.
"We know some of their degenerates, and we've spotted some others who could
be working for them." He shrugged again, this time physically. "All
right, if they want to escalate, we've got more people and a lot more
resources. Let's escalate right back."
"Ah?" Anu
raised an eyebrow, his expression arrested.
"Exactly, Chief.
They surprised us at Colorado Springs, and they've been riding the advantage of
surprise ever since. They've been on the offensive, and so far it's only cost
them a few dozen degenerate military types in attacks on domestic terrorists
and maybe—" he emphasized the qualifier "—one or two of their
own people since they've started going after foreign bases on the ground.
They're probably feeling pretty confident about now, so let's kill a few of
their people and see if they get the message."
He smiled unpleasantly
and tried not to sigh in relief as Anu smiled back. He watched the chief
mutineer's slow nod, then swiveled his eyes challengingly to Jantu, enjoying
the angry frustration in the Security man's expression.
"How?" Anu's
voice was soft, but his eyes were eager.
"We've already made
a start, Chief. My people are trying to predict their next targets so we can
put a few of our own teams in positions to intervene. After that, we can start
hitting suspects direct. Give 'em a taste of their own medicine, you might
say."
"I like it,
Chief," Inanna said softly. Anu glanced at her, and she shrugged. "At
the least, it'll keep them from having things all their own way, and, with
luck, we may actually get a few of their Imperials. Every one they lose is
going to hurt them far worse than the same loss would hurt us."
"I agree," Anu
said, and Ganhar felt as if the weight of the planet had been lifted from his
back. "Maker, Ganhar! I didn't think you had it in you. Why didn't you
suggest this sooner?"
"I thought it would
have been premature. We didn't know how serious an attack they meant to mount.
If it was only a probe, a powerful response might actually have encouraged them
to press harder in retaliation." And wasn't that a mouthful of
nothing, Ganhar thought sourly. But Anu's smile grew.
"I see. Well, get
it in the works. Let's send a few of them and their precious degenerates to the
Breaker and see how they like that!"
Ganhar smiled back.
Actually, he thought, except for the possibility of ambushing the other side's
raiding parties it was the stupidest thing he'd ever suggested. Almost every
degenerate his people had suspected of being among Nergal's henchmen had
already vanished as completely as Hector MacMahan. He'd target his remaining
suspects first, but after that he might as well pick targets at random. Aside
from the satisfaction Anu might take from it, they would accomplish exactly
nothing, however many degenerates they blew away.
It was insane and
probably futile, but Inanna had been right. The violence of the plan obviously
appealed to Anu, and that was what mattered. As long as Anu was convinced
Ganhar was Doing Something, Ganhar would hang on to his position and the
perquisites that went with it. Like breathing.
"Let me have a
preliminary plan as soon as possible, Ganhar," Anu said, addressing the
Operations head more courteously than he had since Cuernavaca. Then he nodded
dismissal, and his three subordinates rose to leave.
Jantu was in a hurry to
get back to his office, but Inanna blocked him in the corridor, apparently by
accident, as she turned to Ganhar.
"Oh, Ganhar,"
she said, "I'm afraid I have some bad news for you."
"Oh?"
Jantu paused as Ganhar
spoke. He wanted to hear anything that was trouble for Ganhar, he thought
viciously.
"Yes. One of your
people got caught in a malfunction in Bislaht's transit shaft—a freak
grav surge. We didn't think she was too badly hurt when they brought her into
sickbay, but I'm afraid we were wrong. I'm sorry to say one of my med techs
missed a cerebral hemorrhage, and we lost her."
"Oh." There
was something strange about Ganhar's voice. He didn't sound surprised enough,
and there was an odd, sick little undertone. "Uh, who was it?" he
asked after a moment.
"Bahantha, I'm
afraid," Inanna said, and Jantu froze. He stared at Inanna in disbelief,
and she turned slowly to meet his eyes. Something gleamed in the depths of her
own gaze, and he swallowed, filled with a sudden dread suspicion.
"I see it's shaken
you, too, Jantu," she said softly. "Terrible, isn't it? Even here in
the enclave, you can't be entirely safe, can you?"
And she smiled.
"God damn them!
Damn them to Hell!"
Hector MacMahan's
normally expressionless face twisted with fury. His clenched fists trembled at
his sides, and Colin looked away from the colonel, sick at heart himself, to
study the other three people at the table.
Horus looked shaken and
ill, like a man trapped in a horrifying nightmare, and Isis sat silently, frail
shoulders bowed. Her lashes were wet, and she stared blindly down at the
age-delicate hands folded in her lap.
Jiltanith was
expressionless, her relaxed hands folded quietly on the table, but her eyes
were deadly. Neither group of Imperials had operated so openly during her
subjective lifetime, and though she might have accepted the possibility of such
a response intellectually, she hadn't really imagined it as a probability.
Now it had happened, and Colin felt the fury radiating from her . . . and the
focused strength of will it took to control it.
And how did he feel? He
considered that for a moment, and decided Hector had just spoken for him, as
well.
"All right,"
he said finally. "We knew they weren't exactly stable, and they've given
plenty of past examples of their willingness to do things like this. We should
have anticipated what they'd do."
"I should have
anticipated it, you mean," MacMahan said bitterly.
"I said 'we' and I
meant 'we.' The strategy was yours, Hector, but we were all involved in the
planning, and the Council approved it. We figured if they knew we were hitting
them, we'd be the targets they chose to strike back at. It was a logical
estimate, and we all shared it."
" 'Tis true,
Hector," Jiltanith said softly. "This plan was product of us all, not
thine alone." She smiled bitterly. "And did not we twain counsel
Colin madmen yet might dismay us all? Take not more guilt upon thyself than is
thy due."
"All right."
MacMahan drew a deep breath and sat. "Sorry."
"We
understand," Colin said. "But right now, just tell us how bad it
is."
"I suppose it could
be worse. They've gotten about thirty of our Terra-born—seven at once when they
hit that Valkyrie at Corpus Christi; Vlad Chernikov would've made eight, and he
may still lose his arm unless we can break him out of the hospital and get him
into Nergal's sickbay—but our own losses haven't been that high. Most of
the people they've slaughtered are exactly what they seem to be: ordinary
citizens.
"The death toll
from the Eden Two mass missile strike is about eighteen thousand. That was a
pay-back for Cuernavaca, I suppose. The bomb at Goddard got another two
hundred. The nuke they smuggled into Klyuchevskaya leveled the facilities, but
the loss of life was minimal thanks to the 'terrorists' ' phoned-in warning.
Sandhurst and West Point were Imperial weaponry—warp grenades and energy guns.
I imagine they were retaliation for Tehran and Kuiyeng. The Brits lost about
three hundred people; the Point lost about five."
He paused and shrugged
unhappily.
"It's a warning to
back off, and I—we—should have seen it coming. It's classic terrorist thinking,
and it fits right into Anu's own sick mentality."
"Agreed. The
question is, what do we do about it? Horus?"
"I don't
know," Horus said in a flat voice. "I'd like to say shut down. We've
hurt them worse than we ever did before. We'd have to shut down pretty soon,
anyway, and too many people are getting killed. I don't think I can take
another bloodbath." He looked at his hands and spoke with difficulty.
"This isn't a drop
in the bucket compared to Genghis Khan or Hitler, but it's still too much. It's
happening all over again, and this time we started it, Maker help us.
Can't we stop sooner than we planned?" He turned desperate eyes to Hector
and Jiltanith. "I know we all agreed we needed Stalking-Horse, but haven't
we done them enough damage for our purposes?"
"Isis?"
"I have to agree
with Dad," Isis said softly. "Maybe I'm too close to it because of
Cal and the girls, but . . ." She paused, and her lips trembled. "I .
. . just don't want to be responsible for any more slaughter, Colin."
"I
understand," he said gently, then looked at her sister.
"Jiltanith?"
"There's much in
what thou sayst, Father, and thou, Isis," Jiltanith said quietly,
"yet if we do halt our actions all so swift upon his murders, wi' no loss
of our own, may we not breed suspicion? If e'er doubt there was, there is no
longer: Anu and his folk have run full mad. Yet in their madness lurketh
danger, for 'tis most unlike they'll take a sane man's view o'things.
"Full sorely ha' we
smote his folk. Now ha' they dealt us buffets in return, and 'tis in my mind
that e'en now they watch us close, hot to scent our stomach for this work. And
if but so little blood—for so know we all Anu will see it—and it not ours
stoppeth up our blows, may not doubt hone sharp the wit of one so cunning, be
he e'er so mad? Be risk of that howe'er small, yet risk there still must be.
'Twas 'gainst that very danger Stalking-Horse was planned." She met her
father's pleading eyes.
"Truth maketh
bitter bread i'such a pass," her voice was even softer, "but whate'er
our hearts may tell us, i'coldest truth it mattereth but little how many lives
Anu may spend. Their blood is innocent. 'Twill haunt us all our whole lives
long. Yet if we fail, then all compassion may ha' spared will live but till
such time as come the Achuultani. 'Tis in my mind we durst not cease—not yet, a
while. Some few attacks more, then turn to Stalking-Horse as was the plan,
would be my counsel."
Colin nodded slowly as
he recognized her anguish. Her eyes were hooded, armoring the torment her own
words had given her, and behind her barricaded face, he knew, she was seeing
countless, nameless men, women, and children she had never met. Yet she was
right. That the blood that would be shed was innocent would mean nothing to
Anu. Might he not assume it meant less to them than the lives of their
own people?
They couldn't know that,
but Jiltanith had the resolution to face the possibility and the moral courage
to voice it.
"Thank you,"
he said. "Hector?"
" 'Tanni's
right," Hector sighed unhappily. "I wish to God she weren't, but that
won't change it. We can't know how Anu will react, but everything we do
know points to a man who hurts people for the pleasure of it and regards all
'degenerates' as expendable. He wouldn't stop because some of them were
getting killed; if we do, he may just ask himself why, and that's the one
question we can't afford for him to ask."
He stared at the table,
pressing his clenched fists together on its top.
"I hate the thought
of provoking massacres—or even a single death more than may be absolutely
necessary—but if we miscalculate and stop too soon, all the people who've
already died will have been killed for absolutely nothing."
"I agree,"
Colin said heavily. "We have to convince them, in terms they can
accept, that they've made us stop. Go ahead with the set-up for
Stalking-Horse, Hector. See if you can't compress the time frame, but do
it."
"I will."
MacMahon rose, and only Imperial ears could have heard his last words as he
left the room.
"God forgive
me," he whispered.
* * *
Ninhursag sat on the
bench and concentrated on looking harmless. The enclave's central park struck
her as crude and unfinished beside her memories of Dahak's recreation
areas, and she filed the observation away with all the others she'd made since
her return from the outside world. The sum of those observations was almost as
disturbing, in its way, as the day she awakened to learn what Anu had been
doing to her fellow mutineers.
She managed not to
shudder as a tall, slender man walked by. Tanu, she thought. Once she'd
known him well, but he was no longer Tanu. She didn't know which of Anu's
lieutenants had claimed his body, and she didn't want to find out. It was bad
enough watching him walk around and knowing he was dead.
She looked away,
thinking. There was an unfinished feeling to the entire enclave, like a
temporary camp, not a habitation. Anu and his followers had lived on this
planet for fifty thousand years, yet they'd never come to belong here. It was
as if they deliberately sought to preserve their awareness of the alien about
them. There were comfortable blocks of apartments here under the ice, built
immediately after their landing, but no more had been built since and virtually
none of the mutineers used the ones that existed. They'd retreated back into
their ships, clinging to their quarters aboard the transports despite their
cramped size. For herself, Ninhursag knew she would have gone mad long ago if
she'd been confined to such quarters for so long.
She watched the spray of
one of the very few tinkling fountains anyone had bothered to build and
considered that. Perhaps that was part of the miasma of madness drifting in the
air. These people had far outlived their allotted lifespans penned up inside
their artificial environment but for occasional jaunts outside. Their stolen
bodies were young and strong, but the personalities inhabiting them were old,
and the enclave was a pressure-cooker.
By their very nature,
most of Anu's people had been flawed or they would not have been here, and over
the endless years of exile, closeted within this small world, their minds had
turned inward. They'd been alone with their hates and ambitions and resentments
longer than human minds were designed to stand, and what had been flaws had
become yawning fissures. The best of them were distorted caricatures of what
they had been, while the worst . . .
She shuddered and hoped
none of the security scanners had noticed.
Theirs was a dead
society, decaying from its core. They wouldn't admit it—assuming they could
even recognize it—yet the truth was all about them. Five thousand years they'd
been awake, yet they'd added absolutely nothing to their tech base beyond a
handful of highly personal modifications to ways of spying on or killing one
another. They were only a small population, but it was the nature of societies
to change, to learn new things. A culture that didn't was doomed; if an outside
force didn't destroy it, its own members turned upon one another within the
static womb to which they had returned. Whether or not they could admit or recognize
their stagnation was ultimately unimportant, for deep inside, where the life
forces and the drive of a people came together out of emotion and beliefs they
might never have formalized, they knew they were spinning their wheels,
marking time . . . dying.
Ninhursag's eyes were
open now, and she saw it in so many things. The suspicion, the ambition, the
perversions of a degenerate age that knows it is degenerate. And,
perhaps most tellingly of all, there were no children. These people were no
celibates, but they had deliberately renounced the one thing that might have
forced them to change and evolve. And with it, they'd cut themselves off from
their own human roots. Like a woman barren with age, their biological clock had
stopped, and with it had died their sense of themselves as a living,
ever-renewed species.
Why had they done that
to themselves? They were—had been—Imperials, and the Imperium had known that
even a single quarter-century deployment aboard a ship like Dahak
required that sense of vitality and renewal among its crewmen. Even those who
had no children could see the children of others, and so share in the flow of
their species. But Anu's people had chosen to forget, and she could not
understand it.
Had their stolen
immortality made children irrelevant? Or did they fear producing a generation
foreign to their own twisted purpose? One that might rebel against them? She
didn't know. She couldn't know, for they had become a different
species—a dark, malevolent shadow that wore the bodies of her people but was
not hers.
She rose, walking slowly
across the park towards the building in which she had half-defiantly made her
own quarters, aware of the way her shadowing keeper followed her. He didn't
even bother to be unobtrusive, but it had helped to know exactly where the
security man assigned to watch her might be found.
She glanced idly at the
gawking Terra-born who shared the park with her, noting their awe at the
environment that seemed so crude to her, and wondered which of them would
collect the record chip she'd hidden under her bench.
* * *
Abu al-Nasir watched
Ninhursag walk away, then ambled over to the bench she'd occupied. The soaring,
vaulted ceiling of the park, with its projected roof of summer-blue sky and
fleecy clouds was amazing. It was hard to believe he was buried under hundreds
of meters of ice and stone. The illusion of being outside was almost perfect,
and perhaps the looming, bronze-toned hulls thrusting up beyond the buildings
helped to make it so.
He sat down and leaned
back, watching idly for the security scanners Colonel MacMahan had described to
him. There they were—nicely placed to watch the bench, but only from the front.
That was handy.
He let one hand drop
down beside him, about where his holster normally rode. Sergeant Asnani had
never felt any particular need to be armed at every moment; Abu al-Nasir felt
undressed without his personal arsenal. Still, it was hardly surprising the
mutineers declined to permit their henchmen weapons.
Not surprising, yet it
underscored the difference between them and their allies and the way Nergal's
crew worked with their own Terra-born. He'd never visited Nergal, but
he'd trained among her Terra-born, and he knew Colonel MacMahan. The colonel
was no man's flunky—the very thought was absurd—yet any of his Imperial allies
would have trusted him behind them with a gun.
But al-Nasir had already
concluded that everything the colonel had told him about these Imperials
was the truth. Since his initiation into Black Mecca, al-Nasir had become
accustomed to irrationality. Extremism, hatred, greed, sadism, fanaticism, megalomania,
disregard for human life . . . he'd know them all, and he recognized something
very like them here. Less bare-fanged and snarling, but perhaps even more evil
because of that. And these people truly regarded themselves as a totally
different species, simply because of the artificial enhancement of their own
bodies . . . and their ability to torment and kill the Terra-born.
The sense of ancientness
behind those comely, youthful faces was frightening, and al-Nasir was glad
there were no children. The thought of what any child who breathed this
poisoned atmosphere must become turned his stomach, and it was no longer a
stomach that turned easily.
His relaxed hand crooked
casually, stroking the wooden bench absently, and his eyelids drooped as he
listened to the tinkle and splash of the fountain. His entire body was
eloquently if unobtrusively relaxed, and his fingers stroked more slowly, as if
the idle thoughts that moved them were slowing.
He touched the tiny,
barely discernible dot of the message chip, and his forefinger moved. The chip
slid up under his nail, invisible under the thin sheet of horn, and no flicker
of triumph crossed his face. If the colonel was wrong about Ninhursag, he was a
dead man, but no sign of that showed, either.
He let his hand continue
stroking for a few moments, then laid his forearm negligently along the
armrest. Every nerve in his lax body screamed to stand up, to walk away from
the drop site, but this was a game he'd learned to play well, and he settled
even more comfortably on the bench.
About an hour, he
thought. A short, restoring nap, utterly innocent, totally unconcealed, and
then he could leave. His eyes closed fully, his head lolled back, and Abu
al-Nasir began to snore.
* * *
The city of La Paz
dreamed under an Argentine moon, and the streets were emptying as Shirhansu sat
by the window and stroked her ash-blonde hair.
Even after all these
years, she still found it difficult to accept that her pale-skinned hand was
"hers," that the aqua eyes that looked back from any mirror belonged
to her. It was a lovely body, far more beautiful than the one she'd been born
to, but it marked her as one outside the inner circle. Yet it also set her
aside from the odd—to Terran eyes—appearance of the Imperial race, and that
could be invaluable.
She sighed and shifted
the energy gun across her lap, wishing yet again that they could have worn
combat armor. It was out of the question, of course. Stealth fields could do a
lot, but if the enemy operated unarmored or, even worse, were entirely
Terra-born, they would be mighty hard to spot, and armor, however carefully
hidden, could be picked up by people without it long before her own scanner
teams could pick them up, so she had to strip down herself.
This was a stupid
mission. She was glad to have it instead of one of the other operations—she was
no Girru and took no pleasure from slaughtering degenerates in job lots—but it
was still stupid. Suppose she did manage to surprise some of Nergal's
crowd. They would never let themselves lead her back to the battleship. Even if
she managed to follow them, it stood to reason that whatever auxiliary picked
them up would carry out a careful scan before it made rendezvous, and when it
did, it would spot her people however carefully they were stealthed. That
auxiliary would undoubtedly be armed, too, and was there any fighter cover for
her people? Of course not. The limited supply of fighter crews was being tasked
with offensive strikes . . . aside from the fifty percent reserve Anu insisted
on retaining to cover the enclave, though what he expected Nergal's
people to accomplish against its shield eluded Shirhansu.
Of course, she did
suffer from one little handicap when it came to understanding the
"Chief." Her brain still worked.
Which also explained why
she was so unhappy at the prospect of trying to follow one of Nergal's
teams. Their efficiency to date had been appalling, even allowing for the
purely Terran nature of most of their targets, not that it surprised Shirhansu.
She'd developed a deep if grudging respect for her enemies over the centuries,
for the casualty figures were far less one-sided than they should be. They'd
survived everything her own group had thrown at them from the lofty advantage
of its superior tech base and managed—somehow—to keep their HQ completely
hidden; they weren't bloody likely to screw up now.
The whole idea was
foolish, but she knew why the mission had been mounted anyway, and she approved
of anything that kept Ganhar alive and in control of Operations, for she was
one of his faction. Joining him had seemed like a good idea at the
time—certainly he was far closer to sane than Kirinal had been!—but she'd been
having second thoughts recently. Still, Ganhar seemed to be making a recovery,
and if her presence here could help him, then it also helped her, and
that . . .
Her hand-held security
com gave a soft, almost inaudible chime. She raised it to her ear, and her eyes
widened. Ganhar's analysts had called it right; the bastards were going
to hit Los Puñas!
She spoke succinctly into
the com, hoping her own stealth field would hide the fold-space pulse as it was
supposed to, then checked her weapon. She set it for ten percent power—there
was no armor inside the approaching stealth fields, and there was no point
blowing too deep a hole in the pavement—and opened a slit in her stealth field,
freeing her implants to scan a narrow field before her while the field still
hid her from flanks and rear.
* * *
Tamman followed Amanda
along the sidewalk, as invisible as the wind. He felt more at home than he had
in Tehran, but his enhanced senses could do more good watching her back than
probing the darkness before her, and she'd convinced him of the virtue of
keeping the commander out of the forefront.
He let a scowl twist his
lips. The massacre of innocents continued and, if anything, had accelerated.
Eden Two remained the worst single atrocity, but there were others. Shepard
Center's security people had stood off an assault, but their casualties had
been high. Still, Tamman was certain the attackers had been under orders to
withdraw rather than press the attack fully home. Anu wouldn't want to damage
the aerospace industry too badly, and the fact that what had to be full
Imperials equipped with energy guns and warp grenades had been "driven off"
by Terra-born infantry, however good, armed only with Terran weapons was as
good as a floodlit sign.
Yet that was the only
southern attack that had been resisted, if that was the word for it, and the
casualty count was starting to trouble his dreams. Watching World War One's
trenches and World War Two's extermination camps had been horrifying, and Phnom
Penh had been even worse, in its way. Afghanistan and the interminable,
fanatical bloodletting between Iran and Iraq in the 'eighties had been
atrocious, and the Kananga massacres in Zaire had been pretty bad, too, but
this sort of desecration wasn't something a man could become used to, however
often he saw it.
Los Puñas—"The
Daggers"—were pussy cats compared to Black Mecca, but they'd been
positively identified running Anu's errands. He wouldn't like it a bit if they
were pulverized, and it would be satisfying to wipe them out. Tamman wouldn't
even try to pretend otherwise, but it would be even nicer to see a few of Anu's
butchers in his sights.
* * *
"Get ready,"
Shirhansu whispered. "Take 'em when they reach the plaza."
"Take them? I
thought we were supposed to shadow them, 'Hansu." It was Tarban, her
second in command, and Shirhansu scowled in the darkness.
"If any of them get
away, we will," she growled, "but it's more important to nail a few
of the bastards."
"But—"
"Shut up and get
off the com before they pick it up!"
* * *
"Tamman, it's a
trap!" The voice screaming into Tamman's left ear was Hanalat, their
recovery pilot, who had been watching over them with her sensors. "I'm
picking up a fold-space link ahead of you, at least two point sources! Get the
hell out!"
"Gotcha," he
grunted, thanking the Maker for Hector's suggestion that they carry Terran
communications equipment. Hector had calculated that Anu's people would be
looking primarily for Imperial technology, and he must have been right; Tamman
had received the warning and he was still alive.
"All right,
people," he said softly to his team, "let's ease out of here.
Joe—" Joe Crynz, a distant cousin of Tamman's and the last man in line,
carried a warp grenade launcher "—get ready to lay down covering fire. The
rest of you, just ease on back. Let's get out quietly if we can."
There were no
acknowledgments as his team came slowly to a halt and started drifting
backward. Tamman held his breath, praying they would get away with it. They
were naked down here, sitting ducks for—
* * *
"Breaker take you,
Tarban!" Shirhansu snarled, and braced her energy gun on the window sill.
She had the best vantage point of all her twenty people, and she could see only
three of the bastards. Her senses—natural and implants alike—were alive through
the slit in her stealth field, but their fields interfered badly. She
couldn't make them out well enough for a sure kill at this range, but, thanks
to Tarban, they weren't going to come any closer.
"Take them
now!" she ordered coldly over her com.
* * *
Tamman bit back a scream
as an energy bolt flashed through the edge of his stealth field. His physical
senses—boosted almost to max as he tried to work his team out of the trap—were
a flare of agony in the beam's corona. But it had missed him, and he flung
himself aside with the dazzling quickness of his enhanced reaction time.
Larry Clintock was less
lucky; at least three snipers had taken him for a target. He never even had
time to scream as energy blasts tore him apart . . . but Amanda did, and
Tamman's blood ran cold as he heard her.
He sheltered
automatically—and uselessly—behind a potted tree, and his enhanced vision caught
the energy flare at an upper window. His own energy gun tore the window frame
apart, spraying the street with broken bits of brick, and whoever had been
firing opted for discretion, assuming he was still alive.
Joe's grenade launcher
burped behind him, and a gaping hole appeared in another building front, but
the other side had warp grenades as well. A huge chunk of paving vanished,
water spurting like a fountain from a severed main, and Tamman hurled himself
to his feet. He should flee to join Joe and the others, but his feet carried
him forward to where Amanda's scream had ended in terrifying silence.
More bolts of disruption
slashed at him, splintering the paving, but his own people knew what was
happening. Their stealth fields were in phase with his, letting them see him,
and they spread out under whatever cover they could find while their weapons
raked the buildings fronting on the plaza. They were shooting blind, but they
were throwing a lot of fire, and he was peripherally aware of the grav gun darts
chewing at stonework, the shivering pulsations of warp grenades, and the
susuration of more energy guns trying to mark him down.
Amanda's left thigh was
a short, ugly stump, but no blood pulsed from the wound. Her Imperial commando
smock had fastened down in an automatic tourniquet as soon as she was hit, yet
she was no Imperial, and she was unconscious from shock—or dead. His mind
flinched away from the possibility, and he scooped her up in a fireman's carry
and sprinted back up the street.
Devastation lashed at
his heels, and he cried out in agony as an energy beam tore a quarter pound of
flesh from the back of one leg. He nearly went down, but his own
implants—partial though they were—damped the pain as quickly as it had come.
Tissues sealed themselves, and he ran on frantically.
A warp grenade's field
missed him by centimeters, the rush of displaced air snatching at him like an
invisible demon, and he heard another scream as an energy gun found Frank
Cauphetti. He spared a glance as he went by, but Frank no longer had a torso.
Then he was around the
corner, his surviving teammates closing in about him, and the four of them were
dashing through the night.
* * *
"Shouldn't we
follow them, 'Hansu?"
"Sure, Tarban, you
do that little thing! You and your damn gabble just cost us a complete kill!
Not to mention Hanshar—that bastard with the energy gun cut him in half. So,
please, go right ahead and follow them . . . I'm sure their cutter pilot will
be delighted to vaporize your worthless ass!"
There was silence over
the com, and Shirhansu forced her rage back under control. Maker, they'd come
so close! But at least they'd gotten two of them, maybe even three, and
that was the best they'd done yet against an actual attack force. Not that it
would be good enough to please Anu. Still, if they cleaned up their report a
little bit first . . .
"All right,"
she sighed finally. "Let's get out of here before the locals get too nosy.
Meet me at the cutter."
"How is she?"
Tamman looked up at
Colin's soft question. He sat carefully, one leg extended to keep his thigh off
his chair, and his face was worn with worry.
"They say she'll be
all right." He reached out to the young woman in the narrow almost-bed,
her lower body cocooned in the sophisticated appliances of Imperial medicine,
and smoothed her brown hair gently.
" 'All right,'
" he repeated bitterly, "but with only one leg. Maker, it's
unfair! Why her?!"
"Why anyone?"
Colin asked sadly. He looked at Amanda Givens' pale, plain face and sighed.
"At least you got her out alive. Remember that."
"I will. But if she
had the biotechnics she deserves, she wouldn't be in that bed—and she could
grow a new leg, too." He looked back down at Amanda. "It's not even
their fault, yet they give so much, Colin. All of them do."
"All of you
do," Colin corrected gently. "It's not as if you had anything to do
with the mutiny either."
"But at least I got
a child's biotechnics." Tamman's voice was very low. "She didn't get
even that much. Hector didn't. My children didn't. They live their lives like
candle flames, and then they're gone. So many of them." He smoothed
Amanda's hair once more.
"We're trying to
change that, Tamman. That's what she was doing."
"I know," the
Imperial half-whispered.
"Then don't take that
away from her," Colin said levelly. "Yes, she's Terra-born, just like
I am, but I was drafted; she chose to fight, knowing the odds. She's not
a child. Don't treat her like one, because that's the one thing she'll never
forgive you for."
"How did you get so
wise?" Tamman asked after a moment.
"It's in the genes,
buddy," Colin said, and grinned more naturally as he left Tamman alone
with the woman he loved.
* * *
Ganhar cocked back his
chair and rested one heel on the edge of his desk. He'd just endured a rather
stormy interview with Shirhansu, but, taken all in all, she was right—they'd
been lucky to get any of Nergal's people, and the odds were
against doing it twice. Tarban's blathering com traffic had given them away
this time, but now that the other side had walked into one trap, they damned
well wouldn't walk into another. They'd cover any attacking force with active
scanners powerful enough to burn through any portable stealth field.
He pondered unhappily,
trying to decide what to recommend this time. The logical thing was to withdraw
a few fighters from offensive sweeps and use them to nail any of Nergal's
cutters that came in with active scanners, but Ganhar had developed a lively
respect for Hector MacMahan—who, he was certain, was masterminding this entire
campaign. The equally logical response would be obvious to him: cover Nergal's
cutters with his own stealthed fighters to nail Ganhar's fighters when they
revealed themselves by attacking the cutter.
The very idea reeked of
further escalation, and he was sick of it. They couldn't match his resources,
but they knew where they were going to strike, and they could concentrate their
forces accordingly; he had to cover all the places they might
strike. He couldn't have overwhelming force anywhere, unless Anu would let him
back off on offensive operations and smother all possible targets with their
own fighters.
Which, of course, Anu
would never do.
He rubbed his closed
eyes wearily, and his thoughts moved like a dirge. It was no good. Even if they
managed to locate Nergal and destroy her and all her people, there was
still Anu. Anu and all of them—even himself—and their endless futility. Anu was
mad, but was he much better off himself? What did he think would happen if they
ever managed to leave this benighted planet?
Like Jantu, Ganhar had
reached his own conclusions about the Imperium's apparent disappearance from
the cosmos. If he was wrong, then they were all doomed. The Imperium would
never forgive them, for there could be no clemency for such as they—not for
mutineers, and never for mutineers who'd gone on to do the things they'd done
to the helpless natives of Earth.
And if there was no more
Imperium? In that far more likely case, their fate might be even worse, for
there would still be Anu. Or Jantu. Or someone else. The madness had infected
them all, for they'd lived too long and feared death too much. Ganhar knew he
was saner than many of his fellows, and look what he had done in the
name of survival. He'd worked with Kirinal despite her sadism, knowing
about her sadism, and when he replaced her, he'd devised this obscene plan
merely to stay alive a bit longer. She and Girru would have loved it, he
thought bitterly. This slaughter of defenseless degenerates . . .
No, not
"degenerates." Primitives, perhaps, but not degenerates, for it was
he and his fellows who had degenerated. Once there might even have been a bit
of glamour in daring to pit themselves against the Imperium's might, but not in
what they'd done to the people of Earth and their own helpless fellows.
He stared down at the
hands he had stolen, and his stomach knotted. He didn't regret the mutiny or
even the long, bitter warfare with Nergal's crew. Or perhaps he did
regret those things, but he wouldn't pretend he hadn't known what he was doing
or whine and snivel before the Maker for it. But the other things, especially
the things he had done as Operations head, sickened him.
But there was no way to
undo them, or even stop them. If he tried, he would die, and even after all
these years, he wanted to live. But the truly paralyzing thing was that even if
he'd been willing to die, his death would accomplish nothing except, perhaps,
to grant him a fleeting illusion of expiation. Even if he could bring himself
to embrace that—and he was cynically uncertain he could—it would leave Anu
behind. The madmen had the numbers, firepower, and tech base, and nothing Nergal
and her people might achieve in the short-term could alter that.
Head of Operations
Ganhar's hands clenched as he stared at them and wondered when he'd finally
begun to crack. He'd seen the awakening of guilt in a few others. It usually
happened slowly, and some had ended their long lives when it happened to them.
Others had been spotted by Jantu's zealous minions and made examples, but there
had never been many, and none had been able to do any more than Ganhar could.
He sighed and stood,
walking slowly from his office. The futility of it all oppressed him, but he
knew he would sit down at the conference table and tell Anu things were going
according to plan. He might be coming to the realization that he despised
himself for it, but he would do it, and there was no point pretending he
wouldn't.
* * *
Ramman sat in his small
apartment, gnawing his fingernails. His pastel-walled quarters were littered
with unwashed clothing and dirty eating utensils, and his nostrils wrinkled
with the smell of sour bedding. There were extra disadvantages in slovenliness
for the sensory-enhanced.
He knew he was under
surveillance and that his strange behavior, his isolation from his fellows, was
dangerously likely to attract the suspicion he could not afford, yet mounting
terror and desperation paralyzed his ability to do anything about it. He felt
like a rabbit in a snare, waiting for the trapper's return, and if he mingled
with the others, they must see it.
He rose and walked
jerkily about the room, the fingers of his clasped hands writhing together
behind him. Madness. Jiltanith and her father had to be insane. They would
fail, and their failure would betray the fact that someone had helped them by
giving them the admittance codes. The witch hunt might sweep up the innocent, but
would almost certainly trap the guilty, and he would be the guilty. He
would be found out, arrested . . . killed.
It wasn't fair!
But he'd been given his orders, and he had obeyed them. He'd planted the codes
where he'd been told to. If he told anyone . . . he shuddered as he thought of
Jantu and the unspeakable things perverted Imperial technology had been used to
do to other "traitors."
If he kept quiet, told
no one, he would at least live a little longer. At least until Nergal's
people launched their doomed attack.
He sank back down on the
edge of the bed and sobbed into his hands.
* * *
" 'Tis time for
Stalking-Horse," Jiltanith said quietly. "That fact standeth proved
by the fate which did befall Tamman's group. That and the slaughter which e'en
now doth gain in horror do set the stage and gi' us pretext enow to cease when
Stalking-Horse be added."
"Agreed,"
MacMahan said softly, and looked at Colin.
"Yes," Colin
said. "It's time to stop this insanity. Is it set up?"
"Yes. I've
scheduled Geb and Tamman to fly lead with Hanalat and Carhana as their
wing."
"Nay,"
Jiltanith said, and MacMahan glanced at her in surprise, taken aback by the
finality of her voice. "Nay," she repeated. "The lead is
mine."
"No!" The
strength of his own protest surprised Colin, and Jiltanith met his eyes
challengingly—not with the bitter, hateful challenge of old, but with a
determination that made his heart sink.
"Tamman hath been
wounded," she said reasonably.
"A flesh wound
sickbay and his biotechnics have already taken care of almost completely,"
MacMahan said in the cautious tone of a man who knew he was edging into
dangerous waters, if not exactly why they had become perilous.
"I speak not o' his
flesh, Hector. Certes, 'twould be reason enow t' choose anew, yet 'tis his heart
hath taken too sore a hurt. I ha' not seen him care for any as he doth for his
Amanda, not since Himeko's death."
"We've all been
hurt, 'Tanni," MacMahan protested.
"That's
sooth," she agreed, "yet 'tis graver far in Tamman's case."
" 'Tanni, you can't
go." Colin extended one hand to reach across the table. "You can't.
You're the backup commander for Dahak."
He could have bitten off
his tongue as he saw her dark eyes widen. But then they narrowed again and she
cocked her head. It was a small gesture, but it demanded explanation.
"Well, I had to
pick someone," he said defensively. "It couldn't be Horus or
one of the older Imperials—they were active mutineers; I couldn't take a
chance on how Dahak's Alpha Priorities might work out if I'd tried that! So it
had to be one of the children, and you were the logical choice."
"And thou didst not
think fit to tell me of't?" she demanded, a curiously intent light
replacing the surprise in her eyes.
"Well . . ."
Colin's face flamed, and he darted an appealing glance at MacMahan, but the
colonel only looked back impassively. "Maybe I should have. But it didn't
seem like a good idea at the time."
"Whyfor not? Yea,
and now I think on't, why didst thou not e'en tell a soul thou hadst named any
one of all our number to follow thee in thy command?"
"Frankly . . .
well, much as I wanted to trust you people, I didn't know I could when I
recorded Dahak's orders. That's one reason I insisted on doing it myself,"
he said, and felt a rush of relief when she nodded thoughtfully rather than
flying into a rage.
"Aye, so much I
well can see," she said softly. " 'Twas in thy mind that so be we
knew thou hadst named thine own successor, then were we treason-minded we had
slain thee and had done?"
"That's about
it," he admitted uncomfortably. "I don't dare contact Dahak again,
and he can't pick up my implants on passive instrumentation. If I'd been wrong
about you and you'd known, you could have offed me and told him I bought it
from the southerners." He met her eyes much more pleadingly than he had
MacMahan's. "I didn't really think you'd do it, but with the Achuultani
coming and everything else going to hell, I couldn't take the chance."
" 'Twas wiser in
thee than e'er I thought to find," she said, and he blinked in surprise as
she smiled in white-toothed approval. "God's Teeth, Colin—'twould seem we
yet may make a spook o' thee!"
"You do
understand!"
"I ha' not played
mistress to Nergal's spies these many years wi'out the gaining o' some
small wit," she said dryly. " 'Twas but prudence on thy part. Yet
still a question plagueth me. Whyfor choose me to second thee? And if thou must
make that choice, whyfor tell me not e'en now? Surely there can be naught but
trust betwixt us wi' all that's passed sin then?"
"Well . . ."
He felt himself flushing again. "I wasn't certain how you'd take it,"
he said finally. "We weren't exactly . . . on the best of terms, you
know."
" 'Tis true,"
she admitted, and this time she blushed. It was her turn to glance
sidelong at MacMahan, who, to his eternal credit, looked back with only the
slightest twinkle in his eyes. "Yet knowing that, thou wouldst still ha'
seen me in thy shoon?"
"I didn't intend to
give my 'shoon' to anyone," he said testily, "and I wouldn't've been
around to see it if it happened! But, yes, if it had to be someone, I picked
you." He shrugged. "You were the best one for the job."
" 'Tis hard to
credit," she murmured, "and 'twas lunacy or greater wit than I myself
possess to gi' such a gift to one who hated thee so sore."
"Why?" he
asked, his voice suddenly gentle. He met her gaze squarely, forgetting
MacMahan's presence for a moment. "You can understand the precautions I
felt I had to take—is it so hard to accept that I might understand the
reasons you hated me, 'Tanni? Or not blame you for them?"
"Isis spake those
self-same words unto me," Jiltanith said slowly, "and told me they
did come from thee, yet no mind was I to hear her." She shook her head and
smiled, the first truly gentle smile he had seen from her. "Thy heart is
larger far than mine, good Colin."
"Sure," he
said uncomfortably, trying to sound light. "Just call me Albert
Schweitzer." Her smile turned into a grin, but gentleness lingered in her
dark eyes. "Anyway," he added, "we're all friends now, aren't
we?"
"Aye," she
said firmly.
"Then there's an
end to't, as you'd say. And the reason you can't fly the lead in
Stalking-Horse. We can't risk losing you."
"Not so," she
said instantly, her eyes shrewd. "Thou art not dead nor like to be, and
'twould be most unlike thee not to ha' named some other to follow me. Tamman,
I'll warrant, or some other o' the children?"
He refused to answer,
but she saw it in his eyes.
"Well, then,
sobeit. Tamman is most unlike myself, good Colin. Thou knowest—far more than
most—how well my heart can hate, but my hate burneth cold, not hot. Not
so for him. He needeth still some time ere he may clear his mind, and
Stalking-Horse can be no task for one beclouded."
"But—"
"She's right,"
MacMahan said quietly, and Colin glared reproachfullly at him. The colonel
shrugged. "I should've seen it myself. Tamman hasn't left sickbay since he
carried Amanda into it. He'd go, but he needs time to settle down before he
goes back out. And 'Tanni is our best pilot—you know that better than
most, too. There's not supposed to be any fighting, but if there is, she's best
equipped to handle it. We'll give her Rohantha for a weaponeer. They'll
actually make a better team than Geb and Tamman."
"But—"
" 'Tis closed, Colin.
'Hantha and I will take the lead."
"Damn it, I don't want
her up there in a goddamned pinnace, Hector!"
"That doesn't
matter. 'Tanni and I are in charge of this operation—not you—and she's right.
So shut up and soldier . . . sir!"
* * *
The admittance chime to
Ganhar's private study sounded, and he looked up from the holo map he'd been
updating as he ordered the hatch to open. It was late, and he half-expected to
see Shirhansu, but it wasn't she, and his eyes narrowed in surprise as his caller
stepped inside.
"Ramman?" He
leaned back in his chair. "What can I do for you?"
"I . . ." The
other man's eyes darted about like those of a trapped animal, and Ganhar found
it hard not to wrinkle his face in distaste as Ramman's unwashed odor wafted to
him.
"Well?" he
prompted when the other's hesitation stretched out.
"Are . . . are your
quarters secure?" Ramman asked hesitantly, and Ganhar frowned in fresh
surprise. Ramman sounded serious, yet also oddly as if he were playing for time
while he reached some inner decision.
"They are," he
said slowly. "I have them swept every morning."
"Good." Ramman
paused again.
"Look," Ganhar
said finally, "if you've got something to say, why not say it?"
"I'm afraid,"
Ramman admitted after another maddening pause. "But I have to tell
someone. And—" he managed a lopsided, sickly smile "—I'm even more
afraid of Jantu than I am of you."
"Why?" Ganhar
asked tightly.
"Because I'm a
traitor," Ramman whispered.
"What?!"
Ramman flinched as if Ganhar had struck him, yet it also seemed he'd crossed
some inner Rubicon. When he spoke again, his flat, hurried voice was louder.
"I'm a traitor.
I—I've been in contact with . . . with Horus and his daughter, Jiltanith, for
years."
"You've been talking
to them?!"
"Yes. Yes! I was
afraid of Anu, damn it! I wanted . . . I wanted to defect, but they wouldn't
let me! They made me stay, made me spy for them!"
"You fool,"
Ganhar said softly. "You poor, damned fool! No wonder Jantu scares the
shit out of you." Then, as the shock faded, his eyes narrowed again.
"But if that's true, why tell me? Why tell anyone?"
"Because . . .
because they're going to attack the enclave."
"Preposterous! They
could never crack the shield!"
"They don't plan
to." Ramman bent towards Ganhar, and his voice took on an urgent cadence.
"They're coming in through the access points."
"They can't—they
don't have the admittance code!"
"I know. Don't you
see? They want me to steal it for them!"
"That's
stupid," Ganhar objected, staring at the dirty, cringing Ramman.
"They must know Anu doesn't trust you—or did you lie to them about
that?"
"No, I
didn't," Ramman said tightly. "And even if I hadn't told them, they'd
know from how long I've been left outside."
"Then they must
also know Jantu plans to change the code as soon as all the 'untrustworthy
elements' are back outside."
"I know,
damn it! Listen to me, for Maker's sake! They don't want me to
bring it out. I'm supposed to plant it for someone else. One of the
degenerates!"
"Breaker!"
Ganhar whispered. Maker damn it, but it made sense! If they'd gotten one of
their own degen-people inside, it made audacious, possibly foolhardy
sense, but sense. They were terribly outnumbered, but with surprise on their
side . . . And it made their whole offensive make sense, too. Drive them into
the enclave . . . steal the code . . . smuggle it out and hit them before Anu
and Jantu changed it. . . . It was brilliant!
"Why tell me
now?" he demanded.
"Because they'll
never get away with it! But if they try, Anu will know someone gave them the
code, and I'll be one of the ones who get killed for it!"
"And you think
there's something I can do about it? You're a bigger fool than I
thought, Ramman!"
"No, listen! I've
thought about it, and there's a way," Ramman said eagerly. "A way
that'll help both of us!"
"How? No, wait. I
see it. You tell me, I trap their courier, and we pass it off as a
counter-intelligence ploy, is that it?"
"Exactly!"
"Hmmmmmm."
Ganhar stared down at his holo map, then shook his head. "No, there's a
better way," he said slowly. "You could go ahead and make the drop.
We could give them the code, then wait for them with everybody in armor
and all our equipment on line and wipe them out—gut them once and for
all."
"Yes. Yes!"
Ramman said eagerly.
"Very neat,"
Ganhar said, trying to picture what would follow such an overwhelming triumph. Nergal's
people would be neutralized, but what would happen then? He'd be a hero, but
even as a hero, his life would hang in the balance, for Inanna knew how he
thought of the "Chief." Perhaps Anu knew, as well. And he remembered
his other thoughts, how his own actions had come to sicken him. And he still
didn't know what had prompted Nergal's people to start their
offensive, even if he knew how they meant to end it. But if he and Ramman
trapped them, they could end the long, covert war. He'd have no more need to
slaughter innocents . . . not that there weren't enough Kirinals and Girrus to
go on doing it for the fun of it. . . .
"When are you
supposed to make the drop?" he asked finally.
"I already
have," Ramman admitted.
"I see,"
Ganhar said, and nodded absently as he opened a desk drawer. "I'm glad you
told me about this. I'm finally going to be able to do something effective
about the situation on this planet, Ramman, and I couldn't have done it without
you. Thank you."
His hand came out of the
drawer, and Ramman gaped at the small, heavy energy pistol it held. He was
still gaping when Ganhar blew his head to paste.
Jiltanith and Rohantha
settled into their flight couches and checked their computers with
extraordinary care, for the stakes were higher this night than they had ever
been before, and not just for them.
They were not in a
fighter, but in a specially modified pinnace. Larger even than one of the
twenty-man cutters, the pinnace (one of only two Nergal carried) was
crammed with stealth systems, three times the normal missile load, and the
extra computers linked to the two cutters and matching pair of fighters beside
it in the launch bay. A third fighter sat behind them while Hanalat and Carhana
carried out their own pre-flight checks. Even if Stalking-Horse was a total
success, it was going to make a terrible hole in Nergal's equipment
list.
Jiltanith nodded,
satisfied with the reports of her own flight systems and the ready signals
flowing through her cross links to Rohantha's equipment, and opened a channel
to flight operations.
"Ready," was
all she said.
"Good
hunting," a voice responded, and she smiled down at her console, for the
response came not from Hector but from Colin MacIntrye. Since admitting he'd
chosen her to succeed him, he seemed to have been constantly at hand, almost
hovering there, and she knew he'd resigned himself to letting her fly this
mission without really accepting it. She thought about saying something back to
him, but their new relationship—whatever it was—remained too fragile, too
unexplored. There would be time for that later. She hoped.
Instead, she lifted the
pinnace off the hangar deck and led the procession of vehicles up the long,
sloping tunnel. Freedom was upon her once more . . . and the hunger. But it was
different this time. Her hunger was less dark and consuming, and there was no
simmering tension between her and her weaponeer.
More than that, she was
heavier, less fleet of wing. Slower and shorter-ranged than a fighter in
vacuum, the pinnace was actually faster in atmosphere where its drive, thanks
to its heavier generators, could bull through air resistance without being
slowed to the same extent. But it had no atmospheric control surfaces for use
in the stealth regime, and its very power made it slower to accelerate or
decelerate, less maneuverable . . . and harder to hide.
They floated up the
shaft, alert for any last-minute warning from Nergal's scan crews. But
there were no alarms, and the small craft slipped undetected into the open
atmosphere. Calm, cool thoughts flowed to the computers, and they turned to the
east.
Under the false
tranquillity of her surface thoughts, Jiltanith's mind whirred like yet another
computer, probing even now for any last-minute awareness of error. She expected
to find none, but she could not stop searching, and that irritated her. It
wasn't the mark of the confident person she liked to believe she was.
For all the equipment
committed to Stalking-Horse, there were only four people involved in the
mission. She and Rohantha in the pinnace; Hanalat and Carhana in the only
manned fighter. But that was all right . . .
assuming she and Hector had accurately gauged Anu's new dispositions. If
they hadn't . . .
The use of the pinnace
was the part that bothered her most, she admitted to herself, leading the
procession towards their target at just under mach one. Its designers had never
intended it for the cut and thrust of close combat. Its single energy gun was a
toy beside the powerful multiple batteries of a fighter, and though her
electronics were much more capable and her upgraded missile armament gave her a
respectable punch at longer range, she knew what would happen if she was forced
into short-range combat with a proper fighter.
Yet only a pinnace had
the power plant, speed, and cargo capacity they needed. She could only trust in
Rohantha and her stealth systems and pray.
She stiffened as a
warning tingled in her link to Rohantha. Hostile fighters—two of them—to the
south. They were higher and moving faster than her own formation, degrading the
performance of their stealth systems, and had she piloted a fighter of her own,
Jiltanith would have asked nothing better than to scream up after them in
pursuit. As it was, she stifled a sudden desire to cram on power and run and
held her breath as her mind joined with Rohantha's, following the enemy's
movements. They swept on upon their own mission and faded from the passive
scanners.
Jiltanith made herself
relax, trying to forget her dread of which new innocents they were to kill. She
altered course minutely, swinging north of Ottawa before turning back on a
south-southwest heading, and managed to push such thoughts to the back of her
mind. The need for purposeful concentration helped, and her navigation systems
purred to her, the controls of her pinnace caressed her like a lover, and the
target area swept closer with every moment. Soon. Soon . . .
* * *
Shirhansu yawned, then
took a quick turn around the camouflaged bunker. If Ganhar was right (and his
analysts had done a bang-up job so far), they might see some more action soon.
She hoped so. The shoot-out in La Paz, what there'd been of it, had been a
relief despite the frustration of knowing so many enemies had escaped, and this
time she'd left Tarban behind. Of course, there were always risks, but her own
position was well protected, and she had plenty of firepower on hand this time.
In fact, it would be—
"We're getting
something, 'Hansu!"
She stepped quickly to Caman's
side. He was leaning forward slightly, eyes unfocused as he listened to his
electronics, and she glanced at the display beside him. Caman had no need of
it, but it let her see what his scanners reported without tying into his
systems and losing herself in them.
Active scanner systems
were coming in from the north! So Ganhar had guessed right. The other
side had no intention of being mousetrapped again, so they were probing ahead
of their attack force. Now the question was whether or not they'd visualized
the next moves as well as Ganhar had.
She watched a tiny red
dot move above the small, perfectly detailed hills and trees of the holo
display. The computers classed it as a cutter, but no cutter would be so brazen
if it was unescorted. Their own scanners, operating in passive mode so far, had
yet to spot anything else, but they'd find the bastards when it mattered.
* * *
Jiltanith had taken over
Rohantha's weapon systems as well as the flight controls for the moment, and
her brain was poised on a hair-trigger of anticipation. The base in upstate New
York was no Cuernavaca, and, though it had been on Hector's list from the
beginning, it had been carefully avoided to this point. It was juicy enough to
merit attention—a major staging point for weapons and foreign terrorists aiming
at targets in the northeastern states and Canada combined with the presence of
southerner coordinators and a small quantity of Imperial technology—but it was
also close to home, relatively speaking. More importantly, it was bait; they'd
needed a target like this to set the stage for Stalking-Horse.
Rohantha was tense
beside her as she concentrated on her specially-programmed computers. At the
moment, she was "flying" both cutters and their fighter escorts via
directional radio links. It was risky, because it meant placing the pinnace in
a position to hit them with the radio beams, but far less risky than relying on
fold-space links. And her directional links had the advantage of being
indetectable unless somebody from the other side got into their direct path.
There were no words in
the pinnace. Despite her own preoccupation, a corner of Jiltanith's mind was
open to the flow of Rohantha's thoughts through their neural feeds as the lead
cutter moved closer to the target, active scanners probing industriously,
turning it into a beacon in the heavens.
* * *
"Got 'em,
Hansu!" Caman said exultantly. "See?"
Shirhansu nodded. A
second cutter had just blipped onto the display. Its coordinates were less
definite, for it was using no scanners, but the fold-space link between it and
the first vessel had burned briefly through its stealth field. So they had
sent in the first one on its automatics, had they?
She raised a small mike,
smiling. They'd used radio against her in La Paz and she hadn't been ready for
it, but this time she had a radio link, as well. They might be watching
for it, but even if they spotted it, they couldn't be certain it was being used
by Imperials.
"First Team,"
she said quietly in English. "Go."
There was no reply, but
far above the surface of the Earth, a pair of Imperial fighters swooped
downward at mach three while they took targeting data from Caman's scanners
over the primitive radio link.
* * *
"Missiles!"
The unneeded word was
dragged out of Rohantha, and Jiltanith nodded jerkily. The energy signatures of
Imperial missiles were unmistakable as they scorched down out of the heavens,
and 'Hantha's plotting systems were backtracking frantically.
Both cutters went to
pre-programmed evasive action as the missiles came in. It was useless, of
course. It was intended to be, but it would have been useless whether they'd
planned it that way or not. The missles shrieked home, and Jiltanith cringed as
thermonuclear flame ripped the night skies apart. The southerners were using heavy
missiles!
She paled as she
pictured the radiation boiling out from those fireballs. They were barely a
kilometer up, and Maker only knew what they were doing to any Terra-born in the
vicinity, but she knew what their EMP would do to Rohantha's directional
antennae! Imperial technology was EMP-proof, but they'd counted on lighter
weapons, with less ruinous effect on the electromagnetic spectrum, and she only
hoped the targeting data had gotten through . . . and that the maneuvers in the
drones' computers were up to their needs. If they had to open up a fold-link
while the southerners were watching . . .
Both cutters had
vanished in the holocaust, and Jiltanith banked away from the blast as Rohantha
reclaimed her onboard systems. She'd done all she could by remote control.
* * *
"Hard kills on both
cutters!" Caman shouted, and Shirhansu crouched over his shoulder, staring
triumphantly at the display.
That was one fucking
commando team that would never hit a target! But her triumph was not unmixed
with worry as her fighters clawed back upward, putting as much distance between
themselves and their firing positions as they could without breaking stealth. .
. .
"Missile sources!
Multiple launches!" Caman snapped, and Shirhansu smothered a curse.
Ganhar had been right
again, Breaker take it! But there was still a good chance for her fighter
crews. She watched the missiles climbing the holographic display, spreading as
they rose. They couldn't have a definite lock, but they'd obviously gotten something
from the tracks of the missiles that had killed the cutters.
"Team Two!"
She used a fold-space com, but the heavy EMP from Team One's warheads would
make it hard for even Imperial systems to spot it just now, and the need for
secrecy was past, anyway. There was not even any need to tell her second
fighter force what to do—they knew, and they were already doing it.
Shit! Erdana's fighter
was clear of the missiles seeking it, but those were self-guided homing
weapons, and at least three had locked onto Sima and Yanu! She watched Sima go
to full power, abandoning stealth now that he knew he'd been targeted. Decoys
blossomed on the display and jamming systems fought to protect the fighter, and
two of the missiles lost lock and veered away. One killed a decoy in a
three-kiloton burst of fury; the other simply disappeared into the night. But
the third drilled through every defense Yanu could throw out against it, and its
target vanished from the display.
Shirhansu swallowed a
sour gulp of fury, but there was no time for dismay. Caman's scanners had
picked out both of the firing fighters, and Team Two—not two, but four Imperial
fighters—charged after them, missiles already lashing out across the heavens.
* * *
Jiltanith watched
exultantly as one of the southern fighters disappeared in a ball of flame. That
was more than they'd hoped for, and she was impressed by how well their
unmanned fighters' computers had done.
Now they were doing the
rest of their job, and she angled the pinnace away, hugging the ground, covered
by Hanalet and Carhana as they flashed back into the north at mach two and
prayed their own stealth systems held. . . .
* * *
Shirhansu watched the
northerners react to her own incoming fighters. They went to full power, one
streaking away to the west towards Lake Erie, the other breaking east and
diving for the cover of the mountains. Decoys blazed in the night, dying in
salvos of nuclear flame, and the west-bound fighter evaded the first wave of
missiles racing after it. Not so the one headed east; three different missiles
took it from three different directions.
She concentrated on the
surviving fighter, praying that its crew would be frightened—and foolish—enough
to flee straight back to Nergal, but those Imperials were made of
sterner stuff. They turned back from the western shore of the lake, hurling
their own missiles in reply, and she smothered an unwilling admiration for
their guts as they took on all four pursuers in a hopeless battle rather than
reveal their base's location.
What followed was swift
and savage. The single enemy fighter was boxed, and its crew were obviously
more determined than skilled. Its weapons sought out all its attackers,
splitting its fire instead of seeking to blast a single foe out of the way to
flee, and its violent evasive maneuvers had a fatalistic, almost mechanical
air. Her own flight crews' defensive systems handled the incoming fire, and
Changa's fighter flashed in so close he actually took the target out with his
energy guns instead of another missle.
The molten,
half-vaporized wreckage spilled into the cold, waiting waters of Lake Erie, and
the victors reformed above the steam cloud and flashed away to the south.
Shirhansu let her shoulders unknot and straightened, only then realizing that
she'd been crouched forward. She wiped her forehead, and her hand came away
damp.
Done. The whole thing
had taken less than five minutes, and it was done.
"Get me
Ganhar," she told Caman softly, and her assistant nodded happily.
Shirhansu drew a deep
breath and crossed her arms, considering what to say. It was a pity about Sima
and Yanu, but they'd taken out both cutters, the raiding force, and both
stealthed escorts, for the loss of a single fighter of their own. That was a
third of Nergal's fighter strength, plus at least five of their
remaining Imperials. Probably at least six, since there would have been one
Imperial in the raiding force, as well, and possibly seven if they'd been
foolish enough to use a live pilot in the lead cutter.
She let herself smile
thinly. Not a single survivor—and no indication of a message home to tell Nergal
what had happened, either. Their entire attack force had been gobbled up, and
it was unlikely they'd even know how it had happened. It was the worst they'd
ever been hurt. Proportionately, it made Cuernavaca meaningless, and she
had been in command. She'd commanded both successful interceptions!
"I've got Ganhar,"
Caman said, and Shirhansu let her smile broaden as she took over the com link.
"Ganhar? 'Hansu. We
got 'em all—clean sweep!"
* * *
Jiltanith and Rohantha
let themselves relax, knowing Hanalat and Carhana were doing the same aboard
their fighter.
Their equipment losses
had been severe, but that had been planned, and there had been no loss of life.
Not theirs, anyway, Jiltanith reminded herself, and tried to turn her mind away
from the Terra-born who must have been caught in the fireballs and radiation of
the cross-fire. At least the area was thinly populated, she thought, and knew
she was grasping at straws.
But the southerners
couldn't know the northerners had lost none of their own personnel, which meant
that they would believe Nergal's losses had been staggering enough to
frighten them into suspending offensive operations.
They might actually pull
it off, and she looked forward to returning to Nergal to report the
mission's success. Hector would be pleased at how well it had gone, she
thought, but her lips curved in a small, secret smile, hidden from Rohantha as
she admitted a surprising truth to herself.
It was Colin's face she
truly wished to see.
General Gerald Hatcher
stood beside his GEV command vehicle on a hill overlooking what had once been a
stretch of pleasantly wooded countryside and listened to the radiation
detectors snarl. The wind was from behind him and the levels were relatively
low here, but that was cold comfort as he looked down into the smoldering mouth
of Hell.
Smoke fumed up from the
forest fires, but they were still far away and the Forestry Service and fire
departments and volunteers from the surviving locals along the fringe of the
area were fighting to bring them under control. Most of those people didn't
have dosimeters, either, and Hatcher shook his head slowly. Courage came in
many guises, and it never ceased to amaze and humble him, but this carnage went
beyond anything courage could cope with. Hatcher's bearing was as erect and
soldierly as ever, but inside himself he wept.
Red and blue flashers
blinked atop emergency vehicles further out into the smoking wasteland, and the
night sky was heavy with helicopters and vertols that jockeyed through the
treacherous thermals and radiation. They would not find many to rescue out
there . . . and this was only one of the nuked areas.
He turned at the whine
of fans as another GEV swept up the slope, blowing a gale of downed branches and
ash from under its skirts, and settled beside his own. The hatch popped, and
Captain Germaine, his aide, climbed down. His battle dress was smutted with
dirt and ash and his face was drawn as he removed his breathing mask and walked
heavily over to his commander.
"How bad is it,
Al?" Hatcher asked quietly.
"About as bad as it
could be, sir," Germaine said in a low voice, waving a hand out over the
expanse of ruin. "The search teams are still working their way towards the
center, but the last body count I heard was already over five hundred and still
climbing."
"And that doesn't
include the flash-blinded and the ones who'll still die," Hatcher said
softly.
"No, sir. And this
is one of the bright spots," Germaine continued in bitter, staccato
bursts. "One of the goddamned things went off right over a town to the
south. Sixteen thousand people." His mouth twisted. "Doesn't look
like there'll be any survivors from that one, General."
"Dear God,"
Hatcher murmured, and even he could not have said whether it was a prayer or a
curse.
"Yes, sir. The only
good thing—if it's not obscene to call anything about this bitched-up mess
'good'—is they seem to've been mighty clean. The counters show a relatively
small area of lethal contamination, and the wind's out of the southeast, away
from the big urban areas. But God knows what it's going to do to the local gene
pool or what the Canadians are going to catch from all this shit."
The last word came out
of him in a half-strangled shout as his attempted detachment crumbled, and he
half-turned from his general, clenching his fists.
"I know, Al. I
know." Hatcher sighed and shook himself, his normally sharp eyes sad as he
looked out over the battlefield. And battlefield it had been, even if none of
the United States' detection systems had picked up a thing before or after the
explosions. At least they'd had satellites in place to see what happened during
the battle . . . not that the records made him feel any better.
"I'm heading back
to the office, Al. Stay on it and keep me informed."
"Yes, sir."
Hatcher gestured, and
his white-faced young commo officer stepped to his side. Her auburn hair was
cut a bit longer than regulations prescribed, and it blew on the winds the
fires ten kilometers away were sucking into their maw.
"Get hold of Major
Weintraub, Lieutenant. Have him meet me at HQ."
"Yes, sir."
The lieutenant headed for the command vehicle's radios, and Hatcher rested a
hand on Germaine's shoulder.
"Watch your
dosimeter, Al. If it climbs into the yellow, you're out of here and back to
base. The major and I'll want to talk to you, anyway."
"Yes, sir."
Hatcher squeezed the
taut shoulder briefly, then walked heavily to his GEV. It rose on its fans and
curtsied uncomfortably across the rough terrain, but Hatcher sat sunken in
thought and hardly noticed.
It wasn't going well.
Hector's people had started on a roll, but they were getting the holy howling
shit kicked out of them now, and the rest of the human race with them.
The first wave of
counter-attacks had puzzled Hatcher. A handful of attacks on isolated segments
of the aerospace effort, a few bloody massacres of individual families. They'd
seemed more like pinpricks than full-scale assaults, and he'd tentatively
decided the bad guys, whoever they were, were going after those few of Hector's
people they could identify, which had been bad enough but also understandable.
But within twelve hours,
another and far bloodier comber of destruction had swept the planet like a
tsunami. The Point, Sandhurst, Klyuchevskaya, Goddard . . . Eden Two.
Clearly the other side
had opted for the traditional terrorist weapon: terror. Coupled with the
reports from La Paz, which could only have been a direct clash between the
extra-terrestrial opponents, and this new obscenity in New York, it sounded
terribly as if the momentum was shifting, and his preliminary examination of
the satellite tapes seemed to confirm it.
The first warning anyone
had was the burst of warheads, but the cameras had watched it all. Clearly one
side had gotten the shit kicked out of it, and judging by the warheads each had
used, it hadn't been the bad guys. Hector's people had used only small-yield
nukes, when they'd used them at all, but their enemies didn't give a shit who
they killed. They went in for great big bangs and hang the death toll, and his
satellite people put the winning side's yields in the twenty kiloton range,
maybe even a bit higher.
Hatcher sighed
unhappily. Other bits and pieces had come together as his analysts tried to
figure out what was going on, and one thing had become clear: the nature and
pattern of Hector's people's operations all suggested meticulous planning,
economy of force, and conservation of resources, whereas their opponents were
operating on a far vaster scale, their actions wider-spread and more often
simultaneous rather than sequenced. All of which indicated the balance of force
was against Hector's side, probably by a pretty heavy margin.
History was replete with
examples of out-numbered forces that had triumphed over clumsier enemies or
those less technologically advanced than themselves, but right off the top of
his head, Hatcher couldn't recall a single case in which a weaker force had
defeated one that was equally advanced, more numerous, and knew what the hell
it was doing. Especially not when the stronger side were also the barbarians.
His command vehicle
reached the highway and turned north, heading for the vertol waiting to carry
him back to his HQ, and he rubbed his eyes wearily. He and Weintraub had to get
their heads together, though God only knew what good it was going to do. So
far, all anyone had been able to do was beef up civil defense and keep their heads
down. They were too outclassed for anything else, but if Hector's people went
down, it was Hatcher's duty to do what he could.
Even if it hadn't been,
he would have tried, for there was one thing upon which Gerald Hatcher was
savagely determined. The bastards who didn't care how many innocent people they
slaughtered were not going to take over his world without a fight, however
advanced they were.
* * *
"Oh, Jesus!"
Hector MacMahan whispered. His strong, tanned face was white as he listened to
the reports flowing over the government and civilian emergency radio nets, and
Colin reached over to lay a hand upon his shoulder.
"It wasn't our
doing, Hector," he said quietly.
"Oh yes it
was." MacMahan's bitter voice was as savage as his eyes. "We didn't
use those fucking monsters, but we provoked them into doing it! And do
me a favor and don't tell me we didn't have any choice!"
Colin met his eyes for a
moment, then patted the colonel's shoulder once, gently, and leaned back in his
own chair. Hector's bitterness wasn't directed at him, though he would have
preferred for MacMahan to have an external focus for his self-loathing. Yet
even in his pain, Hector had put his finger on it. They hadn't had a choice . .
. and Colin wondered how many commanders over the ages had tried to assuage
their consciences with thoughts like that.
"All right,"
he said finally. He reached out through his implant to shut off the emergency
workers' voices, and MacMahan looked at him angrily, as if he resented the
interruption of his self-imposed auditory penance. "We know what happened.
The question is whether or not it worked. 'Tanni?"
"I can but say it
should," Jiltanith said softly, and managed a ghost of the triumphant
smiles they'd shared before the casualty reports started coming in. "Had
they spied our other craft, then would they ha' sought the death of all. So far
as they may tell, they slew our force entire."
"Horus?"
" 'Tanni's right.
We've done all we can. I pray the Maker it was enough." The old Imperial
looked down at his hands and refused to look back up. Isis hugged him gently,
and when she looked up to meet Colin's eyes her bright tears stopped him from
asking her opinion. He glanced at MacMahan, instead.
"Oh, sure,"
the colonel said savagely. "My wonderful fucking plan worked just fine.
All those extra bodies'll be a big help, too, won't they?"
"All right,"
Colin said again, his own voice carefully neutral. "In that case, we'll
suspend all further offensive operations immediately. There's nothing we can do
but wait, anyway." Heads nodded, and he rose. "Then I recommend we
all get something to eat and some rest."
He extended his hand to
Jiltanith without even thinking about it, and she took it. The warmth of her
grip made him realize what he'd done, and he looked over at her quickly. She
met his gaze with a small, sad smile and tightened her clasp as she stood
beside him. They were almost exactly the same height, Colin noted, and for some
no longer quite so obscure reason that pleased him even in their shared pain.
Horus and Isis rose more
slowly, but MacMahan remained seated. Colin looked down at him and started to
speak, but Jiltanith squeezed his hand and gave her head a tiny shake. He
hesitated a moment longer, then thought better of it, and they walked
wordlessly from the conference room.
The hatch closed behind
them, but not quickly enough to cut off the mutter of ghostly, angry, weeping
voices as MacMahan turned the radios back on.
* * *
"So much for those
smart-assed bastards!" Anu gloated as Ganhar finished his report.
"Caught them with their pants down and kicked them right in the ass, by
the Maker! Good work, Ganhar. Very good!"
"Thank you,
Chief." It was becoming harder for Ganhar to hold himself together, and he
wondered what was really happening deep inside him.
"What next?"
Anu demanded, and his hand-rubbing glee nauseated the Operations head.
"Got any more targets picked out?"
"I don't think we
need them, Chief," Ganhar said carefully. He saw Anu's instant
disappointment, like the resentment of a little boy denied a third helping of
dessert, and made himself continue.
"It looks like
we've hurt them worse than the numbers alone suggest. They haven't mounted a
single attack in the thirty-six hours since Shirhansu's people pulled out.
Either they're rethinking or they've already rethought, Chief. Whichever it is,
they're not going to lock horns with us again after this. That being the case,
do we really want to do any more damage than we have to? Anything we smash is
going to have to be rebuilt before we can get our other projects back on
line."
"That's true,"
Anu said unwillingly. He looked at his head of security. "Jantu? You've
been damned quiet. What'd you think?"
"I think we should
give them a few more licks for good measure," Jantu said, but his voice
was less forceful than of old. He hadn't realized how much he'd actually come
to enjoy his affair with Bahantha. Her death had shaken him badly, but the blow
to his ambitions was even worse, and Ganhar's and Inanna's alliance had come as
a terrible shock.
"Ganhar's right,
Chief." Inanna eyed the Security chief coldly, as if to confirm his
thoughts. "The real problem's always been Nergal's people. Killing
more degenerates is pointless, unless we want to take over openly."
"No," Anu
said, shaking his head. "It's bad enough they know we're here; if we come
out into the open, there's too much chance of losing control."
"I agree,"
Ganhar said quietly, locking eyes with Jantu. "Right now, the degenerates
don't have any idea where to look for us, but that could change if we get too
open, and our tech advantage doesn't mean we're invulnerable. There's more than
one way someone can get at us."
Jantu winced as Anu
joined the other two in glaring at him. In retrospect, it was obvious from the
surveillance reports that Ramman had acted unnaturally ever since his return to
the enclave, and if Jantu had been less shaken by the realization that Ganhar
and Inanna were leagued against him he probably would have noticed it and
hauled the man in for questioning. As it was, he'd let matters slip so badly it
had been Ganhar, his worst rival, who'd noticed something and dragged Ramman in
to confront him.
The Operations head was
damned lucky to be alive, Jantu thought viciously. Somehow Ramman had gotten
his hands on an energy pistol despite his suspect status—something Jantu still
couldn't understand—and only the fact that Ganhar had out-drawn him had saved
his life. Damn Ramman! The least he might have done was kill the
son-of-a-bitch!
Unfortunately, he
hadn't, and Ganhar had not only preserved his own life, but uncovered the worst
security breach in the enclave's history: a self-confessed spy who'd admitted
he was working for Horus. And the fact that Horus had gotten to Ramman without
being detected was Jantu's failure, not Ganhar's. His failure to spot
Ramman, coupled with the fact that it was his bitterest rival Ramman had
almost killed, had seemed dangerously close to collusion rather than
carelessness, and Jantu knew Anu thought so.
"Maybe you're
right," he admitted now, the words choking in his throat. "But if so,
what else should we do?"
"We ought to make
sure we're right about their reaction," Ganhar said positively. "Our
important degenerates have been safe inside the shield, but Nergal's bunch've
blown the crap out of our outside networks. Let's start rebuilding while the
rest of the degenerates are still disorganized. There's no way the other side
could miss our doing that. If they've still got the guts to face us, they'll go
after our degenerates as soon as they spot them."
"Sounds
reasonable," Anu agreed. "Which batch do you want to throw out
first?"
"Let's sit tight on
our people in government and industry." Ganhar had personally run the
background checks on too many of those people for it to be likely Ramman's
courier was among them. "They're too valuable to risk."
"If we hang on to
them too long, they'll lose credibility," Inanna pointed out.
"Especially the ones in government. Some of them're already going to lose
their jobs for running when things got hot."
"A few more days
won't make much difference, and the delay's worth it to keep them alive if
we've guessed wrong. Remember, the very fact that we hid them has marked them
for Nergal's bunch. If they do have the guts to go on, they'll know
exactly who to gun for." Ganhar wanted to marshal weightier arguments, but
he dared not. Inanna was his ally for now, but if she guessed what he was
really up to . . .
"You're right
again, Ganhar," Anu said expansively. "By the Maker, it's almost a pity
Kirinal didn't get herself killed earlier. If you'd been running things, we
probably wouldn't have been taken by surprise this way."
"Thanks,
Chief," the words were like splintered bone in Ganhar's throat, "but
I stand by what I said. There was simply no way to predict what they were going
to pull. All we could do was see which way the wind blew and then hit back
hard."
He saw a trace of
approval in Inanna's eyes, for she, better than any, would know it was the
right note to strike. Anu was feeling expansive just now, but soon he would
settle back into his usual behavior patterns, and it could be more dangerous to
be overly competent than incompetent then.
"Well, you did a
good job," Anu said, "and I'm inclined to follow your advice now.
Start with the combat types—they're easier to replace anyway."
He nodded to indicate
the meeting was adjourned, and the other three rose and left.
* * *
Ganhar felt the hatch
close behind him with a vast sense of relief, then nodded to Inanna, gave Jantu
a cold, dangerous smile, and stalked off. For the moment, his position was
secure, and unless he missed his guess, he'd only need for it to stay that way
a very little while longer.
The cold wind of
mortality blew down his spine, and he'd put it there himself, but he still didn't
know exactly why he had. The events he'd set in motion—or, more accurately,
allowed to remain in motion—terrified him, yet there was a curious
satisfaction in it. One way or another, it would bring the eternal, intricate
betrayal and counter-betrayal to an end, and perhaps it could go some way
towards expiating the sickness he'd felt ever since he had replaced Kirinal and
his had become the hand that personally managed the organized murder of the
people of Terra.
And it would also be the
gambit that ended the long, futile game. The consummate, smoothly-polished
stratagem that set all the other plotting, scheming would-be tyrants at naught.
There was a certain sweetness in that, and—who knew?—he might even survive it
after all.
It was very quiet on Nergal's
hangar deck. The command deck was too small for the crowd of people who had
gathered here, and Colin let his eyes run over them thoughtfully. Every
surviving Imperial was present, but they were vastly outnumbered by their
Terra-born descendants and allies, and perhaps that was as it should be. It was
fitting that what had started as a battle between Anu's mutineers and the
loyalists of Dahak's crew should end as a battle between those same
butchers and the descendants of those they had betrayed.
He sat beside Jiltanith
on the stage against the big compartment's outer bulkhead and wondered how the
rest of Nergal's people were reacting to the outward signs of their
changing relationship. There were dark, still places in her soul that he
doubted he would ever understand fully, and he had no idea where they were
ultimately headed, but he was content to wait and see. Assuming they won and
they both survived, they would have plenty of time to find out.
Hector MacMahan,
immaculate as ever in his Marine uniform, entered the hangar deck beside a
dark-faced, almost-handsome young man in the uniform of a US Army master
sergeant, and Colin felt a stir rustle through the gathering as they found
chairs to Jiltanith's left. Only a few of them had yet met Andrew Asnani, but
all of them had heard of him by now.
Horus waited until they
were seated, then stood and folded his hands behind him. He had abandoned his
ratty old Clemson sweatshirt for this meeting and, at Colin's insistence, wore
the midnight blue of the Fleet for the first time in fifty thousand years. His
collar bore the single golden starburst of a fleet captain, not his old
pre-mutiny rank, in a gesture that spoke to all of his fellow mutineers, even
if they did not understand its full implications, and Colin had seen one or two
of the older Imperials sit a bit straighter, their eyes a bit brighter, at the
change.
"We've waited a
long time for this moment," Horus said quietly, looking out over the
silent ranks, "and we and, far more, the innocent people of this planet,
have paid a terrible price to reach it. Many of us have died trying to undo
what we did; far more have died trying to undo something someone else
did. Those people can't see this day, yet, in a way, they're right here with
us."
He paused and drew a
deep breath.
"All of you know
what we've been trying to do. It looks—and I caution you that appearances may
be deceiving—but it looks like we've succeeded."
A sound like wind
through grass filled the hangar deck. His words were no surprise, but they were
a vast relief—and a source of even greater tension.
"Hector will brief
you on our operations plan in just a moment, but there's something else I want
to say to our children and our allies first." He looked out, and his
determined old eyes were dark.
"We're sorry,"
he said quietly. "What you face is our fault, not yours. We can never
repay you, never even thank you properly, for the sacrifices you and your
parents and grandparents have made for us, knowing that we are to blame for so
many terrible things. Whatever happens, we're proud of you—prouder, perhaps,
than you can ever know. By being who you are, you've restored something to us,
for if we can call upon the aid of people as extraordinary as you have proven
yourselves to be, then perhaps there truly remains something of good in all of
us. I—"
His voice broke and he
cleared his throat, then stopped with a little headshake and sat. There was
silence, but it was a silence of shared emotions too deep for expression, and
then all eyes switched to Colin as he rose slowly. He met their assembled gazes
calmly, acutely aware of the way the paired stars of his own Fleet rank
glittered upon his collar, then looked down at Horus.
"Thank you,
Horus," he said softly. "I wish I could count myself among those
extraordinary people you just referred to, but I can't unless, perhaps, by
adoption."
He held Horus's eyes a
moment, then swung back to face the hangar deck.
"You all know how I
came to hold the position I hold, and how much more deeply some of you merited
it. I can't change what happened, but everything Horus just said holds true for
me, as well. I'm honored to have known you, much less to have the privilege,
however it came my way, of commanding you.
"And there's
another thing. I insisted Horus wear the Fleet's uniform today. He argued with
me, as he's done a time or two before—" that won a ripple of laughter, as
he'd known it would "—but I insisted for a reason. Our Imperials stopped
wearing that uniform because they felt they'd dishonored it, and perhaps they
had, but Anu's people have retained it, and therein lies the true dishonor. You
made a mistake—a horrible mistake—fifty thousand years ago, but you also
recognized your error. You've done all that anyone could, far more than anyone
could have demanded of you, to right the wrong you did, and your children and
descendants and allies have fought and died beside you."
He paused and, like
Horus, drew a deep breath. When he spoke again, his voice was very formal,
almost harsh.
"All of that is
true, yet the fact remains that you are criminals under Fleet Regulations. You
know it. I know it. Dahak knows it. And, if the Imperium remains, someday Fleet
Central will know it, for you have agreed to surrender yourselves to the
justice of the Imperium. I honor and respect you for that decision, but on the
eve of an operation from which so many may not return, matters so important to
you all, so fundamental to all you have striven for, cannot be left unresolved.
"Now, therefore, I,
Senior Fleet Captain Colin MacIntyre, Imperial Battle Fleet, Officer
Commanding, Dahak Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Nine-One, by the
authority vested in me under Fleet Regulation Nine-Seven-Two, Subsection Three,
do hereby convene an extraordinary court martial to consider the actions of
certain personnel serving aboard the vessel presently under my command during
the tenure of Senior Fleet Captain Druaga of Imperial Battle Fleet, myself
sitting as President and sole member of the Court. Further, as per Fleet
Regulation Nine-Seven-Three, Subsection One-Eight, I do also declare myself
counsel for the prosecution and defense, there being no other properly empowered
officers of Battle Fleet present.
"The crew of
sublight battleship Nergal, Hull Number
SBB-One-Seven-Two-Two-Nine-One-One-Three stands charged before this Court with
violation of Articles Nineteen, Twenty, and Twenty-Three of the Articles of
War, in that they did raise armed rebellion against their lawful superiors; did
attempt to seize their vessel and desert, the Imperium then being in a state of
readiness for war; and, in commission and consequence of those acts, did also
cause the deaths of many of their fellow crewmen and contribute to the
abandonment of others upon this planet.
"The Court has
considered the testimony of the accused and the evidence of its own
observations, as well as the evidence of the said battleship Nergal's
log and other relevant records. Based upon that evidence and testimony, the
Court has no choice but to find the accused guilty of all specifications and to
strip them of all rank and privilege as officers and enlisted personnel of
Battle Fleet. Further, as the sentence for their crimes is death, without
provision for lesser penalties, the Court so sentences them."
A vast, quiet
susurration rippled through the hangar deck, but no one spoke. No one could
speak.
"In addition to
those individuals actively participating in the mutiny, there are among Nergal's
present crew certain individuals, then minor children or born to the core crew
and/or descendants of Dahak's core crew, and hence members of the crew
of the said Dahak. Under strict interpretation of Article Twenty, these
individuals might be considered accomplices after the fact, in that they did
not attempt to suppress the mutiny and punish the mutineers aboard the said Nergal
when they came of age. In their case, however, and in view of the
circumstances, all charges are dismissed.
"The Court wishes,
however, to note certain extenuating circumstances discovered in Nergal's
records and by personal observation. Specifically, the Court wishes to record
that the guilty parties did, at the cost of the lives of almost seventy percent
of their number, attempt to rectify the wrong they had done. The Court further
wishes to record its observation that the subsequent actions of these mutineers
and their descendants and allies have been in the finest traditions of the
Fleet, far surpassing in both duration and scope any recorded devotion to duty
in the Fleet's records.
"Now, therefore,
under Article Nine of the Imperial Constitution, I, Senior Fleet Captain Colin
MacIntrye, as senior officer present on the Planet Earth, do hereby declare
myself Planetary Governor of the colony upon that planet upon the paramount
authority of the Imperial Government. As Planetary Governor, I herewith
exercise my powers under Article Nine, Section Twelve, of the Constitution, and
pronounce and decree—" he let his eyes sweep over the taut, assembled
faces "—that all personnel serving aboard the sublight battleship Nergal,
Hull Number SBB-One-Seven-Two-Two-Nine-One-One-Three, are, for extraordinary
services to the Imperium and the human race, pardoned for all crimes and, if
they so desire, are restored to service in Battle Fleet with seniority and rank
granted by myself as commanding officer of Dahak, Hull Number
One-Seven-Two-Two-Nine-One, to date from this day and hour. I now also direct
that the findings of the Court and the decree of the Governor be entered
immediately in the data base of the said battleship Nergal and
transferred, as soon as practicable, to the data base of the said
ship-of-the-line Dahak for transmission to Fleet Central at the earliest
possible date.
"This Court,"
he finished quietly, "is adjourned."
He sat in a ringing
silence and turned slowly to look at Horus. It had taken weeks of agonized
thought to reach his decision and mind-numbing days studying the relevant
regulations to find the authority and precedents he required. In one sense, it
might not matter at all, for it was as apparent to the northerners as to anyone
in the south that the Imperium might well have fallen. But in another, far more
important sense it meant everything . . .
and was the very least he could do for the people Horus had so rightly
called "extraordinary."
"Thank—" Horus
broke off to clear his husky throat. "Thank you, sir," he said
softly. "For myself and my fellows."
A sound came from the
hangar deck, a sigh that was almost a sob, and then everyone was on his or her
feet. The thunder of their cheers bounced back from the battle steel bulkheads,
battering Colin with fists of sound, but under the tumult, he heard one voice
in his very ear as Jiltanith gripped his arm in fingers of steel.
"I thank thee,
Colin MacIntyre," she said softly. "Howsoe'er it chanced, thou'rt a
captain, indeed, as wise as thou'rt good. Thou hast gi'en my father and my
family back their souls, and from the bottom of my heart, I thank thee."
* * *
It took time to restore
calm, yet it was time Colin could never begrudge. These were his people,
now, in every sense of the word, and if mortal man could achieve their purpose,
his people would do it.
But a whispering quiet
returned at last, and Hector MacMahan stood at Colin's gesture.
MacMahan would never
forget the guilt and grief of Operation Stalking-Horse's civilian casualties.
There were fresh lines on his face, fresh white in his dark hair, but he was
not immune to the catharsis that had swept the hangar deck. It showed in his
eyes and expression as he faced the others.
"All right,"
he said quietly, "to business," and there was instant silence once
more.
He touched buttons on
the Terran-made keyboard wired into the briefing console, and a detailed holo
map glowed to life between the stage and the front row of seats. It hovered a
meter off the deck, canted so that its upper edge almost touched the deckhead
to give every observer an unobstructed view.
"This,"
MacMahan said, "is the southern enclave. It's absolutely the best data
we've had on it yet, and we owe it to Ninhursag. We only asked her for the
access code; obviously she figured out why and ran the considerable risk of
compiling the rest of this for us. If we make it, people, we owe her big.
"Now, as you can
see, the enclave is a cavern about twelve kilometers across with the armed
parasites forming an outer ring against its walls right here." He touched
another button, and the small holographic ships glowed crimson. "They
aren't permanently crewed and won't matter much as long as they stay that way;
if they lift off, Dahak should be able to nail them easily.
"These, on
the other hand"—another group of ships glowed bright, forming a second,
denser ring closer to the center of the cavern—"are transports, and
they're going to be a problem. Most of their heavy combat equipment is in them,
though Ninhursag was unable to determine how it's distributed, and most of
their personnel live aboard them, not in the housing units.
"That means the
transports are where their people will be concentrated when they realize
they're under attack and that the heaviest counter-attacks are going to come
from them. The simplest procedure would be to break into the enclave, pop off a
nuke, and get the hell out. The next simplest thing would be to go for the
transports with everything we've got and blow them apart before any nasty
surprises can come out of them. The hardest way to do it is to try to
take them ship-by-ship."
He paused and studied
his audience carefully.
"We're going to do
it the hard way," he said quietly, and there was not even a murmur of
protest. "For all we know, many of the people in stasis aboard them
would've joined us from the beginning if they'd had the chance. Certainly
Ninhursag did, and at the risk of a pretty horrible death if she'd been caught.
They deserve the chance to pick sides when the fighting's over.
"But more than
that, we're going to need them. There are close to five thousand
trained, experienced Imperial military personnel in stasis aboard those ships,
and the Achuultani are coming. We can't count on the Imperium, though we'll
certainly try to obtain any help from it that we can. But in a worst-case
scenario, we're on our own with little more than two years to get this planet
into some kind of shape to defend itself out of its own resources, and we need
those people desperately. By the same token, we need the tech base and medical
facilities that are also aboard those transports, so mass destruction weapons
are out of the question.
"By Ninhursag's
estimates, our Imperials are outnumbered almost ten-to-one, and anyone as
paranoid as Anu will have automatic weapons in strategic locations. We're
taking in a force of just over a thousand people, almost all of them
Terra-born, but our own Imperials are going to have to be in the van. Our
Terra-born are all trained military people, and they'll have the best mix of
Terran and Imperial weaponry we can give them, but they won't be the equal of Imperials.
They can't be, and, at the absolute best, the fighting is going to be close,
hard, and vicious. Our losses—" he swept the watching eyes without
flinching "—will be heavy.
"They're going to
be heavy," he repeated, "but we're going to win. We're going to
remember every single thing they've ever done to us and to our planet and we're
going to kick their asses, but we're also going to take prisoners."
There was a formless
protest at his words, but his raised hand quelled it.
"We're going to
take prisoners because Ninhursag may not be our only ally inside—we'll explain
that in a moment—and because we don't know what sort of booby-traps Anu may
have arranged and we'll need guides. So if someone tries to surrender, let
them. But remember this: our Senior Fleet Captain has other officers now. We
can, and will, convene courts-martial afterward, and the guilty will be
punished." He said the last three words with a soft, terrible
emphasis, and the sound that answered chilled Colin's blood, but he would not
have protested if he could have.
"There's another
point, and this is for our own Imperials," MacMahan said quietly. "We
Terra-born understand your feelings better than you may believe. We honor you
and we love you, and we know you'll be the other side's primary targets. We
can't help that, and we won't try to take this moment away from you, but when
this is over, we're going to need you more than we ever needed you before.
We'll need every single one of you for the fighting, including Colin and all
the children, but we also need survivors, so don't throw your lives away!
You're our senior officers; if anything happens to Colin, command of Dahak
will devolve on one of you, and taking out the southerners is only the first
step. What really matters is the Achuultani. Don't get yourselves killed on
us now!"
Colin hoped the old
Imperials heard the raw appeal in his voice, but he also remembered his
earliest thoughts about Horus, his fear that the northern Imperials were no longer
entirely sane themselves. He'd been wrong—but not very. It wasn't insanity, but
it was fanaticism. They'd suffered a hell on earth for thousands of years to
bring this moment about. He knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that even if they
heard and understood what Hector was saying, they were going to take chances no
cool, calm professional would ever take, and it was going to get all too many
of them killed.
"All right,"
MacMahan said more normally, "here's what we're going to do.
"We're leaving Nergal
right where she is with a skeleton crew. There will be one Imperial, chosen by
lot, to command her in an emergency, backed up by just enough trained
Terra-born to get her into space. I hate asking any of you to stay behind, but
we have no choice. If it all comes apart on us in the south, we'll take the
bastards out with a nuclear demolition charge inside the shield, but that's
going to mean none of us will be coming back."
He paused to let that
sink in, then went on calmly.
"In that case, the
remaining crew members are going to have to take Nergal out to
rendezvous with Dahak. Dahak will be expecting you and won't fire as
long as you stay clear of Senior Fleet Captain Druaga's kill zone. You will
therefore stop at ten thousand kilometers and transmit Nergal's entire
memory to Dahak, which will include the findings of Senior Fleet Captain
MacIntrye's court-martial and his decree of pardon as Planetary Governor. Once
that's been received by Dahak, you will once more be members of Dahak's
crew and the Imperial Fleet. Nergal's memory contains the best
projections and advice Colin and the Council have been able to put together,
but what you actually do after that will be up to you and Dahak.
"But that's an
absolute worst case. Think of it as insurance for something we truly don't
think will happen.
"The rest of us
will take every cutter and ground combat vehicle we can muster and move south
under stealth. We will take no fighters; they'd be useless inside the enclave,
but more importantly, we'll need every Imperial we have to run our other
equipment.
"We'll be going in
through the western access point, here." Another portion of the holo map
glowed as he spoke. "We have the codes from Ninhursag, and there's no
indication they've been changed. We'll advance along these axes—" more
lines glowed "—with parties detailed to each transport. Each attack party
will be individually briefed on its mission and as much knowledge of the
terrain as Ninhursag was able to give us. You'll also have Ninhursag's personal
implant codes. Make damned sure you don't kill her by mistake. She's one lady
we want around for the victory party.
"If you can get
inside on the first rush, well and good. If you can't, the assault parties will
try to prevent anyone from leaving any of the transports while the reserve
deals with each holdout in turn. Hopefully, if any of them try to lift out to
escape, they won't all lift at once. That means Dahak may only have to
destroy one or two of them before the others realize what's happening. With us
inside and an active Dahak outside, they'll surrender if they have a
grain of sanity left.
"All right. That's
the bare—very bare—bones of the plan. My staff will break it down for each
group individually, and we'll hold a final briefing for everyone just before we
push off. But there's one other thing you all ought to know, and Sergeant
Asnani is the one to tell you about it. Sergeant?"
Andrew Asnani stood,
wishing for a moment that he was still Abu al-Nasir, the tough, confident
terrorist leader accustomed to briefing his men, as he felt their avid eyes and
tried to match the colonel's calm tone.
"What Colonel
MacMahan means," he said, "is that there were some unexpected
developments inside the enclave. Specifically, your agent Ramman tried to
betray you."
He almost flinched at
his audience's sudden ripple of shock, but he continued in the same calm voice.
"No one's entirely
certain what happened, but there were rumors all over the enclave, especially
among their Terra-born. The official line is that he was caught out by Ganhar,
their chief of operations, admitted he'd been passing you information for
decades to earn the right to defect, and tried to shoot his way out, but that
Ganhar out-drew and killed him. That's the official story, but I don't
think it's the truth. Unfortunately, I can't know the truth. I can only
surmise."
He inhaled deeply. He'd
seen the southerners, been one of their own, in a sense, and he was even more
aware than his listeners of the importance of his evaluation.
"It's
possible," he said carefully, "that Ramman succeeded in giving his
information to Ganhar before he was killed. He hadn't been told any more than
Ninhursag, but if she could figure out what was coming, so could he. If that
happened, then they may be waiting for us when we come in." His audience
noted his use of the pronoun "we," and one or two people smiled
tightly at him.
"But I don't
believe they will be. If they planned an ambush, they'd've watched the drop
site, and if they did, they know no one went near it. Of course, they may
realize there could have been a backup, but I watched closely after the news
broke. I believe the Imperials themselves believe the official story. And,
while it may be that their leadership chose to put out disinformation, I don't
think they did.
"I think," he
went on, speaking more precisely than ever, "Ganhar told Anu and the
others exactly what they told the rest of their people. I think he knows
we're coming and deliberately helped clear the way for us."
He paused again, seeing
disbelief in more than one face, and shrugged.
"I realize how
preposterous that sounds, but there are reasons for my opinion. First, Ganhar
was in serious trouble before they began their counter-attacks. Jantu, their
security head, had his knife out, and from all I could gather, everyone
expected him to stick it in. Second, Ganhar only inherited their operational
branch after Kirinal was killed; he's new to the top slot, and I think actually
being in charge did something to him. I can't put my finger on it exactly, but
Abu al-Nasir was important enough to attend several conferences with him, and
he let his guard down a bit more with their 'degenerates' than with their own
Imperials. That's an unhappy man. A very unhappy man. Something's eating him up
from the inside. Even before the news about Ramman broke, I had the impression
his heart just wasn't in it anymore.
"You have to
understand that their enclave is like feeding time in a snake house. The
difference between them and what I've seen here—well, it's like the difference
between night and day. If I were in the position of any of their leaders, I'd
be looking over my shoulder every second, waiting for the axe to fall. Mix a
little guilt with that kind of long-term, gnawing anxiety, and you could just
have a man who wants out, any way he can get out.
"I certainly can't
guarantee any of that. It's possible we'll walk right into a trap, and if we
do, it's my evaluation that is taking us into it. But if they let us through
the access point at all, we'll be inside their shield, and Captain MacIntyre
has accepted my offer to personally carry one of your one-megaton nuclear
demolition charges."
He met their eyes, his
own stubborn and determined in the silence.
"I can't guarantee
it isn't a trap," he said very, very quietly, "but I can and will
guarantee that that enclave will be taken out."
* * *
General Gerald Hatcher
opened his office door in the underground command post and stopped dead. He
shot a quick glance back at the outer office, but none of the officers and
noncoms bent over their desks had looked up as if they expected to see his
surprise.
He inhaled through his
nostrils and stepped through the door, closing it carefully behind him before
he walked to his own desk. He'd never seen the twenty-five-centimeter-long
rectangular case that lay on his blotter, and he examined it closely before he
touched it. It was unlikely anyone could have smuggled a bomb or some similar
nastiness into his office. On the other hand, it should have been equally
difficult to smuggle anything into it.
He'd never seen anything
quite like it, and he began to question his first impression that it was made
of plastic. Its glossy, bronze-colored material had a metallic sheen,
reflecting the light from the improbable, three-headed creature that crowned it
like a crest, and he sank tensely into his chair as the implications of the
starburst between the dragon's forepaws registered. He reached out and touched
the case cautiously, smiling in wry self-mockery at his own tentativeness.
Metal, he decided, running
a fingertip over it, though he suspected it was an alloy he'd never
encountered. And there was a small, raised stud on the side. He drew a deep
breath and pressed it, then relaxed and exhaled softly as the case's upper edge
sprang up with a quiet click.
He lifted the lid
cautiously, laying it back to lie flat on the desk, and studied the interior.
There was a small, lift-up panel in what had been the bottom and three buttons
to one side of it. He wondered what he was supposed to do next, then grinned as
he saw the neatly-typed label gummed over one button. "Press," it
said, and its prosaic incongruity tickled his sense of humor. He shrugged and
obeyed, then snatched his hand back as a human figure took instant shape above
the case.
Somehow, Hatcher wasn't
a bit surprised to see Hector MacMahan. The colonel wore Marine battledress and
body armor, and a peculiar-looking, stubby weapon with a drum magazine hung
from his right shoulder. He was no more than twenty centimeters tall, but his
grin was perfectly recognizable.
"Good evening,
General," Hector's voice said in time to the moving lips of the image.
"I realize this is a bit unusual, but we had to let someone know what was
happening, and you're one of the few people I trust implicitly.
"First, let me apologize
for my disappearance. You told me to make myself scarce—" another tight
grin crossed his leprechaun-sized face while Hatcher stared at him in
fascination "—so I did. I'm aware I made myself a bit scarcer than you had
in mind, but I'm certain you understand why. I hope to apologize and explain
everything in person in the near future, but that may not be possible, which is
the reason for this message.
"Now, about what's
been happening in the last few weeks. For the moment, just understand that
there are two separate factions of . . . well, call them extra-terrestrials,
although that's not exactly the best term for them. At any rate, there are two
sides, and they've been fighting one another clandestinely for a very, very
long time. Now the fighting's come out into the open and, with any luck, it
will come to an end very soon.
"Obviously, I'm a
supporter of one side. I apologize for having used you and your resources as we
did, but it was necessary. So"—Hector's face turned suddenly
grim—"were all the casualties. Please believe that you cannot regret those
deaths any more than we do and that we did our best to keep them as low as
possible. Unfortunately, our adversaries don't share our own concern for human
life.
"This message is to
tell you that we're about to kick off an operation that we hope and believe
will prove decisive. I realize your own reports—particularly those from New
York—may've led you to conclude we're losing. Hopefully, our opponents have
reached the same conclusion. If they have, and if our intelligence is correct,
they're about to become our late opponents.
"Unfortunately, a
lot of us are also going to die. I know how you hate terms like 'acceptable
casualties,' Ger, but this time we really don't have a choice. If every one of
us is killed, it'll still be worth it as long as we take them out, too. But in
the process, there may be quite a ruckus in points south, and I'm sorry to say
we really aren't positive how thoroughly their people may have
infiltrated Terran governments or even your own command. I think USFC is
clean, and you'll find a computer disk in the bottom of this case. I ask you to
run it only on your own terminal and not to dump it to the main system, because
it contains the names and ranks of eight hundred field grade and general
officers in your own and other military forces in whom you may place total
confidence.
"The point is that
when we attack, your own bad guys may go ape on you. I have no idea what
they'll do if they realize their lords and masters have been taken out and,
frankly, we don't have the numbers or the organization to deal with all the
things they may do. You, working with our allies on the disk, do. We ask
you to stand by to do whatever you can to control the situation and prevent any
more loss of life and destruction than can possibly be avoided.
"Watch your
communications. You'll find instructions on the disk for reaching the others
via a commo net I'm almost certain is secure. Until you've talked to them,
don't use normal channels. Above all, don't talk to any civilians until
your plans are in place.
"Our attack will
kick off approximately eighteen hours from the time you get this. I know it's
not much time, but it's the best I can do. When you talk to the others on the
disk, don't mention the attack. To succeed, we need total surprise, and
they already know what's coming down. They'll be waiting to discuss 'general
contingency plans' with you.
"I'm sorry to dump
this on you, Ger, but you're a good man. If I don't make it back, it's been an
honor to serve under you. Give my love to Sharon and the kids, and take care of
yourself. Good luck, Ger."
The tiny Hector MacMahan
vanished, and General Gerald Hatcher sat staring at the flat, open case. He
never knew exactly how long he sat there, but at last he reached out to press
the button again and replay the message. Then he stopped himself. In the wake
of that message, every moment was precious.
He lifted the panel and
took out the computer disk, then swiveled his chair and switched on his
terminal.
Nergal's hangar deck
was crowded once more. The Imperials stood out from their allies in the
soot-black gleam of combat armor, limbs swollen and massive with jump gear and
servo-mech "muscles." They were festooned with weapons, and their
faces were grim in their opened helmets.
The far more numerous
Terra-born wore either the close-fitted blackness of Imperial commando smocks
or the battledress of a score of nations. There were only so many smocks, and
the people who wore them wore no body armor, for they were better protection
than any Terran armor. The other Terra-born wore the best body protection Earth
could provide—pathetic against Imperial weapons, but the best they could do.
And there were still many Terra-born inside the enclave; it was highly probable
they would face Terran weapons, as well.
Their own weapons were
as mixed as their uniforms. Cut-down grav guns hung from as many shoulders as
possible, while the very strongest carried lightweight energy guns, like the one
Tamman had used in Tehran and La Paz, and a few teams carried ten-millimeter
grav guns mounted on anti-grav generators as crew-served weapons. Most,
however, carried Terran weapons. There were quite a few battle rifles (and the
proliferation and improvement of body protection meant those rifles had a lot
more punch than the infantry weapons of even a few decades back), but grenade
launchers, squad and heavy machineguns (the latter also fitted with anti-grav
generators), and rocket launchers were the preferred weapons. Goggles hung
around every neck, the fruit of Nergal's fabrication shops. They
provided vision almost as good as an Imperial's and, equally important, would
"read" any Imperial implants within fifty meters.
Horus was absent, for,
to his unspeakable disappointment, the lot for who must remain to command Nergal
had fallen to him. He'd wanted desperately to argue, but he hadn't. The assault
vehicles would carry maximum loads, but even so, too many people who wanted to
be there could not. His own crew would consist entirely of the oldest and least
combat-ready adult Terra-born, with Isis as his executive officer. Children and
those with no combat or shipboard training had been dispersed to
carefully-hidden secondary locations, protected by the combat-trained adults
who couldn't cram into the assault craft. His people were going to war, and he
could no more shirk his responsibilities than could any of the others.
Even now, he and his
bridge crew were watching their sensor arrays and completing last-minute
equipment checks while Colin and Hector MacMahan stood on the launch bay stage.
"All right,"
Colin said quietly, "we've been over the plan backward and forward. You
all know what you're supposed to do, and you also know that no plan survives
contact with the enemy. Remember the objectives and keep yourselves alive if
you possibly can. As Horus would say, this time we're going banco, but if
anybody in this galaxy can pull it off, you can. Good luck, good hunting, and
God protect you all."
He started to turn away,
but MacMahan's suddenly raised voice stopped him.
"Attention on
deck!" the colonel rapped, and every one of those grim-faced warriors
snapped to attention in the first formal military courtesy since Colin had
boarded Nergal. Every right hand whipped up in salute, and his chest
suddenly seemed too small and tight. He tried to think of some proper response,
but he could not even trust his voice to speak, and so he simply brought his
hand up in response, then snapped it down.
There were no cheers as
they followed him to the waiting assault craft, but he felt like a giant as he
climbed into the shuttle he would pilot.
* * *
Night cloaked the
western hemisphere of the planet, and a full, silvery moon rode high and
serene. But deep within that moon, passive instrumentation watched the world
below. Dahak knew, as Anu did not, precisely where to watch, and now he noted
the brief, tiny, virtually indetectable flares of energy as Nergal's
auxiliaries floated out into the night.
It was happening, he
realized calmly. For better or worse, his captain had launched his attack, and
energy pulsed through the web of his circuitry, waking weapons that had been
silent for fifty-one millennia.
* * *
The attack force headed
south, and a vast storm front covered much of the southern Pacific, smashing at
the assault craft with mighty fists. Colin was grateful for it. He led his
warriors into its teeth, scant meters above the rearing, angry wave crests, and
the miles dropped away behind them.
They moved scarcely
above mach two, for they dared not come in at full bore. There were still
southern fighters abroad in the night; they knew that, and they hid in the maw
of the storm under their stealth fields, secure in the knowledge that Dahak
would be watching over them from above. All five of Nergal's other
assault shuttles followed Colin, but there were far too few of them to
transport all of his troops. Cutters and both pinnaces carried additional
personnel, and all six of Nergal's heavy tanks floated on their own
gravitonics, able to keep pace at this slow speed. The tanks were a mixed
blessing, for each used up two of his scant supply of Imperials, but their
firepower was awesome, and very little short of a direct nuclear hit could stop
them. Which was the point Horus and he had carefully not discussed with their
crews; those six tanks protected twelve of Nergal's eighteen Imperial
children.
The tingle of active
scanner systems reached out to them from the south, still faint but growing in
intensity, as he checked his position for the thousandth time. Another twenty
minutes for the tanks, he estimated, but they'd be picked up by those scanners
within ten. He drew a deep breath, and his voice was crisp over the com link.
"Shuttle
pilots—go!" he said, and the heavily armed and armored assault boats
suddenly screamed ahead at nine times the speed of sound.
* * *
Alarms clangored aboard
the sublight battleship Osir, and the man who had been Fleet Captain
(Engineering) Anu shot upright in bed.
He blinked furiously,
banishing the rags of sleep, and his face twisted in a snarl. Those gutless,
sniveling bastards were daring to attack him! His neural feed
dropped data into his brain with smooth efficiency, and he saw six assault
shuttles shrieking towards his enclave. It was incredible! What did they think
they were doing?! He'd blow them away like insects!
A command snapped out to
the automated perimeter weapon emplacements, another ordered his distant
fighters to abandon stealth and rally to the defense of the enclave, and a
third woke every alarm within the shield.
* * *
"Here they
come!" Colin muttered, wincing as missiles and energy beams suddenly
shredded the darkness. This was the riskiest moment of the approach but it was
also something assault shuttles were designed for, and those automated
defenders were outside the main shield.
Decoys and jammers went
to work, fighting the defensive computers, and Tamman's weapon systems sprang
to life beside him. Colin felt him bending forward as if to urge his electronic
minions to greater efforts, but he had little attention to spare. He was too
busy wrenching the shuttle through every evasive maneuver he could devise, and
the night was full of death.
He bit off a groan as
one of the shuttles took a direct hit and blew apart in a ball of fire. Hanalat
and Carhana, he thought sickly, and sixty Terra-born with them. A missile
exploded dangerously close to a second shuttle, and his heart was in his throat
as Jiltanith clawed away from the fireball. Energy guns snarled, and his own
craft shuddered as something smashed a glancing blow against her armor.
But then Tamman had his
own solution, and a salvo of mass missles screamed away, too fast, too close,
for defensive systems to stop. They were ballistic weapons, impervious to
decoys, and they struck in a blast that wracked a continent and flooded the
American Highland plateau with dreadful light. Other shuttles were firing,
their missiles crossing and criss-crossing with the ones charging up to destroy
them, and energy guns raved back at the ground. Explosions and smoke,
pulverized stone and vaporized ice and killing beams of energy—that was all the
world there was as Nergal's people thundered into the attack. . . .
* * *
Anu crowed in triumph as
the first assault shuttle exploded, then cursed savagely as the others struck
back. He struggled into his uniform as the enclave trembled to the fury of the
assault. Breaker! Breaker take them all! His defenses were designed to
stop the all-out attack of an eighty-thousand-ton battleship, not an assault
landing, and fire stations were being blown into oblivion—not one-by-one, but
in twos and threes and dozens! They'd gotten in by surprise, too close for his
heavy anti-ship weapons, and his lightly-protected outer defenses crumbled and
burned as he cursed.
It had been too long
since he'd seen the Imperium wage war; he'd forgotten what it was like.
* * *
Ninhursag stumbled out
of her shower, dragging wet hair frantically from her eyes, and shot down the
apartment block transit shaft like a wet, naked otter. The sub-basement was
built to withstand anything short of a direct hit with a nuke or a warp charge,
and she had no business in what was about to happen out there. Not when she was
as likely to be killed by a friend—or an accident—as by an enemy!
She was closing the
reinforced blast door before it caught up with her. They were here! They'd
done it!
* * *
"Shuttle Two, on my
wing!" Colin snapped, and Jiltanith plummeted out of the flame-sick
clouds. The two of them charged straight into the weakening defenses while
their companions continued to savage Anu's weaponry. There! The access point
beacon!
Colin MacIntrye drew a
deep breath. At this speed, there would be no time to alter course if the
shield stayed up, not even with a gravitonic drive. His implant triggered the
code Ninhursag had stolen.
* * *
"NO!!"
Anu bellowed the protest
in a burst of white-hot fury as he felt the shield open. How? HOW?!
There was no way they could have the code! Ramman had died, and no other
Imperial had left the enclave!
But they had it. The
gates of his fortress yawned wide as two night-black shuttles screamed down the
western tunnel, and its rock walls glowed with the compression heat of their
passage.
* * *
"In!"
Colin screamed to his passengers, and Tamman's exultation was a fire cloud
beside him. The shuttles bucked and heaved, bare meters from destruction
against the tunnel walls or one another, but neither Colin nor Jiltanith spared
a thought for that. They hurtled onward, and their heavy, nose-mounted
batteries of energy guns bellowed, destroying the very air in their path. Colin
rode the thunder of his guns, blazing and invincible, and the inner portal of
Imperial battle steel blew open like a gate of straw.
They crashed through
into the enclave, drives howling in torment as they threw full power into
deceleration. Even Imperial technology had its limits, and they were still
moving at over a hundred kilometers per hour when they smashed through the
trees in the central park and plowed into the apartment blocks. The hapless
Terra-born traitors in their path had mere seconds to realize death had come as
the buildings exploded outward and the shuttles slammed to a halt amid the
wreckage, no more than thirty meters apart. Their passengers were battered and
bruised, but assault shuttles were built for just such mistreatment. The
hatches opened, and the waiting troops charged out.
One or two fell, but
only a spattering of fire met them. It was no trap, Colin thought exultantly.
No trap!
He activated his jump
gear, vaulting over a heap of smoking rubble, his own energy gun snarling. Only
a handful of armed security men confronted him, and he bared his teeth as he
blew the first unarmored enemy apart.
A tremendous boom of
displaced air burst out of the tunnel as the next pair of shuttles shot into
the enclave, and then the true madness began.
* * *
Anu dashed onto Osir's
command deck, cursing his henchmen for the unrealiability that had spawned his
distrust and made him order the other warships deactivated. Not even Osir's
crew was permitted to live on board, but she was his command post, and he
skidded to a halt beside the captain's console, activating his automatic
defensive systems. They were intended to deal with an uprising among his own,
not a full-scale invasion, but maybe they could buy his minions time to get
into action.
Concealed weapons roused
to life throughout the enclave. There was no time to give them precise
directions even had Anu wanted to; they opened fire on anything that moved.
* * *
Ganhar tumbled from his
bed as the alarms shrieked, and his eyes lit. Doubt, fear, and anguished
uncertainty vanished in a blaze of triumph, and he laughed wildly. There,
maniac! Let's see you deal with these people!
He dragged out his own
combat armor. He was going to die, he thought calmly, and unless there truly
was an afterlife, he would never know why he'd permitted this to happen, but it
no longer mattered. He'd done it, and it wasn't in him to leave any task
half-done.
* * *
The last surviving
shuttle crashed into the wreckage and disgorged its troops, and Nergal's
people began to die. Energy beams raked the park, attracted by movement, and
the Terra-born could detect neither the targeting systems nor the weapons that
killed them. But their Imperials' armor scanners could find both, and they
moved to engage them.
Colin wanted to weep as
Rohantha vaulted onto a wreckage-bared structural beam, exposing herself
recklessly, energy gun ripping two heavy weapons from the cavern wall before
they could rake her team of Terra-born. She almost made it back into cover
herself, and Nikan, her cabin mate and lover, blew the gun that killed her to
rubble.
Colin spun on his own
toes, dodging as an energy bolt whipped past him and tore a twenty-centimeter
hole through an Israeli paratrooper. His own weapon silenced the Israeli's
automated executioner, and he dashed on, racing for the battleships while a
corner of his mind tried to remember the dead man's name.
* * *
Three of Anu's stealthed
fighters abandoned concealment, screaming through the heavens under maximum
power as they stooped upon the clumsy gaggle of cutters and pinnaces and tanks
still streaming towards the enclave. Their tracking systems found targets, but
the lead pair vanished in cataclysmic balls of flame before they could fire.
The third flight crew had a moment to gape at one another in horror as their
instruments told them what had happened. Hyper missiles—shipboard
missiles!—which could only have been launched from vacuum!
They died before they
could warn their commander that Dahak was not dead.
* * *
Anu grimaced in hate and
triumph. Even the computers could give him only a confused impression of what
was happening, but he felt armory lockers being wrenched open aboard the
transports while his weapons spewed death outside them.
Yet his triumphant snarl
faded as the intensity of the fighting grew and grew. The attackers weren't
human! They were demons out of Breaker's darkest hell, and they soaked up his
fire and kept right on coming!
* * *
A surge of Nergal's
raiders swept up the boarding ramp of the transport Bislaht, and a trio
of French Marines set up a fifty-caliber machine-gun in the lock. Their
teammates rushed past them behind Nikan, racing for the armory before Bislaht's
mutineers could find their weapons.
They almost won their
race. Barely half a dozen defenders were in armor when they crashed out of the
transit shaft. Nikan roared in fury as he cut two of them down and charged the
others, his energy gun on full automatic, filling the air with death. A third
armored mutineer went down, then a fourth, but the fifth got his weapon up in
time. Nikan exploded in a fountain of blood and a crackling corona of ruptured
energy packs, and the SAS commando behind him hosed his killer with a grav gun.
Smoke and the stink of
blood filled the armory, and the Terra-born commandos, now with no Imperial to
lead them, crouched for cover just inside the hatch and killed anything that
moved.
* * *
Ganhar stepped out of
the transit shaft inside Security Central aboard the transport Cardoh.
Security men shoved past or bounced off his armor as they funneled towards the
transit shaft, heading for the armory below, and he waded through them like a
Titan. Jantu's outer office was deserted, and he felt a momentary surge of
disappointment. But then the inner hatch licked open, and Jantu stood in the
opening, an energy pistol clutched in his hand.
Ganhar smiled through
his armored visor, savoring the wildness of Jantu's eyes. It was worth it, he
thought coldly. It was all worth it, if only for this moment.
He lifted his grav gun
slightly, and Jantu's crazed eyes narrowed with sudden comprehension as his
implants recognized Ganhar's. The Operations head saw it all in that fleeting
instant, saw the recognition and understanding, the sudden, intuitive grasp of
what had really happened when Ramman came to him.
"You lose," he
said softly, and his gun hissed.
* * *
Colin went flat on his
face as an armored form tackled him from behind, and he rolled over, snatching
out his sidearm before he recognized Jiltanith. The reason she'd hit him became
instantly clear as an energy bolt whipped above him, and he raised himself on
one elbow, sighting back along its path. The unarmored security man was lining
up for a second shot when Colin's grav gun ripped him to shreds.
* * *
Dahak felt almost cheerful,
despite a gnawing anxiety over Colin. His scanners showed that the northerners
had breached the enclave. One way or the other, that shield would soon fall.
In the meantime, he
busied himself locating all of Anu's deployed fighters as they abandoned
stealth mode to streak back south. He tracked each of them precisely, allocated
his hyper missiles with care, and fired a single salvo.
Twenty-nine more
Imperial fighters died in a span of approximately two-point-seven-five Terran
seconds.
The huge cavern was
hideous with smoke and flame as more southerners found weapons and armor,
emerging as isolated knots of warring figures that sought to link with one
another amid the nightmare that had burst upon them. They were badly
outnumbered, but they were all Imperials. Even without combat armor, they were
more than a match for any Terra-born opponent. Or would have been, had they
understood what was happening.
Most of Anu's automatics
were silent now, for both sides were equally at risk from them, and both had
been taking them out from the start. But they'd blunted the first rush while
more of his people got themselves armed. It was helping, but they'd yielded a
dangerous amount of ground. So far he'd lost touch completely only with Bislaht,
but fighting raged aboard three other transports, and six more were surrounded,
their hatches under intense fire.
Breaker! Who would have
thought degenerates could fight like this? There were only a handful of
old, worn out Imperials among them, but they were like madmen!
He winced as his
scanners watched a quintet of Terra-born suddenly pop up out of a tangle of
wreckage. They formed a gantlet, with three of his own Imperials between them.
Two of the degenerates went down, but the others swept his armored henchmen
with an unbelievable mix of Imperial and Terran weapons. Grav gun darts
exploded inside armored bodies, a flamethrower hosed them with liquid fire, and
a Terran anti-tank rocket blew the last survivor six meters backward. The
surviving degenerates ducked back down under cover and went scuttling off in
search of fresh prey.
This couldn't be
happening—he saw it with his own eyes, and he still couldn't believe it!
But then came the report
he'd hoped for. Transhar's people had finally gotten some of their
vehicles powered up, and he grinned again as the first light tank floated
towards the hatch on its gravitonics.
* * *
Andrew Asnani slid to a
halt, sucking in air as he scrubbed sweat from his face. He'd become separated
from the rest of his team, and the deafening bellow and crash of battle pounded
him like a fist, but for all its horror, it was the sweetest sound he'd ever
heard. It proved he hadn't led the colonel and his people into a trap, and he'd
been able to shuck off his demolition charge.
He drew another breath
and took a firmer grip on his assault rifle as he eased around the rubble of a
broken wall. He was in the section that had housed Anu's terrorists, and he
still wasn't certain how he'd gotten here. Habit, perhaps. Or possibly
something else. . . .
He dropped suddenly as
shapes loomed in the dust-heavy smoke. Terra-born, not Imperials, for his
goggles saw no signature implants. But neither were they his people, he
thought grimly, hunkering deeper into the shadow of his broken wall. There were
at least twenty of them, all armed, though he had no idea how they'd gotten
their hands on weapons. It didn't matter. The odds sucked, and with a little
luck, he'd just let them slip . . .
But he had no luck. They
were coming straight towards him, and the copper taste of fear filled his
mouth. Unfair! To have come so far, risked so much, and blunder into contact
with—
His mind froze, panic
suddenly a thing of the past, and he stopped trying to ease further back out of
sight. Abgram! The man leading that group was Abgram, and that
changed everything, for it had been Abgram whose operation had planted a truck
bomb in New Jersey five years before.
For eleven months,
Asnani had known who had killed his family, yet he could do nothing without
blowing his own cover and Colonel MacMahan's op. But the thunder and screams
were in his ears, and his own life was no longer essential to success.
He ejected his partially
used magazine, replacing it with a fresh one, checking his safety, gathering
his legs under him. The terrorists were coming closer, dodging in and out of
shadows even as he had. He couldn't leave his cover without being seen, but
they'd see him anyway in another twenty seconds. Ten meters. He'd let them come
another ten meters. . . .
Sergeant Andrew Asnani,
United States Army, exploded from concealment with his weapon on full auto.
Six men died almost
instantly, and the man called Abgram went down, screaming, even as his fellows
poured fire into the apparition that had erupted in their midst. He stared up
in agony, watching bullets hammer body armor and flesh, seeing blood burst from
the man who had shot him.
It was the last thing
Abgram ever saw, for only one purpose remained to Andrew Asnani, and his last,
short burst blew Abgram's head apart.
* * *
"Shit!"
Colin killed his jump
gear and slithered to a halt in a tangle of smashed greenery as the light tank
let fly. A solid rod of energy ripped through two of Anu's madly fleeting Terran
allies and what had once been a fountain before it struck an armored figure.
Rihani, he thought, one of Nergal's engineers, but there was too little
left to ever know. He watched the tank settle onto its treads for added
stability as grenades and rockets exploded about it. Its thick armor and
invisible shield shrugged off the destruction as the turret swiveled, seeking
fresh prey. The long energy cannon snouted in his direction, and he grabbed
Jiltanith's ankle and hauled her down beside him, not that—
A lightning bolt
whickered out of the shattered portal, and the southern tank exploded with a
roar. Its killer rumbled into sight, squat and massive on its own treads,
grinding out onto the cavern floor, and Colin pounded the dirt beside him in
jubilation.
Nergal's heavy tank
moved forward confidently, cannon seeking, anti-personnel batteries flashing,
heavy grav guns whining from its upper hull.
* * *
Anu roared in fury as Transhar's
tank was killed, but his fury redoubled as the enemy tank took up a firing
position that covered Transhar's vehicle ramp. Another tank tried to
come down it, and Nergal's heavy blew it to wreckage with a single,
contemptuous shot.
A warp grenade bounced
and rolled, bringing up against the edge of its shield, but nothing happened.
Both sides had their suppressers out, smothering the effect of a grenade's tiny
hyper generator. Normally that favored the defense, but now he watched a second
enemy tank charge out of the portal—and a third!—and nothing but a nuke
or a warp warhead was going to stop those things. That or a proper warship
giving ground support. But he had only one active battleship, and the rest of
her crew had not yet arrived.
It was a race, he
thought grimly. A race between Osir's personnel and whatever horror Nergal's
people would produce next.
* * *
Ganhar leapt lightly
down from Cardoh's number six personnel lock, letting his jump gear
absorb the twelve-meter drop. Osir was over that way, he thought, still
queerly calm, almost detached, and that was where Anu would be.
* * *
"There!" Colin
shouted, pointing across two hundred meters of fire-swept ground at the
battleship Osir. "Feel it, 'Tanni? Her systems are live! Anu must
be aboard her!"
"Aye,"
Jiltanith agreed, then broke off to nail a fleeing southerner with a snapshot
from her energy gun. In her armor her strength was the equal of any full
Imperial's, and her reflexes had to be seen to be believed.
"Aye," she
said again, "yet 'twill be no lightsome thing to cross yon kill zone,
Colin!"
"No, but if we can
get in there . . ."
"We've none t'guard
our backs and we 'compass it," she warned.
"I know."
Colin scanned the smoking bedlam, but they'd outdistanced their own people, and
few of the southerners seemed to be in the vicinity. It was the automatics
sweeping the area that made the approach so deadly.
"Look over there,
to the left," he said suddenly. Some of the robotic weapons had been
knocked out, leaving a gap in the defenses. "Think we can get through
there before they fry us?"
"I know not,"
Jiltanith replied, "yet may we assay it."
"I knew you'd like
the idea," he panted, and then they were off.
* * *
Hector MacMahan ducked,
then swore horribly as an enemy grav gun spun Darnu's shattered armor in a
madly whirling circle. The Imperial crashed to the ground, and Hector hosed a
stream of darts at the spot he thought the fire had come from.
An armored southerner
lurched up and fell back into death, but it was hardly a fair trade, MacMahan
thought savagely, leading the surviving members of his team forward. Darnu had
been worth any hundred southerners, and he was far from the first Imperial Nergal
had lost this bloody night.
But they were pushing
the bastards back. The tanks were making the difference—that and the teams
who'd gotten aboard the other transports and kept their armored vehicles from
ever being manned. They had a chance, a good chance, if they could only keep
moving. . . .
The last of Nergal's
cutters swept out of the tunnel and exploded in mid-air. MacMahan swore again,
and his men went forward in a crouching run.
* * *
Ganhar darted a look
over his shoulder. He didn't recognize the implants on either of those two
armored figures. Breaker! There was a third unknown looming up behind them! It
was always possible that if they'd known he'd let them through the door they
would have greeted him as an ally, but they couldn't know that, could they?
Besides, he was closer to Osir than they were.
He reached a ramp and
hurled himself up it, seeking the cover of the battle steel hull while beams
and grav gun darts lashed at his heels. He landed on a shoulder and rolled in a
clatter of armor, coming up onto his feet and running for the transit shaft.
Anu would be on the command deck.
* * *
Jiltanith and Colin went
up the main ramp under a hurricane of fire from the automatics, but none of the
surviving weapons could depress far enough to hit them. The hatch was open, and
Colin crashed through it first, dodging to the right. Jiltanith followed,
spinning to the left, but the lock was empty and the inner hatch stood open as
well. They edged forward as cautiously as they dared in their need for haste.
It was quieter in here,
and the clank of an armored foot was loud behind them. They wheeled, but it was
one of their own—Geb, his armor as smoke and soot-smutted as their own.
Something had hit him in the chest, hard enough to crack even bio-enhanced
ribs, but the dished-in armor had held, though Colin didn't like the way the
old Imperial was favoring his left side.
"Glad to see you,
Geb," he said, suppressing a half-hysterical giggle at how inane the
greeting sounded. "Feel like a little walk?"
"As long as it's
upstairs," Geb panted back.
"Good. Watch our
backs, then, will you?" Geb nodded and Colin slapped Jiltanith's armored
shoulder. "Let's go find Anu, 'Tanni," he said, and led the way
towards the central transit shaft.
* * *
Ganhar stepped out of
the transit shaft twelve decks below the command deck, for the shaft above was
inactive. So, a security measure he hadn't known about, was it? There were
still the crawl ways, and he pressed the bulkhead switch to open the nearest of
them.
"Hello,
Ganhar." He froze at the soft voice and did a quick
three-hundred-sixty-degree scan. She was unarmored, but her energy gun was
trained unwaveringly on his spine.
"Hello,
Inanna." He spoke quietly, knowing he could never turn fast enough to get
her with the grav gun. "I thought we were on the same side."
"I told you before,
Ganhar—I'm a bright girl. I had my own bugs in Jantu's outer office."
Ganhar swallowed. So
she'd seen it all, and she knew why he was here.
"My quarrel's with
Anu," he said. "If I can take him out, maybe they'll let us
surrender."
"Wrong idea,
Ganhar," Inanna said calmly. "I told you that before."
"But why,
Inanna?! He's a fucking maniac!"
"Because I love
him, Ganhar," she said, and fired.
* * *
Colin and Jiltanith rode
the transit shaft as high as they could, but someone had deactivated it above
deck ninety. They stepped out of it, looking for another way up, and Colin
gasped in sudden alarm as the blast of an energy gun echoed down the passageway
behind him. He was trying to turn towards it when a second beam from the same
weapon slashed across the open bore of the shaft. It missed him by a centimeter
as he heard Jiltanith's weapon snarl and looked up to see an unarmored figure
tumble to the deck.
"Jesus!" he
muttered. "That one was too fucking close!"
"Aye,"
Jiltanith replied, then paused. "Methinks our way lieth thither wi' all
speed, Colin. Unless mine eyes deceive me, there lie two bodies 'pon yonder
deck. I'll warrant well the first o' them did seek out Anu as do we."
"Methinks you're
probably right," he grunted, stepping back across the transit shaft.
Jiltanith's shot had caught the unarmored woman in mid-torso, and the gruesome
sight made him look away quickly. He had no time to examine her, anyway, yet an
odd sense of familiarity tugged at a corner of his brain. He glanced at her
again, but he'd never seen her before and he turned his attention to the
half-opened crawl way, stepping over the mangled, armored figure lying before
it.
"Wonder who the
hell he was?" he muttered, opening the hatch fully.
* * *
Geb came out of the
transit shaft and paused for breath as Jiltanith eeled into the crawl way after
Colin. His ribs must be pretty bad, he decided. His implants were suppressing
the pain, but it was hard to breathe, and they were using enough painkillers to
make him dizzy. Best not to squeeze into quarters that narrow. Besides, they'd
need someone here to watch their retreat.
He squatted on his
heels, trying not to think about how many friends were dying beyond this quiet
hull, and glanced at the dead, armored figure beside him, wondering, like Colin
and Jiltanith, who he'd been and why his fellow mutineer had killed him. Then
he glanced at the dead woman and froze.
No, he thought. Please,
Maker, let me be wrong!
But he wasn't wrong. He
knew that face well, had known it millennia ago when it belonged to a woman
named Tanisis. A beautiful young woman, married to one of his closest friends.
He'd thought her dead in the mutiny and mourned her, as had her husband . . .
who had named a Terran-born daughter "Isis" in her memory.
And now, so many years
later, Geb cursed the Maker Himself for not making that the truth. She'd lived,
he thought sickly, slept away the dreamless millennia in stasis, alive, still
young and beautiful . . . only to be obscenely murdered, butchered so that one
of Anu's ghouls could don her flesh.
He rose slowly, blinded
by tears, and adjusted his energy gun to wide-angle focus, breathing a prayer
of thanks that Jiltanith either had not remembered her mother's face or else
had not looked closely at the body. Nor would she have the chance to, for there
was one last service Geb could perform for his friend Tanisis. He pressed the
firing stud and a fan of gravitonic disruption wiped the mangled body out of
existence.
* * *
Hector MacMahan looked
about cautiously. All six of Nergal's tanks were in action now, and only
one southern heavy had gotten free of its transport hold to challenge them. Its
half-molten wreckage littered two hundred square meters of cavern floor,
spewing acrid, choking smoke to join the fog shrouding the hellish scene.
An awful lot of their
Imperials were dead, he thought bitterly. Their own hatred, coupled with their
need to protect their weaker Terra-born, had cost them. He doubted as many as
half were still alive, even counting the tank crews, but their sacrifice had
given Nergal's raiders control of the entire western half of the enclave
and four of the seven transports on the eastern side. They were closing in on
pockets of resistance, Terra-born moving cautiously under covering fire from
the tanks.
Unless something went
dreadfully wrong in the next thirty minutes, they were going to win this thing.
* * *
Colin let his armor's
"muscles" take the strain of the climb, questing ahead with his
Dahak-modified implants as he neared the humming intensity of the command deck.
They were only one deck below it when he felt the automatic weapons. They were
covered by a stealth field, but it needed adjustment, and even in its prime it
hadn't been a match for his implants.
"Hold it," he
grunted to Jiltanith.
"What hast thou
spied?"
"Booby traps and
energy guns," he replied absently, examining the intricate field of
interlocking fire. "Damn, it's a bitch, too. Well . . ."
He plucked his grav gun
from its webbing. The energy gun might have been better, but the quarters were
far too cramped for it.
"What dost
thou?"
"I'm going to open
us a little path," he said, and squeezed the trigger.
A hurricane of needles
swept the crawl way, drilling half their lengths even into battle steel before
they exploded. Scanner arrays, trip signals, and targeting systems shredded
under his fire, and the weapons went mad. The shaft above him became a
crazy-quilt of exploding energy beams and solid projectiles.
* * *
Anu's head jerked up as
bedlam erupted in one of the crawl ways. His automatic defenses had been
triggered, but there was something wrong. They weren't firing under proper
control—they were tearing themselves apart!
* * *
The carnage lasted a
good thirty seconds, and Colin probed the smoking wreckage carefully.
"That's got it. On
the other hand, we just rang the doorbell. Think we should keep going?"
" 'Twould seem we
ha' scant choice."
"I was afraid you'd
say that. C'mon."
* * *
Anu turned away from his
console, and his face was almost relaxed.
It would take a while
yet, but the sheer audacity of the attack had been decisive. Those heavy tanks
had hurt, but it was surprise that had done in the enclave. The dreams of fifty
thousand years were crumbling in his fingers, and it was all the fault of those
crawling traitors from Nergal. Their fault, and the fault of his own
gutless subordinates.
But if he'd lost, he
could still see to it they lost, too. He walked calmly across the command deck
to the fire control officer's couch, insinuating his mind neatly into the
console. He really should have provided a proper bomb, but this would do.
He initiated the arming
sequence, then paused. No, wait. Let whoever was in the crawl way get here
first. He wanted to watch at least one of the bastards know what was
going to happen to his precious, putrid world.
* * *
Colin helped Jiltanith
out of the crawl way, then paused, his face white. Jesus! The son-of-a-bitch
was arming every warhead in the magazines!
"Come on!" he
shouted, and hurled himself toward the command deck. His gauntleted hand
slapped the emergency over-ride, and he charged through as the hatch licked
open. His energy gun was ready, swinging to cover the captain's console, but
even as he burst onto the command deck, he knew he'd guessed wrong. The heavy
hand of a grab field smashed at him, seizing him in fingers of iron. He stopped
instantly, not even rocking with the impetus of his charge, unable even to fall
in the armor that had become a prison.
"Nice of you to
drop by," a voice said, and he turned his head inside his helmet. A tall man
sat at the gunnery console with an energy pistol in one hand. He didn't look
like the images of Anu from the records, but he wore the midnight blue of
Battle Fleet with an admiral's insignia.
"It's over,
Anu," Colin said. "You might as well give it up."
"No," Anu said
calmly, "I don't think I'm the surrendering kind."
"I know what kind
you are," Colin said contemptuously, keeping his eyes on Anu while his
implants watched Jiltanith creeping closer and closer. She was belly-down on
the deck, trying to work her way under the plane of the grab field, but her enhanced
senses were less keen than his. Could she skirt it safely, or not?
"Do you, now?"
Anu mocked. "I doubt that. None of you ever had the wit to understand me,
or you would have joined me instead of trying to pull me down to your own
miserable level."
"Sure," Colin
sneered. "You've done a wonderful job, haven't you? Fifty thousand years,
and you're still stuck on one piddling little planet."
Anu's face tightened and
he started to trigger the warheads, then stopped and uncoiled from the couch
like a serpent.
"No," he
murmured. "I think I'll watch you scream a bit first. I'm glad you're in
armor. It'll take a while to burn through with this little popgun, and you'll feel
it so nicely. Let's start with an arm, shall we? If I start with a leg, you'll
just fall over, and that won't be any fun."
He came nearer, and
sweat beaded Colin's forehead. If the bastard came another three meters closer,
Jiltanith would have a shot through the hatch—but he'd be able to see her, and
she was flat on her belly. He wracked his brain as Anu took another step. And
another. There had to be a way! There had to! They'd come so far. . . .
Wait! Anu had been so
damned confident, he might not have changed—
Anu took another step,
and Jiltanith raised her grav gun. Her armor scuffed the deck so gently normal
ears would not have heard it, but Anu was an Imperial. He whirled snake-quick,
his eyes widening in shock, and the energy pistol swung down and fired like
lightning.
It was all one blinding
nightmare. Anu's pistol snarled. Its energy bolt hit Jiltanith squarely in the
spine and held there. Smoke burst from her armor, but she pressed the trigger
and an explosive dart hit blew his right leg into tatters an instant before a
sparkling corona of ruptured power packs glared above her armored body.
Colin heard her scream
over his com link. Her grav gun fell from her hand and her armored body
convulsed, and his world vanished in a boil of fury.
Anu hit the deck,
screaming until his implants took control. They damped the pain, sealed the
ruptured tissues, drove back the fog of shock, but it took precious seconds,
and Colin's implants—his bridge officer implants—reached out and demanded
access to Osir's computers.
There was a flicker of
electronic shock, and then, like Nergal, Osir recognized him, for
Anu hadn't changed the command codes; it hadn't even occurred to him to try. He
stared at Colin in horror, momentarily stunned as even the loss of his leg had
not stunned him, unable to believe what he was seeing. There were no
bridge officers! He'd killed them all!
Colin's mind flooded
into Osir's computers, killing the grab field. But hate and madness
spurred Anu's own efforts, and his command licked out to the fire control
console. He enabled the sequenced detonation code.
Colin raced after it,
trying to kill it, but he was in the wrong part of Osir's brain. He
couldn't get to it, so he did the only other thing he could. He slammed down a
total freeze of the entire command network, and every single system in the ship
locked.
Anu screamed in
frustration, and Colin staggered as the pistol snarled again. Energy slammed
into his chest, but his armor held long enough for him to hurl himself aside.
Anu swung the pistol, trying to hold it on his fleeing target, but he hadn't
counted on the adjustments Dahak had made to Colin's implants. He misjudged his
enemy's reaction speed, and Colin slammed into a bulkhead in a clangor of armor
and battle steel. He richocheted off like a bank shot, bouncing himself back
towards Anu, and Anu screamed again as an armored foot reduced his pistol hand
to paste. He tried to roll away, but Colin was on him like a demon. He reached
down, jerking him up in a giant's embrace, and his hands twisted.
Anu shrieked as his arms
shattered, and for just an instant their eyes met—Anu's mad with terror and
pain, his own equally mad with hate and a pain not of his flesh—and Colin knew
Anu's life was his.
But he didn't take it.
He tossed his victim aside, cold in his fury, and the mutineer bounced off a
bulkhead with another wail of agony. He slid to the deck, helpless in his
broken body, and Colin ignored him as he flung himself to his knees beside
Jiltanith. He couldn't read her bio-read-outs through her badly damaged armor,
and he lifted her in his arms, calling her name and peering into her helmet visor
in desperation.
Her eyes opened slowly,
and he gasped in relief.
" 'Tanni! How . . .
how badly are you hurt?"
"Certes, 'twas like
unto an elephant's kick," she murmured dazedly, "yet 'twould seem I
am unhurt."
"Thank God!"
he whispered, and she smiled.
"Aye, methinks He
did have more than summat t'do wi' it," she replied, her voice a bit
stronger. " 'Twas that, or mine armor, or mayhap a bit o' both. Yet having
saved me, it can do no more, good Colin. I must come forth if I would move. That
blast hath fused my servo circuits all."
"You're out of your
mind if you think I'm letting you out of there yet!"
"So, thou art a
tyrant after all," she said, and he hugged her close.
"Rank hath its
privileges, 'Tanni, and I'm getting you out of here in one piece, damn
it!"
"As thou
wilt," she murmured with a small smile. "Yet what of Anu?"
"Don't worry,"
Colin said coldly.
He eased her dead armor
into a sitting position where she could see the crippled mutineer, then
returned his attention to the computers. He activated a stand-alone emergency
diagnostic system and felt his cautious way down the frozen fire control
circuits to the detonation order, then sought the next circuit in the sequence.
He disabled it and withdrew, then reactivated the core computers and swung to
face Anu, and his face was cold.
"How?" the
mutineer moaned. Even his implants couldn't fully deaden the agony of his
broken limbs, and his face was white. "How could you do that?"
"Dahak taught
me," Colin said grimly, and Anu shook his head frantically.
"No! No, Dahak's
dead! I killed it!" The agony of failure, utter and complete,
filled Anu's face, overshadowing his physical pain.
"Did you,
now?" Colin asked softly, and his smile was cruel. "Then you won't
mind this a bit."
He bent over the broken
body and snatched it up, careless of Anu's wail of anguish.
"What wouldst thou,
Colin?" Jiltanith asked urgently.
"I'm giving him
what he wanted," Colin said coldly, and crossed the command deck. A hatch
hissed open at his command to reveal the cabin of a lifeboat, and he dumped Anu
into the lead couch. The mutineer stared at him with desperate, hating eyes,
and Colin smiled that same cold, cruel smile as his neural feed programmed the
lifeboat with a captain's imperative, locking out all attempts to change it.
"You wanted Dahak,
you son-of-a-bitch? Well, Dahak wants you, too. I think he'll enjoy the meeting
more than you will."
"No!" Anu
shrieked as the hatch began to close. "Nooooooooo! Ple—"
The hatch cut him off,
and Osir twitched as the lifeboat launched.
* * *
The gleaming minnow
arced upward through the enclave's shield, fleeing the planet its mother ship
had come to so long before. It altered course, swinging unerringly to line its
nose on the white, distant disk of the moon, and its passenger's terrified mind
hammered futilely at the commands locked into its computers. The lifeboat paid
no heed, driving onward toward the mighty starship it had left millennia ago.
Tracking systems aboard that starship locked upon it, noting its origin and
course, and a fold-space signal pulsed out before it, identifying its single
passenger to Dahak.
The computer watched it
come, and Alpha Priority commands within his core programming tingled to life.
Dahak could have fired the instant he identified the target, but he held his
fire, waiting, letting the lifeboat bear its cargo closer and closer, and the
human emotion of anticipation filled his circuitry.
The lifeboat reached the
kill zone about the warship, and a single, five-thousand-kilometer streamer of
energy erupted from beneath the crater men had named Tycho. It lashed out, fit
to destroy a ship like Osir herself, and the silver minnow vanished.
There were tiny sounds
aboard the leviathan called Dahak. The targeting systems shut themselves
down with a quiet click. The massive energy mount whined softly as it powered
down, its glowing snout cooling quickly in the vacuum of its weapon bay. Then
there was only silence. Silence and yet another human emotion . . . completion.
Two months to the day
after the fall of the enclave, Senior Fleet Captain Colin MacIntyre, Imperial
Battle Fleet, commanding officer of the ship-of-the-line Dahak and
Governor of Planet Earth and the Solarian System, stepped out of the hoverjeep
and breathed deep of the crisp, clear morning of a Colorado autumn. The usual
frenzy of Shepard Space Center was stilled, and he felt his NASA driver staring
at the bronze-sheened tower of alloy thrusting arrogantly heavenward before
them. The sublight battleship Osir had been sitting here for a week,
waiting for him, but a week hadn't been long enough for NASA to get used to
her.
He adjusted his cap and
moved to join the small group at the foot of Osir's ramp. He was
grateful that those same people had let him have a few moments of privacy to
stand alone with the permanent honor guard before The Cenotaph. That was the
only name it had, probably the only name it ever would have, and it was enough.
The polished obsidian shaft reared fifty meters into the air in front of White
Tower, glittering and featureless, and its plain battle steel plinth bore the
name and birth-planet of every person who had died fighting the southerners.
It was a long list. He'd
stepped close, scanning the endless names until he found the two he sought.
"SANDRA YVONNE TILLOTSON, LT. COL., USAF, EARTH" and "SEAN
ANDREW MACINTYRE, US FORESTRY SERVICE, EARTH." His brother and his friend
were in good company, he thought sadly. The best.
Now he tried to put the
sorrow aside as he reached the waiting group. Horus stood with General Gerald
Hatcher, Sir Frederick Amesbury, and Marshal Vassily Chernikov—the three men
who, most of all, had held the planet together in the wake of the preposterous
reports coming out of Antarctica. Once the truth of those fantastic tales
registered, virtually every major government had fallen overnight, and Colin
still wasn't quite certain how these men had managed to hang on to a semblance
of order, even with the support of Nergal's allies within the military.
"Horus," Colin
nodded to his friend. "It looks like I'm leaving you in good hands."
"I think so,
too," Horus replied with a small, slightly wistful smile.
Only eleven of Nergal's
senior Imperials had lived through the fighting, and they had chosen to remain
behind with the planet on which they'd spent so much of their long lives. Colin
was glad. They'd far more than earned their right to leave, but it would have
seemed wrong, somehow. In a very real sense, they were the surviving godparents
of the human race, Terran branch. If anyone could be trusted to look after
Earth's interests, they could.
And Earth's interests
would need looking after. A second line of automated stations had gone off the
air, which meant the Achuultani's scouts were no more than twenty-five months
away. He had that long to reach the Imperium, find out why no defense was being
mounted, summon assistance, and get back to Sol. It was a tall order, and he
frankly doubted he could do it. Nor was the fact reassuring that no one had yet
answered the non-stop messages Dahak had been transmitting ever since they
recovered the hypercom spares from the enclave.
It looked like the only
way they could find help—if there was any to find—was to go out and get it in
person, and only Dahak could do that. Which meant Earth would be on her
own until Dahak could return.
The situation wasn't
quite as hopeless as it might have been. Assuming Dahak's records of previous
incursions were any guide, the Achuultani scouts would be anywhere from a year
to eighteen months ahead of the main incursion, and Earth would not be fangless
when they arrived. Except for Osir herself, all of Dahak's
sublight warships had been debarked, along with the vast majority of the old
starship's fighters and enough combat and ground vehicles to conquer the planet
five times over. They would remain behind to form the nucleus of Sol's defense.
Two of Dahak's
four Fleet repair units, each effectively a hundred-fifty-thousand-ton
spaceborne industrial complex in its own right, had also been debarked. Their
first task had been the construction of the gravity generator Dahak would leave
in his place to avoid disturbing such things as the Lagrange point habitats,
not to mention little items like Earth's tides. Since completing that
assignment, they had split their capacity between replicating themselves and
producing missiles, mines, fighters, and every other conceivable weapon of war.
The technological and industrial base Anu had hoarded for fifty millennia was
coming into operation, as well, with every Terrestrial assistance a badly
frightened planet could provide.
No, Earth would not be
helpless when the Achuultani arrived. But a strong hand would be needed to lead
Colin's birth-world through the enormous changes that awaited it, and that hand
would belong to Horus.
Colin had declared
himself Governor of Earth, but he'd never meant to claim the title seriously.
He'd seen it only as a means to make his pardon of Nergal's Imperials
"official," yet it had become clear his temporary expedient was in
fact a necessity. It would be a long time before Terrans really trusted any
politician again, and Hatcher, Amesbury, and Chernikov agreed unanimously with
Horus: Earth needed a single, unquestioned source of authority, or her people
would be too busy fighting one another to worry about the Achuultani.
So Colin had declared
peace and, backed by Dahak's resources, made it stick with very little
difficulty. When he then proclaimed himself Planetary Governor in the name of
the Imperium (once more with Dahak's newly-revealed potential hovering
quietly in the background) and promised local autonomy, most surviving
governments had been only too happy to hand their problems over to him. The
Asian Alliance might still make problems, but Horus and his new military aides
seemed confident that they could handle that situation.
Once they had, all
existing militaries were to be merged (and Colin was profoundly grateful he
would be elsewhere while his henchmen implemented that decision), and
he'd named Horus Lieutenant Governor and appointed all ten of his surviving
fellows Imperial Councilors for Life to help him mind the store while "the
Governor" was away.
All of which, he
reflected with an inner smile, would certainly keep Horus's
"retirement" from being boring.
The thorniest problem,
in many ways, had been the surviving southerners. Of the four thousand nine
hundred and three mutineers from stasis, almost all had declared their
willingness to apply for Terran citizenship and accept commissions in the local
reserves and militia. Colin had re-enlisted a hundred of them for service
aboard Dahak (on a probationary basis) to help provide a core of
experienced personnel, but the rest would remain on Earth. Since they had been
sitting under an Imperial lie detector at the time they declared their loyalty
anew, he felt reasonably confident about leaving them behind. Horus would keep
an eagle eye on them, and they would furnish him with a nucleus of trained,
fully-enhanced Imperials to get things rolling while the late Inanna's medical
facilities began providing biotechnics to Earth's Terra-born defenders.
But that left over three
hundred Imperials who had joined Anu willingly or failed the lie detector's
test, all of them guilty, at the very least, of mutiny and multiple murder.
Imperial law set only one penalty for their crimes, and Colin had refused to
pardon them. The executions had taken almost a week to complete.
It had been his most
agonizing decision, but he'd made it. There had been no option . . . and deep
inside he knew the example—and its implicit warning—would stick in the minds he
left behind him, Terra-born and Imperial alike.
So now he was leaving. Dahak's
crew was tremendously understrength, but at least the ship had one again. The
survivors of Hector MacMahan's assault force, all fourteen of Nergal's
surviving children, and his tentatively rehabilitated mutineers formed its
core, but it had been fleshed out just a bit. A sizable chunk of the USFC and
SAS, and the entire US Second Marine Division, Russian Nineteenth Guards
Parachute Division, German First Armored Division, and Japanese Sendai Division
would provide the bulk of his personnel, along with several thousand
hand-picked air force and navy personnel from all over the First World. All
told, it came to barely a hundred thousand people, but with so many parasites
left behind it would suffice. They'd rattle around like peas in the vastness of
their ship, but taking any more might strain even Dahak's ability to provide
biotechnics and training before they reached the borders of the
Imperium.
"Well, we'll be
going then," Colin said, shaking himself out of his thoughts. He reached
out to shake hands with the three military men, and smiled at Marshal
Chernikov. "I expect my new Chief Engineer will be thinking of you,
sir," he said.
"Your Chief
Engineer with two good arms, Comrade Governor," Chernikov replied warmly.
"Even his mother agrees that his temporary absence is a small price to pay
for that."
"I'm glad,"
Colin said. He turned to Gerald Hatcher. "Sorry about Hector, but I'll
need a good ops officer."
"You've got one,
Governor," Hatcher said. "But keep an eye on him. He disappears at
the damnedest times."
Colin laughed and took
Amesbury's hand.
"I'm sorry so much
of the SAS is disappearing with me, Sir Frederick. I hope you won't need
them."
"They're good
lads," Sir Frederick agreed, "but we'll make do. Besides, if you run
into a spot of bother, my chaps should pull you out again—even under Hector's
command."
Colin smiled and held
out his hand to Horus. The old Imperial looked at it for a moment, then reached
out and embraced him, hugging him so hard his reinforced ribs creaked. The old
man's eyes were bright, and Colin knew his own were not entirely dry.
"Take care of
yourself, Horus," he said finally, his voice husky.
"I will. And you
and 'Tanni take care of each other." Horus gave him one last squeeze, then
straightened, his hands on Colin's shoulders. "We'll take care of the
planet for you, too, Governor. You might say we've had some experience at that."
"I know."
Colin patted the hand on his right shoulder, then stepped back. A recorded
bosun's pipe shrilled—he was going to have to speak to Dahak about this
perverse taste for Terran naval rituals he seemed to have developed—and his
subordinates snapped to attention. He returned their salutes sharply, then
turned and walked up the ramp. He did not look back as the hatch closed behind
him, and Osir floated silently upward as he stepped into the transit
shaft.
His executive officer
looked up as he arrived on the command deck.
"Captain," she
said formally, and started to rise from the captain's couch, but he waved her
back and took the first officer's station. The gleaming disk of Dahak's
hull, no longer hidden by its millennia-old camouflage, floated before him as
the visual display turned indigo blue and the first stars appeared.
"Sorry you missed
the good-byes?" he asked quietly.
"Nay, my
Colin," she said, equally softly. "I ha' said my farewells long
since. 'Tis there my future doth lie."
"All of ours,"
he agreed. They sped onward, moving at a leisurely speed by Imperial standards,
and Dahak swelled rapidly. The three-headed dragon of his ensign faced
them, vast and proud once more, loyal beyond the imagining of humans. Most
humans, at any rate, Colin reminded himself. Not all.
The starship grew and
grew, stupendous and overwhelming, and a hatch yawned open on Launch Bay
Ninety-One. Osir had come full circle at last.
The battleship threaded
her way down the cavernous bore, and Dahak's voice filled her bridge with the
old, old ritual announcement of Colin's own navy.
"Captain,
arriving," it said.
The sensor array was the size of a very large asteroid or a very small
moon, and it had orbited the G6 star for a very, very long time, yet it was not
remarkable to look upon. Its hull, filmed with dust except where the
electrostatic fields kept the solar panels clear, was a sphere of bronze-gold
alloy, marred only by a few smoothly-rounded protrusions, with none of the
aerials or receiver dishes which might have been expected by a radio-age
civilization. But then, the people who built it hadn't used anything as crude
as radio for several millennia prior to its construction.
The Fourth Imperium had left it here fifty-two thousand one hundred and
eighty-six Terran years ago, its electronic senses fueled only by a trickle of
power, yet the lonely guardian was not dead. It only slept, and now fresh
sparkles of current flickered through kilometers of molecular circuitry.
Internal stasis fields spun down, and a computer roused from millennia of
sleep. Stronger flows of power pulsed as testing programs reported, and Comp
Cent noted that seven-point-three percent of its primary systems had failed.
Had it been interested in such things, it might have reflected that such a low
failure rate was near miraculous, but this computer lacked even the most
rudimentary of awarenesses. It simply activated the appropriate secondaries,
and a new set of programs blinked to life.
It wasn't the first time the sensor array had awakened, though more than
forty millennia had passed since last it was commanded to do so. But this time,
Comp Cent observed, the signal which had roused it was no demand from its
builders for a systems test. This signal came from another sensor array over
seven hundred light-years to galactic east, and it was a death cry.
Comp Cent's hypercom relayed the signal another thousand light-years, to a
communications center which had been ancient before Cro-Magnon first trod the
Earth, and awaited a response. But there was no response. Comp Cent was on its
unimaginative own, and that awakened still more autonomous programs. The signal
to its silent commanders was replaced by series of far shorter-ranged
transmissions, and other sensor arrays stirred and roused and muttered sleepily
back to it.
Comp Cent noted the gaping holes time had torn in what once had been an
intricately interlocking network, but those holes were none of its concern, and
it turned to the things which were. More power plants came on line, bringing
the array fully alive, and the installation became a brilliant beacon, emitting
in every conceivable portion of the electromagnetic and gravitonic spectra with
more power than many a populated world of the Imperium. It was a signpost, a
billboard proclaiming its presence to anyone who might glance in its
direction.
And then it waited once more.
Months passed, and years, and Comp Cent did not care. Just over seven years
passed before Comp Cent received a fresh signal, announcing the death of yet
another sensor array. This one was less than four hundred light-years distant.
Whatever was destroying its lonely sisters was coming closer, and Comp Cent
reported to its builders once again. Still no one answered. No one issued new
orders or directives. And so it continued to perform the function it had been
programmed to perform, revealing itself to the silent stars like a man shouting
in a darkened room. And then, one day, just over fifteen years after it had
awakened, the stars responded.
Comp Cent's sensitive instruments detected the incoming hyper wake weeks
before it arrived. Once more it reported its findings to its commanders, and
once more they did not respond. Comp Cent considered the silence, for this was
a report its programming told it must be answered. Yet its designers had
allowed for the remote possibility that it might not be received by its
intended addressees. And so Comp Cent consulted its menus, selected the
appropriate command file, and reconfigured its hypercom to omni-directional
broadcast. The GHQ signal vanished, replaced by an all-ships warning addressed
to any unit of Battle Fleet.
Still there was no answer, but this time no backup program told Comp Cent
to do anything else, for its builders had never considered that possibility,
and so it continued its warning broadcasts, unconcerned by the lack of
response.
The hyper wake came closer, and Comp Cent analyzed its pattern and its
speed, adding the new data to the warning no one acknowledged, watching
incuriously as the wake suddenly terminated eighteen light-minutes from the
star it orbited. It observed new energy sources approaching, now at sublight speeds,
and added its analysis of their patterns to its broadcast.
The drive fields closed upon the sensor array, wrapped about cylindrical
hulls twenty kilometers in length. They were not Imperial hulls, but Comp Cent
recognized them and added their identity to its transmission.
The starships came closer still at twenty-eight percent of light-speed,
approaching the sensor array whose emissions had attracted their attention, and
Comp Cent sang to them, and beckoned to them, and trolled them in while passive
instrumentation probed and pried, stealing all the data from them that it
could. They entered attack range and locked their targeting systems upon the
sensor array, but no one fired, and impulses tumbled through fresh logic trees
as Comp Cent filed that fact away, as well.
The starships approached within five hundred kilometers, and a tractor
beam—a rather crude one, but nonetheless effective, Comp Cent noted—reached out
to the sensor array. And as it did, Comp Cent activated the instructions stored
deep within its heart for this specific contingency.
Matter met anti-matter, and the sensor array vanished in a boil of light
brighter than the star it orbited. The detonation was too terrible to call an
"explosion," and it reduced the half-dozen closest starships to
stripped atoms, ripped a dozen more to incandescent splinters, damaged others,
and—just as its long-dead masters had intended—deprived the survivors of any
opportunity to evaluate the technology which had built it.
Comp Cent had performed its final function, and it neither knew nor cared
why no one had ever answered its warning that after sixty thousand years, the
Achuultani had returned.
It was raining in the
captain's quarters.
More precisely, it was
raining in the three-acre atrium inside the captain's quarters. Senior Fleet
Captain Colin MacIntyre, self-proclaimed Governor of Earth and latest
commanding officer of the Imperial planetoid Dahak, sat on his balcony
and soaked his feet in his hot-tub, but Fleet Captain Jiltanith, his tall,
slender executive officer, had chosen to soak her entire person. Her
neatly-folded, midnight-blue uniform lay to one side as she leaned back, and
her long sable mane floated about her shoulders.
Black-bottomed
holographic thunderheads crowded overhead, distant thunder rumbled, and
lightning flickered on the "horizon," yet Colin's gaze was remote as
he watched rain bounce off the balcony's shimmering force field roof. His
attention was elsewhere, focused on the data being relayed through his neural
feeds by his ship's central command computer.
His face was hard as the
report played itself out behind his eyes, from the moment the Achuultani
starships emerged from hyper to the instant of the sensor array's
self-immolation. It ended, and he shook himself and looked down at Jiltanith
for her reaction. Her mouth was tight, her ebon eyes cold, and for just a
moment he saw not a lovely woman but the lethal killing machine which was his
executive officer at war.
"That's it, then,
Dahak?" he asked.
"It is certainly
the end of the transmission, sir," a deep, mellow voice replied from the
empty air. Thunder growled again behind the words in grimly appropriate
counterpoint, and the voice continued calmly. "This unit was in the
tertiary scanner phalanx, located approximately one hundred ten light-years to
galactic east of Sol. There are no more between it and Earth."
"Crap," Colin
muttered, then sighed. Life had been so much simpler as a NASA command pilot.
"Well, at least we got some new data from it."
"Aye,"
Jiltanith agreed, "yet to what end, my Colin? 'Tis little enow, when all's
said, yet not even that little may we send home, sin Earth hath no
hypercom."
"I suppose we could
turn back and deliver it in person," Colin thought aloud. "We're only
two weeks out. . . ."
"Nay,"
Jiltanith disagreed. "Should we turn about 'twill set us back full six
weeks, for we must needs give up the time we've but now spent, as well."
"Fleet Captain
Jiltanith is correct, Captain," Dahak seconded, "and while these data
are undoubtedly useful, they offer no fundamental insights necessary to Earth's
defense."
"Huh!" Colin
tugged at his nose, then sighed. "I guess you're right. It'd be different
if they'd actually attacked and given us a peek at their hardware, but as it
is—" He shrugged. "I wish to hell they had, though. God knows
we could use some idea of what they're armed with!"
"True," Dahak
agreed. "Yet the readings the sensor array did obtain indicate no major
advances in the Achuultani's general technology, which suggests their weaponry
also has not advanced significantly."
"I almost wish
there were signs of advances," Colin fretted. "I just can't
accept that they haven't got something new after sixty thousand
years!"
"It is, indeed,
abnormal by human standards, sir, but entirely consistent with surviving
evidence from previous incursions."
"Aye,"
Jiltanith agreed, sliding deeper into the hot water with a frown, "yet
still 'tis scarce credible, Dahak. How may any race spend such time 'pon war
and killing and bring no new weapons to their task?"
"Unknown," the
computer replied so calmly Colin grimaced. Despite Dahak's self-awareness, he
had yet to develop a human-sized imagination.
"Okay, so what do
we know?"
"The data included
in the transmission confirm reports from the arrays previously destroyed. In
addition, while no tactical information was obtained, sensor readings indicate
that the Achuultani's maximum attainable sublight velocity is scarcely half as
great as that of this vessel, which suggests at least one major tactical
advantage for our own units, regardless of comparative weaponry. Further, we
have reconfirmed their relatively low speed in hyper, as well. At their present
rate of advance, they will reach Sol in two-point-three years, as originally
projected."
"True, but I'm not
too happy about the way they came in. Do we know if they tried to examine any
of the other sensor arrays?"
"Negative, Captain.
A hypercom of the power mounted by these arrays has a maximum omni-directional
range of less than three hundred light-years. The reports of all previously
destroyed sensor arrays were relayed via the tertiary phalanx arrays and
consisted solely of confirmation that they had been destroyed by Achuultani
vessels. This is the first direct transmission we have received and contains
far more observational data."
"Yeah." Colin
pondered a moment. "But it doesn't match very well with what little we
know about their operational patterns, now does it?"
"It does not, sir.
According to the records, normal Achuultani tactics should have been to destroy
the array immediately upon detection."
"That's what I
mean. We were dead lucky any of the arrays were still around to tell us they're
coming, but I can't help thinking the Imperium was a bit too clever in the way
it set these things up. Sucking them in close for better readings is all very
well, but these guys were after information of their own. What if they
change tactics or speed up on us because they figure someone's waiting for
them?"
"Methinks thy
concern may be over great," Jiltanith said after a moment. "Certes,
they needs must know some power did place sentinels to ward its borders, yet
what knowledge else have they gained? How shall they guess where those borders
truly lie or when their ships may cross them? Given so little, still must they
search each star they pass."
Colin tugged on his nose
some more, then nodded a bit unhappily. It made sense, and there wasn't
anything he could do about it even if Jiltanith were wrong, but it was his job
to worry. Not that he'd asked for it.
"I guess you're
right," he sighed. "Thanks for the report, Dahak."
"You are welcome,
Captain," the starship said, and Colin shook himself, then grinned at
Jiltanith.
"Looking forward to
sickbay, 'Tanni?" He put an edge of malicious humor into his voice as an
anodyne against their worries.
"Hast an uncommon
low sense of humor, Colin," she said darkly, accepting the change of
subject with a smile of her own. "So long as I do recall have I awaited
this day—yea, and seldom with true hope mine eyes might see it. Yet now 'tis
close upon me, and if truth be known, there lies some shadow of fear within my
heart. 'Tis most unmeet in thee so to tease me over it."
"I know," he
admitted wickedly, "but it's too much fun to stop."
She snorted and shook a
dripping fist at him, yet there was empathy as well as laughter in his green
eyes. Jiltanith had been a child, her muscles and skeleton too immature for the
full bioenhancement Battle Fleet's personnel enjoyed, when the mutiny organized
by Fleet Captain (Engineering) Anu marooned Dahak in Earth orbit and the
starship's crew on Earth. The millennia-long struggle her father had led against
Anu had kept her from receiving it since, for the medical facilities aboard the
sublight parasite battleship Nergal had been unable to provide it.
Jiltanith had received the neural computer feeds, sensory boosters, and
regenerative treatments before the mutiny, but those were the easy parts, and
Colin was fresh enough from his own enhancement to understand her anxieties
perfectly . . . and tease her to ease them.
"Bawcock, thou'lt
crow too loud one day."
"Nope. I'm the
captain, and rank—"
"—hath its privileges,"
she broke in, shaking her head ominously. "That phrase shall haunt
thee."
"I don't doubt
it." He smiled down at her, tempted to shuck off his own uniform and join
her . . . if he hadn't been a bit afraid of where it might lead. Not that he
had any objection to where it could lead, but there was plenty of time
(assuming they lived beyond the next two years), and that was one complication
neither of them needed right now.
"Well, gotta get
back to the office," he said instead. "And you, Madam XO, should get
back to your own quarters and catch some sleep. Trust me—Dahak's idea of a slow
convalescence from enhancement isn't exactly the same as yours or mine."
"Of thine,
mayhap," she said sweetly.
"I'll remember that
when you start moaning for sympathy." He drew his toes from the tub and
activated a small portion of his own biotechnics. The water floated off his
feet on the skin of a repellent force field, and he shook the drops away and
pulled on his socks and gleaming boots.
"Seriously, 'Tanni,
get some rest. You'll need it."
"In truth, I doubt
thee not," she sighed, wiggling in the hot-tub, "yet still doth this
seem heaven's foretaste. I'll tarry yet a while, methinks."
"Go ahead," he
said with another smile, and stepped off the edge of the balcony onto a waiting
presser. It floated him gently to the atrium floor, and his implant force
fields were an invisible umbrella as he splashed through the rain to the
door/hatch on the far side of his private park.
It opened at his
approach, and he stepped through it into a yawning, brightly-lit void over a
thousand kilometers deep. He'd braced himself for it, yet he knew he appeared
less calm than he would have liked—and felt even less calm than he managed to
look as he plunged downward at an instantly attained velocity of just over
twenty thousand kilometers per hour.
Dahak had stepped his
transit shafts' speed down out of deference to his captain and Terra-born crew,
though Colin knew the computer truly didn't comprehend why they felt such
terror. It was bad enough aboard the starship's sublight parasites, yet the
biggest of those warships massed scarcely eighty thousand tons. In something
that tiny, there was barely time to feel afraid before the journey was over,
but even at this speed it would take almost ten minutes to cross Dahak's
titanic hull, and the lack of any subjective sense of movement made it almost
worse.
Yet the captain's
quarters were scarcely a hundred kilometers from Command One—a mere nothing
aboard Dahak—and the entire journey took only eighteen seconds. Which
was no more than seventeen seconds too long, Colin reflected as he came to a
sudden halt. He stepped shakily into a carpeted corridor, glad none of his crew
were present to note the slight give in his knees as he approached Command
One's massive hatch.
The three-headed dragon
of Dahak's bas relief crest looked back from it. Its eyes transfixed him
for a moment across the starburst cradled in its raised forepaws, fierce with
the fidelity which had outlasted millennia, and then the hatch—fifteen
centimeters of Imperial battle steel thick—slid open, and another dozen hatches
opened and closed in succession as he passed through them to Command One's
vast, dim sphere.
The command consoles
seemed to float in interstellar space, surrounded by the breath-taking
perfection of Dahak's holographic projections. The nearest stars moved
visibly, but the artificiality of the projection was all too apparent if one
thought about it. Dahak was tearing through space under maximum
Enchanach Drive; at seven hundred and twenty times light-speed, direct
observation of the cosmos would have been distorted, to say the very least.
"The Captain is on
the bridge," Dahak intoned, and Colin winced. He was going to have
to do something about this mania Dahak had developed for protecting his
commander's precious dignity!
The half-dozen members
of Colin's skeleton bridge watch, Imperials all, began to stand, but he waved
them back and crossed to the captain's console. Trackless stars drifted beneath
his boots, and Fleet Commander Tamman, his Tactical officer and third in
command, rose from the couch before it.
"Captain," he
said as formally as Dahak, and Colin gave up for the moment.
"I have the con,
Commander." He slipped into the vacated couch, and it squirmed under him
as it adjusted to the contours of his body. There was no need for Tamman to
give him a status report; his own neural feed to the console was already doing
that.
He watched the tactical
officer retire to his own station with a small, fond smile. Tamman was
Jiltanith's contemporary, one of the fourteen Imperial "children"
from Nergal's crew to survive the desperate assault on Anu's enclave.
All of them had joined Colin in Dahak, and he was damned thankful they
had. Unlike his Terra-born, they could tie directly into their computers and
run them the way the Imperium had intended, providing a small, reliable core of
enhanced officers to ride herd on the hundred pardoned mutineers who formed the
nub of his current crew. In time, Dahak would enhance and educate his
Terra-born to the same standard, but with a complement of over a hundred
thousand, it was going to take even his facilities a while to finish the
task.
Colin MacIntyre reclined
in his comfortable command couch, and his small smile faded as he watched the
stars sweep towards him and the sleek, deadly shapes of Achuultani starships
floated behind his eyes once more. The report from the sensor array replayed
itself again and again, like some endless recording loop, and it filled him
with dread. He'd known they were coming; now he'd "seen" them for
himself. They were real, now, and so was the horrific task he and his people
faced.
Dahak was more than
twenty-seven light-years from Earth, but the nearest Imperial Fleet base had
been over two-hundred light-years from Sol when Dahak arrived to orbit
Earth. The Imperium proper lay far beyond that, yet despite the distances and
the threat sweeping steadily towards his home world, they'd had no choice but
to come, for only the Imperium might offer the aid they desperately needed to
save that home world from those oncoming starships.
But Dahak had
been unable to communicate with the Imperium for over fifty thousand years.
What if there no longer was an Imperium?
It was a grim question
they seldom discussed, one Colin tried hard not to ask even of himself, yet it
beat in his brain incessantly, for Dahak had repaired his hypercom once
the spares he needed had been reclaimed from the mutineers' Antarctic enclave.
He'd been calling for help from the moment those repairs were made—indeed, he
was calling even now.
And, like the sensor
arrays, he had received no reply at all.
Lieutenant Governor
Horus, late captain of the mutinous sublight battleship Nergal and
current viceroy of Earth, muttered a heartfelt curse as he sucked his wounded
thumb.
He lowered his hand and
regarded the wreckage sourly. He'd worked with Terran equipment for centuries,
and he knew how fragile it was. Unfortunately, Imperial technology was becoming
available again, and he'd forgotten the intercom on his desk was Terran-made.
His office door opened,
and General Gerald Hatcher, head of the Chiefs of Staff of Planet Earth
(assuming they ever got the organization set up), poked his head in and eyed
the splintered intercom panel.
"If you want to
attract my attention, Governor, it's simpler to buzz me than to use
sirens."
"Sirens?"
"Well, that's what
I thought I heard when my intercom screamed. Did that panel do
something, or were you just pissed off?"
"Terran
humans," Horus said feelingly, "are pretty damned smart-mouthed,
aren't they?"
"One of our more
endearing traits." Hatcher smiled at Jiltanith's father and sat down.
"I take it you did want to see me?"
"Yes." Horus
waved a stack of printout. "You've seen these?"
"What are—?"
Horus stopped waving, and Hatcher craned his neck to read the header. He
nodded. "Yep. What about them?"
"According to
these, the military amalgamation is a month behind schedule, that's what,"
Horus began, then paused and studied Hatcher's expression. "Why don't you
look surprised or embarrassed or something, General?"
"Because we're
ahead of where I expected to be," Hatcher said, and Horus sat back with a
resigned sigh as he saw the twinkle in his eye. Gerald Hatcher, he sometimes
thought, had adapted entirely too well to the presence of extra-terrestrials on
his world.
"I suppose,"
the general continued unabashedly, "that I should've told you we've
deliberately set a schedule no one could make. That way we've got an excuse to
scream at people, however well they're doing." He shrugged. "It's not
nice, but when a four or five-star general screams at you, you usually discover
a few gears you weren't using. Wonderful thing, screaming."
"I see." Horus
regarded him with a measuring eye. "You're right—you should've told me.
Unless you're planning on screaming at me?"
"Perish the
thought," Hatcher murmured.
"I'm
relieved," Horus said dryly. "But should I take it you're actually
satisfied, then?"
"Given that we're
trying to merge military command structures which, however closely allied, were
never really designed for it, Frederick, Vassily and I are pleased at how
quickly it's moving, but time's mighty short."
Horus nodded. Sir
Frederick Amesbury, Vassily Chernikov, and Hatcher formed what Vassily was fond
of calling Horus's military troika, and they were working like demons at
their all but impossible task, but they had barely two years before the first
Achuultani scout forces could be expected.
"What's the worst
bottleneck?" he asked.
"The Asian
Alliance, of course." Hatcher made a wry face. "Our deadline hasn't
quite run out, and they still haven't gotten off the fence and decided whether
to fight us or join us. It's irritating as hell, but not surprising. I don't think
Marshal Tsien's decided to oppose us actively, but he's certainly dragging his
feet, and none of the other Alliance military types will make a move until he
commits himself."
"Why not demand
that the Alliance remove him, then?" It was a question, but it didn't
really sound like one.
"Because we can't.
He's not just their top man; he's also the best they have. They know it, too,
and so much of their political leadership was in Anu's pocket—and got killed
when you took out the enclave—that he's the only man the Alliance military
still trusts. And however much he may hate us, he hates us less than a lot of
his juniors do." Hatcher shrugged. "We've asked him to meet us
face-to-face, and at least he's accepted. We'll just have to do our best with
him, and he's smart, Horus. He'll come around once he gets past the idea that
the West has somehow conquered him."
Horus nodded again. All
three of his senior generals were "Westerners" as far as Tsien and
his people were concerned. The fact that Anu and his mutineers had manipulated
Terran governments and terrorist groups to play the First and Third Worlds off
against one another was just beginning to percolate through Western
brains; it would be a while yet before the other side could accept it on an
emotional basis. Some groups, like the religious crackpots who had run places
like Iran and Syria, never would, and their militaries had simply been disarmed
. . . not, unhappily, without casualties.
"Besides,"
Hatcher went on, "Tsien is their senior commander, and we'll need
him. If we're going to make this work, we don't have any choice but to
integrate our people and their people—no, scratch that. We have to integrate
all of Earth's military people into a single command structure. We can't
impose non-Asian officers on the Alliance and expect it to work."
"All right."
Horus tossed the printout back into his "IN" basket. "I'll make
myself available to see him if you think it'll help; otherwise, I'll stay out
of it and let you handle it. I've got enough other headaches."
"Don't I know it.
Frankly, I wouldn't trade jobs with you on a bet."
"Your selflessness
overwhelms me," Horus said, and Hatcher smiled again.
"How's the rest of
it going?"
"As well as can be
expected." Horus shrugged. "I wish we had about a thousand times as
much Imperial equipment, but the situation's improving now that the orbital
industrial units Dahak left behind are hitting their stride.
"A lot of their
capacity's still going into replicating themselves, and I've diverted some of
their weapons-manufacturing tonnage to planetary construction equipment, but we
should be all right. It's a geometric progression, you know; that's one of the
beauties of automated units that don't need niggling little things like food or
rest.
"We're just about
on schedule setting up the tech base Anu brought down with him, and the part Dahak
landed directly is up and running. We're hitting a few snags, but that's
predictable when you set about building a whole new industrial infrastructure.
Actually, it's the planetary defense centers that worry me most, but Geb's on
that."
Geb, once Nergal's
Chief Engineer and currently a senior member of the thirty-man (and woman)
Planetary Council helping Horus run the planet, was working nineteen-hour days
as Earth's chief construction boss. Hatcher didn't envy his exhausting task.
There were all too few Imperials available to run the construction equipment
they already had, and if purely Terran equipment was taking up a lot of the slack,
that was rather like using coolie labor in light of their monumental task.
Geb and Horus had
rejected the idea of reconfiguring Imperial equipment—or building new—to permit
operation by unenhanced Terra-born. Imperial machinery was designed for
operators whose implants let them interface directly with it, and altering it
would degrade its efficiency. More to the point, by the time they could adapt
any sizable amount of equipment, they should be producing enhanced Terra-born
in sufficient numbers to make it unnecessary.
Which reminded Horus of
another point.
"We're ready to
start enhancing non-military people, too."
"You are?"
Hatcher brightened. "That's good news."
"Yes, but it only
makes another problem worse. Everyone we enhance is going to be out of action
for at least a month—more probably two or three—while they get the hang of
their implants. So every time we enhance one of our top people, we lose him for
that long."
"Tell me about
it," Hatcher said sourly. "Do you realize—well, of course you do. But
it's sort of embarrassing for the brass to be such wimps compared to their
personnel. Remember my aide, Allen Germaine?" Horus nodded. "I
dropped by the Walter Reed enhancement center to see him yesterday. There he
was, happily tying knots in quarter-inch steel rods for practice, and there I
sat in my middle-aged body, feeling incredibly flabby. I used to think I was
pretty fit for my age, too, damn it! And he'll be back in the office in another
few weeks. That's going to be even more depressing."
"I know."
Horus's eyes twinkled. "But you're just going to have to put up with it. I
can't spare any of my chiefs of staff for enhancement until you get this show
firmly on the road."
"Now there's
an efficiency motivater!"
"Isn't it
just?" Horus murmured wickedly. "And speaking of getting things on
the road, how do you feel about the defensive installations I've
proposed?"
"From what I
understand of the technology, it looks pretty good, but I'd feel better if we
had more depth to our orbital defenses. I've been reading over the operational
data Dahak downloaded—and that's another thing I want: a neural link of my
own—and I'm not happy about how much the Achuultani seem to like kinetic
weapons. Can we really stop something the size of, say, Ceres, if they put
shields on it before they throw it at us?"
"Geb says so, but
it could take a lot of warheads. That's why we need so many launchers."
"Fine, but if they
settle in for a methodical attack, they'll start by picking off our peripheral
weapons first. That's classic siege strategy with any weaponry, and it's also
why I want more depth, to allow for attrition of the orbital forts."
"Agreed. But we
have to put the inner defenses into position first, which is why I'm
sweating the PDC construction rates. They're what's going to produce the
planetary shield, and we need their missile batteries just as badly. Not even
Imperial energy weapons can punch through atmosphere very efficiently, and when
they do, they play merry hell with little things like jet streams and the ozone
layer. That's one reason it's easier to defend nice, airless moons and
asteroids."
"Um-hum."
Hatcher plucked at his lip. "I'm afraid I've been too buried in troop
movements and command structures to spend as much time as I'd like boning up on
hardware. Vassily's our nuts-and-bolts man. But am I correct in assuming your
problems're in the hyper launchers?"
"Right the first
time. Since we can't rely on beams, we need missiles, but missiles have
problems of their own. As Colin is overly fond of pointing out, there are
always trade-offs.
"Sublight missiles
can be fired from anywhere, but they're vulnerable to interception, especially
over interplanetary ranges. Hyper missiles can't be intercepted, but they can't
be launched from atmosphere, either. Even air has mass, and the exact mass a
hyper missile takes into hyper with it is critical to where it re-enters normal
space. That's why warships pre-position their hyper missiles just inside their
shields before they launch."
Hatcher leaned forward,
listening carefully. Horus had been a missile specialist before the mutiny;
anything he had to say on this subject was something the general wanted to
hear.
"We can't do that
from a planet. Oh, we could, but planetary shields aren't like warship shields.
Not on habitable planets, anyway. Shield density is a function of shield area;
after a point, you can't make it any denser, no matter how much power you put
into it. To maintain sufficient density to stop really large kinetic weapons,
our shield is going to have to contract well into the mesosphere. We can stop
most smaller weapons from outside atmosphere, but not the big bastards, and we
can't count on avoiding heavy kinetic attack. In fact, that's exactly what
we're likely to be under if we do need to launch from planetary bases."
"And if the shield
contracts, the missiles would be outside it where the Achuultani could pick
them off," Hatcher mused.
"Exactly. So we
have to plan on going hyper straight from launch, and that means we need
launchers big enough to contain the entire hyper field—just over three times
the size of the missiles—or else their drives will take chunks out of the
defense center when they depart." Horus shrugged. "Since a heavy
hyper missile's about forty meters long and the launcher has to be air-tight
with provision for high-speed evacuation of atmosphere, we're talking some
pretty serious engineering just to build the damned things."
"I see."
Hatcher frowned thoughtfully. "How far behind schedule are you, Horus?
We're going to need those batteries to cover our orbital defenses whatever
happens."
"Oh, we're not
really in trouble yet. Geb allowed for some slippage in his original plans, and
he thinks he can make it up once he gets more Imperial equipment on line. Give
us another six months and we should be back on schedule. By Dahak's least
favorable estimate, we've got two years before the Achuultani arrive, and we
should only be looking at a thousand or so scouts in the first wave. If we can
hurt them badly enough, we'll have another year or so to extend the defenses
before the main fleet gets here. Hopefully, we'll have more warships of our own
by then, too."
"Hopefully,"
Hatcher agreed. He tried to radiate confidence, but he and Horus both knew.
They had an excellent chance of beating off the Achuultani scouts, but unless
Colin found the help they needed, Earth had no hope at all against the main
incursion.
The cold winter wind and
dark, cloudy sky over T'aiyuan's concrete runways struck Marshal Tsien Tao-ling
as an appropriate mirror for his own mood. Impassive and bulky in his uniform
greatcoat, Tsien had headed the military machine of the Asian Alliance for
twelve tumultuous years, and he had earned that post through decisiveness,
dedication, and sheer ability. His authority had been virtually absolute, a
rare thing in this day and age. Now that same authority was like a chain of
iron, dragging him remorselessly towards a decision he did not want to make.
In less than fifty
years, his nation had unified all of Asia that mattered—aside from the Japanese
and Filipinos, and they scarcely counted as Asians any longer. The task had
been neither cheap nor easy, nor had it been bloodless, but the Alliance had
built a military machine even the West was forced to respect. Much of that
building had been his own work, the fruit of his sworn oath to defend his
people, the Party, and the State, and now his own decision might well bring all
that effort, all that sacrifice, to nothing.
Oh, yes, he thought,
lengthening his stride, these are the proper skies for me.
General Quang scurried
after him, his high-pitched voice fighting a losing battle with the wind. Tsien
was a huge man, almost two hundred centimeters in his bare feet, and a native
of Yunnan Province. Quang was both diminutive and Vietnamese, and all rhetoric
about Asian Solidarity notwithstanding, there was very little love lost between
the Southern Chinese and their Vietnamese "brothers." Thousands of
years of mutual hostility could not be forgotten that easily, nor could Vietnam's
years as a Soviet proxy be easily forgiven, and the fact that Quang was a
merely marginally competent whiner with powerful Party connections only made it
worse.
Quang broke off, puffing
with exertion, and the marshal smiled inwardly. He knew the smaller man
resented how ridiculous he looked trying to match his own long-legged stride,
which was why he took pains to emphasize it whenever they met. Yet what
bothered him most just now, he admitted, was hearing a fool like Quang say so
many things he had thought himself.
And what of me? Tsien
frowned at his own thoughts. I am a servant of the Party, sworn to protect the
State, yet what am I to do when half the Central Committee has vanished? Can it
be true so many of them were traitors—not just to the State but to all
humanity? Yet where else have they gone? And how am I to choose when my own
decision has suddenly become so all important?
He looked up at the
sleek vehicle waiting on the taxi way. Its bronze-sheened alloy gleamed dully
in the cloudy afternoon, and the olive-brown-skinned woman beside its open
hatch was not quite Oriental-looking. The sight touched him with something he
seldom felt: uncertainty. Which made him think again of what Quang had been
saying. He sighed and paused, keeping his face utterly impassive with the ease
of long practice
"General, your
words are not new. They have been considered, by your government and
mine—" what remains of them, idiot "—and the decision has been
made. Unless his terms are utterly beyond reason, we will comply with the
demands of this Planetary Governor." For now, at least.
"The Party has not
been well-advised," Quang muttered. "It is a trick."
"A trick, Comrade
General?" Tsien's small smile was wintry as the wind. "You have,
perhaps, noticed that there is no longer a moon in our night skies? It has,
perhaps, occurred to you that anyone with a warship of that size and power has
no need of trickery? If it has not, reflect upon this, Comrade General."
He nodded in the direction of the waiting Imperial cutter. "That vehicle
could reduce this entire base to rubble, and nothing we have could even find
it, much less stop it. Do you truly believe that the West, with hundreds of
even more powerful weapons now at its disposal, could not disarm us by force as
they already have those maniacs in Southwest Asia?"
"But—"
"Spare me your
comments, Comrade General," Tsien said heavily. Especially since they
are so close to my own doubts. I have a job to do, and you make it no easier.
"We have two choices: comply, or be deprived of the poor weapons we still
possess. It is possible they are honest, that this danger they speak of is
real. If that is true, resistance would spell far worse for all of us than
disarmament and occupation. If they are lying, then at least we may have the
opportunity to observe their technology at first hand, possibly even to gain
access to it ourselves."
"But—"
"I will not repeat
myself, Comrade General." Tsien's voice was suddenly soft, and Quang
paled. "It is bad enough when junior officers question orders; I will not
tolerate it in general officers. Is that clear, Comrade General?"
"I-It is,"
Quang managed, and Tsien raised an eyebrow over one arctic eye. Quang
swallowed. "Comrade Marshal," he added quickly.
"I am relieved to
hear it," Tsien said more pleasantly, and walked towards the cutter once
more. Quang followed silently, but the marshal could feel the man's resentment
and resistance. Quang and those like him, particularly those with a base in the
Party, were dangerous. They were quite capable of doing something utterly
stupid, and the marshal made a mental note to have Quang quietly reassigned to
some less sensitive duty. Command of the air patrols and SAM bases covering the
Sea of Japan, perhaps. That once prestigious post had become utterly
meaningless, but it might take Quang a few months to realize it.
And in the meantime,
Tsien could get on with what mattered. He did not know the American Hatcher who
spoke for the . . . beings who had seized control of Earth, but he had met
Chernikov. He was a Russian, and so, by definition, not to be trusted, but his
professionalism had impressed Tsien almost against his will, and he seemed to
respect Hatcher and the Englishman Amesbury. Perhaps Hatcher was truly sincere.
Perhaps his offer of cooperation, of an equal share in this new, planet-wide
military organization, was genuine. There had, after all, been fewer outrageous
demands by his political masters in the "Planetary Council" than
Tsien had feared. Perhaps that was a good sign.
It had better be. All he
had said to Quang was correct; the military position made resistance hopeless.
Yet that had been true before in Asia's history, and if these Westerners meant
to make effective use of Asia's vast manpower, some of their new military
technology must fall into Asian hands.
Tsien had used that
argument with dozens of frightened, angry juniors, yet he was not certain he
believed it, and it irritated him to be unsure whether his own doubts were
rational or emotional. After so many years of enmity, it was difficult to think
with cold logic about any proposal from the West, yet in his heart of hearts,
he could not believe they were lying. The scope of their present advantage was
too overwhelming. They were too anxious, too concerned over the approach of
these "Achuultani," for the threat to be an invention.
His waiting pilot
saluted and allowed him to precede her into the cutter, then settled behind her
controls. The small vehicle rose silently into the heavens, then darted away,
climbing like a bullet and springing instantly forward at eight times the speed
of sound. There was no sense of acceleration, yet Tsien felt another weight—the
weight of inevitability—pressing down upon his soul. The wind of change was
blowing, sweeping over all this world like a typhoon, and resistance would be a
wall of straw before it. Whatever Quang and his ilk feared, whatever he himself
thought, they must ride that wind or perish.
And at least China's
culture was ancient and there were two billion Chinese. If the promises of this
Planetary Council were genuine, if all citizens were to enjoy equal access to
wealth and opportunity, that fact alone would give his people tremendous influence.
He smiled to himself.
Perhaps these glib Westerners had forgotten that China knew how to conquer
invaders it could not defeat.
Gerald Hatcher and his
fellows rose courteously as Marshal Tsien entered the conference room, his
shoulders straight and his face impassive. He was a big bastard for a Chinese,
Hatcher reflected, taller even than Vassily, and broad enough to make two of
Hatcher himself.
"Marshal," he
said, holding out his hand. Tsien took it with the briefest of hesitations, but
his grip was firm. "Thank you for coming. Won't you sit down,
please?"
Tsien waited
deliberately for his "hosts" to find seats first, then sat and laid
his briefcase neatly on the table. Hatcher knew Frederick and Vassily were
right in insisting that he, as the sole charter member of Earth's new Supreme
Chiefs of Staff with no prior connection to the Imperials, must serve as their
chief, but he wished he could disagree. This hard-faced, silent man was the
most powerful single serving military officer on the planet, critical to their
success, and he did not—to say the least—look cheerful.
"Marshal,"
Hatcher said finally, "we asked you to meet us so that we could speak
without the . . . pressure of a civilian presence—yours or ours. We won't ask
you to strike any 'deals' behind your leaders' backs, but there are certain
pragmatic realities we must all face. In that regard, we appreciate the
difficulties of your position. We hope—" he looked levelly into the dark,
unreadable eyes "—that you appreciate ours, as well."
"I
appreciate," Tsien said, "that my government and others which it is
pledged to defend have been issued an ultimatum."
Hatcher hid a wince. The
marshal's precise, accentless English made his almost toneless words even more
unpromising, but they also showed him the only possible approach, and he
reached for it before prudence could change his mind.
"Very well, Marshal
Tsien, I'll accept your terminology. In fact, I agree with your
interpretation." He thought he saw a flicker of surprise and continued
evenly. "But we're military men. We know what can happen if that ultimatum
is rejected, and, I hope, we're also all realists enough to accept the truth,
however unpalatable, and do our best to live with it."
"Your pardon,
General Hatcher," Tsien said, "but your countries' truth seems
somewhat more palatable than that which you offer mine or our allies. Our Asian
allies. I see here an American, a ConEuropean, a Russian—I do not see a
Chinese, a Korean, an Indian, a Thai, a Cambodian, a Malaysian. I do not even
see one of your own Japanese." He shrugged eloquently.
"No, you
don't—yet," Hatcher said quietly, and Tsien's eyes sharpened.
"However, General Tama, Chief of the Imperial Japanese Staff, will be
joining us as soon as he can hand over his present duties. So will Vice Admiral
Hawter of the Royal Australian Navy. It is our hope that you, too, will join
us, and that you will nominate three additional members of this body."
"Three?" Tsien
frowned slightly. This was more than he had expected. It would mean four
members from the Alliance against only five from the Western powers. But was it
enough? He rubbed the table top with a thoughtful finger. "That is
scarcely an equitable distribution in light of the populations involved, and
yet . . ."
His voice trailed off,
and Hatcher edged into the possible opening.
"If you will
consider the nations the men I mentioned represent, I believe you'll be forced
to admit that the representation is not inequitable in light of the actual
balance of military power." He met Tsien's eyes again, hoping the other
could see the sincerity in his own. The marshal didn't agree, but neither did
he disagree, and Hatcher went on deliberately.
"I might also
remind you, Marshal Tsien, that you do not and will not see any representative
of the extreme Islamic blocs here, nor any First World hard-liners. You say we
represent Western Powers, and so, by birth, we do. But we sit here as
representatives of Fleet Captain Horus in his capacity as the Lieutenant
Governor of Earth, and of the five men I've named, only Marshal Chernikov and
General Tama—both of whom have long-standing personal and family connections
with the Imperials—were among the chiefs of staff of their nations. We face a
danger such as this planet has never known, and our only purpose is to respond
to that danger. Towards this end, we have stepped outside traditional chains of
command in making our selections. You are the most senior officer we've asked
to join us, and I might point out that we've asked you to join us. If we
must, we will—as you are well aware we can—compel your obedience, but what we
want is your alliance."
"Perhaps,"
Tsien said, but his voice was thoughtful.
"Marshal, the world
as we have known it no longer exists," the American said softly. "We
may regret that or applaud it, but it is a fact. I won't lie to you. We've
asked you to join us because we need you. We need your people and your
resources, as allies, not vassals, and you're the one man who may be able to
convince your governments, your officers, and your men of that fact. We offer
you a full and equal partnership, and we're prepared to guarantee equal access
to Imperial technology, military and civilian, and complete local autonomy.
Which, I might add, is no more than our own governments have been guaranteed by
Governor MacIntyre and Lieutenant Governor Horus."
"And what of the
past, General Hatcher?" Tsien asked levelly. "Are we to forget five
centuries of Western imperialism? Are we to forget the unfair distribution of
the world's wealth? Are we, as some have," his eyes shifted slightly in
Chernikov's direction, "to forget our commitment to the Revolution in
order to accept the authority of a government not even of our own world?"
"Yes,
Marshal," Hatcher said equally levelly, "that's precisely what you
are to forget. We won't pretend those things never happened, yet you're known
as a student of history. You know how China's neighbors have suffered at
Chinese hands over the centuries. We can no more undo the past than your own
people could, but we can offer you an equal share in building the future,
assuming this planet has one to build. And that, Marshal Tsien, is the crux: if
we do not join together, there will be no future for any of us."
"So. Yet you have
said nothing of how this . . . body will be organized. Nine members. They are
to hold co-equal authority, at least in theory?" Hatcher nodded, and the
marshal rubbed his chin, the gesture oddly delicate in so large a man.
"That seems overly large, Comrade General. Could it be that you intend
to—I believe the term is 'pad'—it to present the appearance of equality while
holding the true power in your own hands?"
"It could be, but
it isn't. Lieutenant Governor Horus has a far more extensive military
background than any of us and will act as his own minister of defense. The
function of this body will be to serve as his advisors and assistants. Each of
us will have specific duties and operational responsibilities—there will be
more than enough of those to go around, I assure you—and the position of Chief
of Staff will rotate."
"I see." Tsien
laid his hands on his briefcase and studied his knuckles, then looked back up.
"How much freedom will I have in making my nominations?"
"Complete
freedom." Hatcher very carefully kept his hope out of his voice. "The
Lieutenant Governor alone will decide upon their acceptability. If any of your
nominees are rejected, you'll be free to make fresh nominations until
candidates mutually acceptable to the Asian Alliance and the Lieutenant
Governor are selected. It is my understanding that his sole criterion will be
those officers' willingness to work as part of his own command team, and that
he will evaluate that willingness on the basis of their affirmation of loyalty
under an Imperial lie detector." He saw a spark of anger in Tsien's eyes
and went on unhurriedly. "I may add that all of us will be required to
demonstrate our own loyalty in precisely the same fashion and in the presence
of all of our fellows, including yourself and your nominees."
The anger in Tsien's
hooded gaze faded, and he nodded slowly.
"Very well, General
Hatcher, I am empowered to accept your offer, and I will do so. I caution you
that I do not agree without reservations, and that it will be difficult to
convince many of my own officers to accept my decision. It goes against the
grain to surrender all we have fought for, whether it is to Western powers or
to powers from beyond the stars, yet you are at least partly correct. The world
we have known has ended. We will join your efforts to save this planet and
build anew. Not without doubts and not without suspicion—you would not believe
otherwise, unless you were fools—but because we must. Yet remember this: more
than half this world's population is Asian, gentlemen."
"We understand,
Marshal," Hatcher said softly.
"I believe you do,
Comrade General," Tsien said with the first, faint ghost of a smile.
"I believe you do."
Life Councilor Geb
brushed stone dust from his thick, white hair as yet another explosive charge
bellowed behind him. It was a futile gesture. The air was thin, but the
damnable dust made it seem a lot thicker, and his scalp was coated in fresh
grit almost before he lowered his hand.
He watched another of
the sublight parasites Dahak had left for Earth's defense—the destroyer Ardat,
he thought—hover above the seething dust, her eight-thousand-ton hull dwarfed
by the gaping hole which would, when finished, contain control systems,
magazines, shield generators, and all the other complex support systems. Her tractors
plucked up multi-ton slabs of a mountain's bones, and then the ship lifted away
into the west, bearing yet another load of refuse to a watery grave in the
Pacific. Even before Ardat was out of sight, the Terra-born work crews
swarmed over the newly-exposed surface of the excavation in their breath masks,
drills screaming as they prepared the next series of charges.
Geb viewed the activity
with mixed pride and distaste. This absolutely flat surface of raw stone had
once been the top of Ecuador's Mount Chimborazo, but that was before its
selection to house Planetary Defense Center Escorpion had sealed the
mountain's fate. The sublight battleships Shirhan and Escal
arrived two days later, and while Escal hovered over the towering peak, Shirhan
activated her main energy batteries and slabbed off the top three hundred
meters of earth and stone. Escal caught the megaton chunks of wreckage
in her tractors while Shirhan worked, lifting them for her pressers to
toss out of the way into the ocean. It had taken the two battleships a total of
twenty-three minutes to produce a level stone mesa just under six thousand
meters high, and then they'd departed to mutilate the next mountain on their
list.
The construction crews
had moved in in their wake, and they had labored mightily ever since. Imperial
technology had held the ecological effects of their labors to a minimum
impossible for purely Terran resources, but Geb had seen Chimborazo before his
henchmen arrived. The esthetic desecration of their labors revolted him; what
they had accomplished produced his pride.
PDC Escorpion,
one of forty-six such bases going up across the surface of the planet, each a
project gargantuan enough to daunt the Pharaohs, and each with a completion
deadline of exactly eighteen months. It was an impossible task . . . and they
were doing it anyway.
He stepped aside as the
whine of a gravitonic drive approached from one side. The stocky, olive-brown
Imperial at the power bore's controls nodded to him, but despite his rank, he
was only one more rubber-necker in her way, and he backed further as she
positioned her tremendous machine carefully, checking the coordinates in her
inertial guidance systems against the engineers' plat of the base to be. An
eye-searing dazzle flickered as she powered up the cutting head and brought it
to bear.
The power bore floated a
rock-steady half-meter off the ground, and Geb's implants tingled with the
torrent of focused energy. A hot wind billowed back from the rapidly sinking
shaft, blowing a thick, plume of powdered rock to join the choking pall hanging
over the site, and he stepped still further back. Another thunderous explosion
burst in on him, and he shook his head, marveling at the demonic energy loosed
upon this hapless mountain. Every safety regulation in the book—Imperial and
Terran alike—had been relaxed to the brink of insanity, and the furious labor
went on day and night, rain and sun, twenty-four hours a day. It might stop for
a hurricane; nothing less would be permitted to interfere.
It was bad enough for
his Imperials, he thought, watching the dust-caked woman concentrate, but at
least they had their biotechnics to support them. The Terra-born did not, and
their primitive equipment required far more of pure muscle to begin with. But
Horus had less than five thousand Imperials; barely three thousand of them
could be released to construction projects, and the PDCs were only one of the
clamorous needs Geb and his assistants had to meet somehow. With enhanced
personnel and their machinery spread so thin, he had no choice but to call upon
the primitive substitutes Earth could provide. At least he could lift in
equipment, materials, and fuel on tractors as needed.
A one-man grav scooter
grounded beside him. Tegran, the senior Imperial on the Escorpion site,
climbed off it to slog through the blowing dust to Geb's side and pushed up his
goggles to watch the power bore at work.
Tegran was much younger,
biologically, at least, than Geb, but his face was gaunt, and he'd lost weight
since coming out of stasis. Geb wasn't surprised. Tegran had never personally
offended against the people of Earth, but like most of the Imperials freed from
Anu's stasis facilities, he was driving himself until he dropped to wash away
the stigma of his past.
The cutting head died,
and the power bore operator backed away from the vertical shaft. A Terra-born,
Imperial-equipped survey team scurried forward, instruments probing and
measuring, and its leader lifted a hand, thumb raised in approval. The
dust-covered woman responded with the same gesture and moved away, heading for
the next site, and Horus turned to Tegran.
"Nice," he
said. "I make that a bit under twenty minutes to drill a
hundred-fifty-meter shaft. Not bad at all."
"Um," Tegran
said. He walked over to the edge of the fifty meter-wide hole which would one
day house a hyper missile launcher and stood peering down at its glassy walls.
"It's better, but I can squeeze another four or five percent efficiency
out of the bores if I tweak the software a bit more."
"Wait a minute,
Tegran—you've already cut the margins mighty close!"
"You worry too
much, Geb." Tegran grinned tightly. "There's a hefty safety factor
built into the components. If I drop the designed lifetime to, say, three years
instead of twenty, I can goose the equipment without risking personnel. And
since we've only got two years to get dug in—" He shrugged.
"All right,"
Geb said after a moment's thought, "but get me the figures before you make
any more modifications. And I want a copy of the software. If you can pull it
off, I'll want all the sites to be able to follow suit."
"Fine," Tegran
agreed, walking back to his scooter. Geb followed him, and the project boss
paused as he remounted. "What's this I hear about non-military
enhancement?" he asked, his tone elaborately casual.
Geb eyed him
thoughtfully. A few other Imperials had muttered darkly over the notion, for
the Fourth Imperium had been an ancient civilization by Terran standards.
Despite supralight travel, over-crowding on its central planets had led to a
policy restricting full enhancement (and the multi-century lifespans which went
with it) solely to military personnel and colonists. Which, Geb reflected, had
been one reason the Fleet never had trouble finding recruits even with minimum
hitches of a century and a half . . . and why Horus's policy of providing full
enhancement to every adult Terran, for all intents and purposes, offended the
sensibilities of the purists among his Imperials.
Yet Geb hadn't expected
Tegran to be one of them, for the project head knew better than most that
enhancing every single human on the planet, even if there had been time for it,
would leave them with far too few people to stand off an Achuultani incursion.
"We started this
week," he said finally. "Why?"
"Wellllllllll . .
." Tegran looked back at the departing power bore, then waved expressively
about the site. "I just wanted to get my bid for them in first. I've got a
hell of a job to do here, and—"
"Don't worry,"
Geb cut in, hiding his relief. "We need them everywhere, but the PDCs have
a high priority. I don't want anybody with implants standing idle, but I'll try
to match the supply of operators to the equipment you actually have on
hand."
"Good!" Tegran
readjusted his goggles and lifted his scooter a meter off the ground, then
grinned broadly at his boss. "These Terrans are great, Geb. They work till
they drop, then get back up and start all over again. Enhance me enough of
them, and I'll damned well build you another Dahak!"
He waved and vanished
into the bedlam, and Geb smiled after him.
He was getting too old
for this, Horus thought for no more than the three millionth time. He yawned,
then stretched and rose from behind his desk and collected his iced tea from
the coaster. Caffeine dependency wasn't something the Imperium had gone in for,
but he'd been barely sixty when he arrived here. A lifetime of acculturation
had taken its toll.
He walked over to the
windowed wall of his office atop White Tower and stared out over the bustling
nocturnal activity of Shepard Center. The rocket plumes of the Terran space
effort were a thing of the past, but the huge field was almost too small for
the Imperial auxiliaries and bigger sublight ships—destroyers, cruisers,
battleships, and transports—which thronged it now. And this was only one of the
major bases. The largest, admittedly, but only one.
The first enhanced
Terra-born crewmen were training in the simulators now. Within a month, he'd
have skeleton crews for most of the major units Dahak had left behind.
In another six, he'd have crews for the smaller ships and pilots for the
fighters. They'd be short on experience, but they'd be there, and they'd pick
up experience quickly.
Maybe even quickly
enough.
He sighed and took
himself to task. Anxiety was acceptable; depression was not, but it was hard to
avoid when he remembered the heedless, youthful passion which had pitted him in
rebellion against the Imperium.
The Fourth Imperium had
arisen from the sole planet of the Third which the Achuultani had missed. It
had dedicated itself to the destruction of the next incursion with a militancy
which dwarfed Terran comprehension, but that had been seven millennia before
Horus's birth, and the Achuultani had never come. And so, perhaps, there were
no Achuultani. Heresy. Unthinkable to say it aloud. Yet the suspicion had
gnawed at their brains, and they'd come to resent the endless demands of their
long, regimented preparation. Which explained, if it did not excuse, why the
discontented of Dahak's crew had lent themselves to the mutiny which
brought them to Earth.
And so here they were,
Horus thought, sipping iced tea and watching the moonless sky of the world
which had become his own, with the resources of this single, primitive planet
and whatever of Imperial technology they could build and improvise in the time
they had, face-to-face with the bogey man they'd decided no longer existed.
Six billion people. Like
the clutter of ships below his window, it seemed a lot . . . until he compared
it to the immensity of the foe sweeping towards them from beyond those distant
stars.
He straightened his
shoulders and stared up at the cold, clear chips of light. So be it. He had
once betrayed the Fleet uniform he wore, but now, at last, he faced his race's
ancient enemy. He faced it ill-prepared and ill-equipped, yet the human race
had survived two previous incursions. By the skin of their racial teeth and the
Maker's grace, perhaps, but they'd survived, which was more than any of
their prehistoric predecessors could say.
He drew a deep breath,
his thoughts reaching out across the light-years to his daughter and Colin
MacIntyre. They depended upon him to defend their world while they sought the
assistance Earth needed, and when they returned—not if—there would be a planet
here to greet them. He threw that to the uncaring stars like a solemn vow and
then turned his back upon them. He sat back down at his desk and bent over his
endless reams of reports once more.
Alheer
va-Chanak's forehead crinkled in disgust as a fresh sneeze threatened. He
wiggled on his command pedestal, fighting the involuntary reflex, and heard the
high-pitched buzz of his co-pilot's amusement—buried in the explosive eruption
of the despised sneeze.
"Kreegor
seize all colds!" va-Chanak grunted, mopping his broad breathing slits
with a tissue. Roghar's laughter buzzed in his ear as he lost the last vestige
of control, and va-Chanak swiveled his sensory cluster to bend a stern gaze
upon him. "All very well for you, you unhatched grub!" he snarled.
"You'd probably think it was hilarious if it happened inside a vac
suit!"
"Certainly
not," Roghar managed to return with a semblance of decent self-control.
"Of course, I did warn you not to spend so long soaking just before a
departure."
Va-Chanak
suppressed an ignoble desire to throttle his co-pilot. The fact that Roghar was
absolutely right only made the temptation stronger, but these four- and
five-month missions could be pure torment for the amphibious Mersakah. And, he
grumbled to himself, especially for a fully-active sire like himself. Four
thousand years of civilization was a frail shield against the spawning urges of
all pre-history, but where was he to find a compliant school of dams in an
asteroid extraction operation? Nowhere, that was bloody well where, and if he
chose to spend a few extra day parts soaking in the habitat's swamp sections,
that should have been his own affair.
And would have
been, he thought gloomily, if he hadn't brought this damned cold with him. Ah,
well! It would wear itself out, and a few more tours would give him a credit
balance fit to attract the finest dam. Not to mention the glamour which clung
to spacefarers in groundlings' eyes, and—
An alarm
squealed, and Alheer va-Chanak's sensory cluster snapped back to his
instruments. All three eyes irised wide in disbelief as the impossible readings
registered.
"Kreegor
take it, look at that!" Roghar gasped beside him, but va-Chanak was
already stabbing at the communications console.
More of the immense
ships—ninety dihar long if they were a har—appeared out of nowhere,
materializing like fen fey from the nothingness of space. Scores of
them—hundreds!
Roghar babbled away
about first-contacts and alien life forms beside him, but even as he gabbled,
the co-pilot was spinning the extractor ship and aligning the main engines to
kill velocity for rendezvous. Va-Chanak left him to it, and his own mind burned
with conflicting impulses. Disbelief. Awe. Wonder and delight that the Mersakah
were not alone. Horror that it had been left to him to play ambassador to the
future which had suddenly arrived. Concern lest their visitors misinterpret his
fumbling efforts. Visions of immortality—and how the dams would react to
this—!
He was still
punching up his communications gear when the closest Achuultani starship blew
his vessel out of existence.
The shattered
wreckage tumbled away, and the Achuultani settled into their formation.
Normal-space drives woke, and the mammoth cylinders swept in-system, arrowing
towards the planet of Mers at twenty-eight percent of light-speed while their
missile sections prepped their weapons.
The endless,
twenty-meter-wide column of lightning fascinated him. It wasn't really
lightning, but that was how Vlad Chernikov thought of it, though the center of
any Terran lightning bolt would be a dead zone beside its titanic density. The
force field which channeled it also silenced it and muted its terrible
brilliance, but Vlad had received his implants. His sensors felt it, like a tide
race of fire, even through the field, and it awed him.
He turned away, folding
his hands behind him as he crossed the huge chamber at Dahak's heart.
Only Command One and Two were as well protected, for this was the source of Dahak's
magic. The starship boasted three hundred and twelve fusion power plants, but
though he could move and fight upon the wings of their power, he required more
than that to outspeed light itself.
This howling chain of
power was that more. It was Dahak's core tap, a tremendous, immaterial
funnel that reached deep into hyper space, connecting the ship to a dimension
of vastly higher energy states. It dragged that limitless power in, focused and
refined it, and directed it into the megaton mass of his Enchanach Drive.
And with it, the drive
worked its sorcery and created the perfectly-opposed, converging gravity masses
which forced Dahak out of normal space in a series of instantaneous
transpositions. It took a measurable length of time to build those masses
between transpositions, but that interval was perceptible only to one such as Dahak.
A tiny, imperfect flaw the time stream of the cosmos never noticed.
Which was as well.
Should Dahak dwell in normal space any longer than that, catastrophe
would be the lot of any star system he crossed. As those fields converged upon
his hull, he became ever so briefly more massive than the most massive star.
Which was why ships of his ilk did not use supralight speed within a system,
for the initial activation and final deactivation of the Enchanach Drive took
much longer, a time measured in microseconds, not femtoseconds. Anu had induced
a drive failure to divert the starship from its original mission for
"emergency repairs," and a tiny error in Dahak's crippled
return to sublight speeds explained the irregularity of Pluto's orbit which had
puzzled Terran astronomers for so long. Had it occurred deep enough in Sol's
gravity well, the star might well have gone nova.
Chernikov plugged his
neural feed back into the engineering subsection of Dahak's computer
net, and the computers answered him with a joyousness he was still getting used
to. It was odd how alive, how aware, those electronic brains seemed, and
Baltan, his ex-mutineer assistant, insisted they had been far less so before the
mutiny.
Chernikov believed him,
and he believed he understood the happiness which suffused the computer net. Dahak
had a crew once more—understrength, perhaps, by Imperial standards, but a
crew—and that was as it should be. Not just because he had been lonely, but
because he needed them to provide that critical element in any warship:
redundancy. It was dangerous for so powerful a unit to be utterly dependent
upon its central computer, especially when battle damage might cut Comp Cent
off from essential components of its tremendous hull.
So it was good that men
had returned to Dahak at last. Especially now, when the very survival of
their species depended upon him.
"Attention on
deck," Dahak intoned as Colin entered the conference room, and he winced almost
imperceptibly as his command team rose with punctilious formality. He smoothed
his expression and crossed impassively to the head of the crystalline
conference table, making yet another mental note to have a heart-to-diode talk
with the computer.
Dozens of faces looked
back at him from around the table, but at least he'd gotten used to facing so
many eyes. Dahak was technically a single ship, but one with a
full-strength crew a quarter-million strong, a normal sublight parasite
strength of two hundred warships, and the firepower to shatter planets. His
commander might be called a captain, yet for all intents and purposes he was an
admiral, charged with the direction of more destructiveness than Terra's
humanity had ever dreamed was possible, and the size of Colin's staff reflected
that.
There were a lot of
"Fleet Captains" on it, though Dahak's new protocol demanded that
they be addressed in Colin's presence either as "Commander" or simply
by the department they headed, since he was the only "Senior Fleet
Captain" and there could be but one captain aboard a warship. The Imperium
had used any officer's full rank and branch, which Colin and his Terra-born
found too cumbersome, but Dahak had obstinately resisted Colin's suggestion
that he might be called "Commodore" to ease the problem.
Colin let his eyes sweep
over them as he sat and they followed suit. Jiltanith was at his right, as
befitted his second-in-command and the officer charged with the organization
and day-to-day management of Dahak's operation. Hector MacMahan sat at
his left, as impeccable in the space-black of the Imperial Marines as he had
ever been in the uniform of the United States. Beyond them, rows of officers,
each department head flanked by his or her senior assistants, ran down the
sides of the table to meet at its foot, where he faced Vlad Chernikov, the man
who had inherited the shipboard authority which had once been Anu's.
"Thank you all for
coming," Colin said. "As you know, we'll be leaving supralight to
approach the Sheskar System in approximately twenty-one hours. With luck, that
means we'll soon re-establish contact with the Imperium, but we can't count on
that. We're going into a totally unknown situation, and I want final readiness
estimates from all of my senior department heads—and for all of you to hear
them—before we do."
Heads nodded, and he
turned to Jiltanith.
"Would you care to
begin with a general overview, XO?" he asked.
"Certes,
Captain," Jiltanith said, and turned confident eyes to her fellows.
"Our Dahak hath been a teacher most astute—aye, and a taskmaster of the
sternest!" That won a mutter of laughter, for Dahak had driven his new
crew so hard ten percent of even his capacity had been committed full-time to
their training and neural-feed education. "While 'tis true I would be
better pleased with some small time more of practice, yet have our folk learned
their duties well, and I say with confidence our officers and crew will do all
mortal man may do if called."
"Thank you,"
Colin said. It was scarcely a detailed report, but he hadn't asked for that,
and he turned to Hector MacMahan.
"Ground
Forces?"
"The ground forces
are better organized than we could reasonably expect," the hawk-faced
Marine replied, "if not yet quite as well as I'd like.
"We have four
separate nationalities in our major formations, and we'll need a few more
months to really shake down properly. For the moment, we've adopted Imperial
organization and ranks but confined them to our original unit structures. Our
USFC and SAS people are our recon/special forces component; the Second Marines
have been designated as our assault component; the German First Armored will
operate our ground combat vehicles; and the Sendai Division and the Nineteenth
Guards Parachute Division are our main ground force.
"There's been a bit
of rivalry over who got the choicest assignment, but it hasn't gotten physical
. . . not very often, anyway." He shrugged. "These are all elite
formations, and until we can integrate them fully, a continued sense of identity
is inevitable, but they've settled in and mastered their new weapons quite
well. I'm confident we can handle anything we have to handle."
"Thank you,"
Colin said again. He turned to General Georgi Treshnikov, late of the Russian
Air Force and now commander of the three hundred Imperial fighters Dahak
had retained for self-defense. "Parasite Command?"
"As Hector, we are
ready," Treshnikov said. "We have even more nationalities, but less
difficulty in integration, for we did not embark complete national formations
to crew our fighters."
"Thank you.
Intelligence, Commander Ninhursag?"
"We've done all we
can with the non-data Dahak has been able to give us, Captain. You've all seen
our reports." The stocky, pleasantly plain Imperial who had been Nergal's
spy within Anu's camp shrugged. "Until we have some hard facts to plug
into our analyses, we're only marking time."
"I understand.
Biosciences?"
"Bioscience is
weary but ready, Captain," Fleet Captain (B) Cohanna replied. Fifty
thousand years in stasis hadn't blunted her confidence . . . or her sense of
humor. "We finished the last enhancement procedures last month, and we're
a little short on biotechnic hardware at the moment—" that won a fresh
mutter of laughter "—but other than that, we're in excellent shape."
"Thank you.
Maintenance?"
"We're looking
good, Captain." Fleet Captain (M) Geran was another of Nergal's
"children," but, aside from his eyes, he looked more like a Terran,
with dark auburn hair, unusually light skin for an Imperial, and a mobile mouth
that smiled easily. "Dahak's repair systems did a bang-up job, and he
slapped anything he wasn't using into stasis. I'd like more practice on damage
control, but—" He raised his right hand, palm upward, and Colin nodded.
"Understood.
Hopefully you'll have lots of time to go on practicing. We'll try to
keep it that way. Tactical?"
"We're in good
shape, sir," Tamman said. "Battle Comp's doing well with simulators
and training problems. Our Terra-born aren't as comfortable with their neural
feeds as I'd like yet, but that's only a matter of practice."
"Logistics?"
"Buttoned up,
sir," Fleet Commander (L) Caitrin O'Rourke said confidently. "We've
got facilities for three times the people we've actually got aboard, and all
park and hydroponic areas have been fully reactivated, so provisions and life
support are no sweat. Magazines are at better than ninety-eight percent—closer
to ninety-nine—and we're in excellent shape for spares."
"Engineering?"
"Engineering looks
good, sir," Chernikov replied. "Our Imperials and Terra-born have
shaken down extremely well together. I am confident."
"Good. Very
good." Colin leaned back and smiled at his officers, glad none of them had
tried to gloss over any small concerns they still had. Not that he'd expected
them to.
"In that case, I
think we can conclude, unless there are any questions?" As he'd expected,
there were none. In a very real sense, this meeting had been almost ceremonial,
a chance for them to show their confidence to one another.
"Very well."
He rose and nodded to them all. "We shall adjourn." He started for
the door, and a mellow voice spoke again.
"Attention on
deck," it repeated, and Colin swallowed a resigned sigh as his
solemn-faced officers stood once more.
"Carry on, ladies
and gentlemen," he said, and stepped out the hatch.
"Supralight
shutdown in two minutes," Dahak remarked calmly.
Colin took great pains
to project a matching calm, but his own relaxation was all too artificial, and
he saw the same strain, hidden with greater or lesser success, in all of his
bridge officers. Dahak was at battle stations, and a matching team under
Jiltanith manned Command Two on the far side of the core hull. The holographic
images of Command Two's counterparts sat beside each of his officers, which
made his bridge seem a bit more crowded but meant everyone knew exactly what
was happening . . . and that he got to sit beside Jiltanith's image on duty.
A score of officers were
physically present at their consoles on the starlit command deck. In an
emergency, Colin could have run the ship without any of them, something which
would have been impossible with the semi-aware Comp Cent of yore. But even
though Dahak was now capable of assessing intent and exercising discretion,
there were limits to the details Colin's human brain could handle. Each of his
highly-trained officers took his or her own portion of the burden off of him,
and he was devoutly thankful for their presence.
"Sublight in one
minute," Dahak intoned, and Colin felt the beginnings of shutdown flowing
through his interface with Chernikov's engineering computers. The measured
sequence of commands moved like clockwork, and a tiny, almost imperceptible
vibration shook Dahak's gargantuan bulk.
"Sublight . . .
now," Dahak reported, and the stars moving across the visual display were
abruptly still.
A G3 star floated
directly "ahead" of Colin in the projection. It was the brightest
single object in view, and it abruptly began to grow as Sarah Meir, his
astrogator, engaged the sublight drive.
"Core tap
shutdown," Dahak announced.
"Enhance image on
the star system, Dahak," Colin requested, and the star swelled while a
three-dimensional schematic of the Sheskar System's planetary orbits flicked to
life about it. Only the outermost planet was visible even to Dahak at their
present range, but tiny circles on each orbit trace indicated the position each
planet should hold.
"Any artificial
radiation?"
"Negative,
Captain," Dahak replied, and Colin bit his lip. Sheskar was—or had
been—the Imperium's forward bastion on the traditional Achuultani approach
vector. Perimeter Security should have detected and challenged them almost instantly.
"Captain,"
Dahak broke the silence which had fallen, "I have detected discrepancies
in the system."
The visual display
altered as he spoke. Oddly clumped necklaces of far smaller dots replaced the
circles representing Sheskar's central trio of planets, spreading ominously
about the central star, and Colin swallowed.
Dahak had gone
sublight at the closest possible safe distance from Sheskar, but that was still
eleven light-hours out. Even at his maximum sublight velocity, it would have
taken almost twenty-four hours to reach the primary, yet it had become
depressingly clear that there was no reason to travel that deep into the
system, and Colin had stopped five light-hours out to save time when they left.
At the moment, he,
Jiltanith, Hector MacMahan, and Ninhursag sat in Conference One, watching a
scaled-down holo of the star system while they tried to decide where to leave
to.
"I have completed
preliminary scans, Captain," Dahak announced.
"Well? Was it the
Achuultani?"
"It is, of course,
impossible to be certain, but I would estimate that it was not. Had it been an
incursion, it would, of necessity, have followed a path other than that
traditionally employed by the Achuultani, else the scanner arrays which reported
this incursion had already been destroyed. Since they were not, I conclude that
it was not the Achuultani who accomplished this."
"Just what we
needed," Hector said quietly. "Somebody else who goes around
blowing away entire planets."
"Unfortunately,
that would appear to be precisely what has happened, General MacMahan. It would
not, however, appear to be of immediate concern. My scans indicate that this
destruction occurred on the close order of forty-eight thousand years
ago."
"How close?"
Colin demanded.
"Plus or minus five
percent, Captain."
"Shit." Colin
looked up apologetically as the expletive escaped him, but no one seemed to
have noticed. He drew a deep breath. "All right, Dahak, cut to the chase.
What do you think happened?"
"Analysis rules out
the employment of kinetic weaponry," Dahak said precisely,
"distribution of the planetary rubble is not consistent with impact
patterns. Rather, it would appear that the planetary bodies suffered implosive
destruction consistent with the use of gravitonic warheads, a weapon, so far as
is known to the Imperium's data base, the Achuultani have never employed."
"Gravitonic?"
Colin tugged on his prominent nose, and his green eyes narrowed. "I don't
like the sound of that."
"Nor I,"
Jiltanith said quietly. "If 'twas not the Achuultani, then must it have
been another, and such weapons lie even now within our magazines."
"Exactly,"
Colin said. He shuddered at the thought. A heavy gravitonic warhead produced a
nice, neat little black hole. Not very long-lived, and not big enough to damage
most suns, but big enough, and a hyper-capable missile with the right targeting
could put the damned thing almost inside a planet.
"That is
true," Dahak observed, then hesitated briefly, as if he faced a conclusion
he wanted to reject. "I regret to say, Captain, that the destruction
matches that which would be associated with our own Mark Tens. In point of
fact, and after making due allowance for the time which has passed, it
corresponds almost exactly to the results produced by those weapons."
"Hector?
Ninhursag?"
"Dahak's dancing
around the point, Colin," MacMahan's face was grim. "There's a very
simple and likely explanation."
"I agree,"
Ninhursag said in a small voice. "I never would have believed it could
happen, but it's got all the earmarks of a civil war."
A brief silence followed
the words someone had finally said. Then Colin cleared his throat.
"Response,
Dahak?"
"I . . . am forced
to concur." Dahak's mellow voice sounded sad. "Sheskar Four, in
particular, was very heavily defended. Based upon available data and the fact
that no advanced alien race other than the Achuultani had been encountered by
the Imperium prior to the mutiny, I must conclude that only the Imperium itself
possessed the power to do what has been done."
"What about someone
they ran into after the mutiny?"
"Possible, but
unlikely, Captain. Due in no small part to previous incursions, there are very
few—indeed, effectively no—habitable worlds between Sol and Sheskar. Logic thus
suggests that any hostile aliens would have been required to fight their way
across a substantial portion of the Imperium even to reach Sheskar. Assuming
technical capabilities on a par with those of this ship—a conclusion suggested,
though not proven, by my analysis of the weaponry employed—that would require a
hostile imperium whose military potential equaled or exceeded that of the
Imperium itself. While it is not impossible that such an entity might have been
encountered, I would rate the probability as no greater than that of an
Achuultani attack."
Colin looked around the
table again, then back at the silent holo display. "This isn't good."
"Hast a gift for
understatement, my Colin." Jiltanith shook her head. "Good Dahak,
what likelihood wouldst thou assign to decision by the Imperium 'gainst
fortifying Sheskar anew?"
"Slight,"
Dahak said.
"Why?" Colin
asked. "There's nothing left to fortify."
"Inaccurate,
Captain. No Earth-like planets remain, but Sheskar was selected for a Fleet
base because of its location, not its planets, and it now possesses abundant
large asteroids for installation sites. Indeed, the absence of atmosphere would
make those installations more defensible, not less."
"In other
words," MacMahan murmured, "they would have come back if they were
interested in re-establishing their pre-war frontiers."
"Precisely,
General."
Another, longer silence
fell, and Colin drew a deep breath.
"All right, let's
look at it. We have a destroyed base in a vital location. It appears to have
been taken out with Imperial weapons, implying a civil war as a probable cause.
It wasn't rebuilt. What does that imply?"
"Naught we wish to
discover." Jiltanith managed a small smile. "'Twould seem the
Imperium hath fallen 'pon hard times."
"True,"
MacMahan said. "I see two probabilities, Colin." Colin raised an
eyebrow, inviting him to continue.
"First, they wiped
each other out. That would explain the failure to rebuild, and it would also
mean our entire mission is pointless." A shiver ran through his human
audience, but he continued unflinchingly.
"On the other hand,
I don't believe anything the size of the Imperium wiped itself out completely.
The Imperium is—or was, or whatever—huge. Even assuming anyone could have been
insane enough to embark on destruction on that scale, I don't see how they
could do it. Their infrastructure would erode out from under them as
they took out industrialized systems, and it seems unlikely anyone would follow
leaders mad enough to try."
"Yet 'twas done to Sheskar,"
Jiltanith pointed out.
"True, but Sheskar
was primarily a military base, 'Tanni, not a civilian system. The decision to
attack it would be evaluated purely in terms of military expedience, like
nuking a well-armed island base in the middle of an ocean. It's a lot easier to
decide to hit a target like that."
"All right,"
Colin nodded. "But if they didn't wipe themselves out, why didn't they
come back?"
"That's probability
two," MacMahan said flatly. "They did so much damage they backslid.
They could have done a fair job of smashing themselves without actually
destroying all their planets. It's hard for me to visualize a high-tech planet
which wasn't nuked—or something like it—decivilizing completely, but I
can accept that more easily than the idea that all their planets look like
this." He gestured at the holo display.
"Besides, they
might have damaged themselves in other ways. Suppose they fought their war and
found themselves faced with massive reconstruction closer to the heart of the
Imperium? Sheskar is—was—a hell of a long way from their next nearest inhabited
system, and, as Dahak has pointed out, this area isn't exactly prime real
estate. If they had heavily damaged areas closer to home, they could've decided
to deal with those first. Afterward, the area on the far side of the Imperium,
where damage from the Achuultani hadn't wrecked so many planets to begin with,
would have been a natural magnet for future expansion."
"Mayhap, yet that
leaveth still a question. Whyfor, if Sheskar was so vital, rebuild it
not?"
"I'm afraid I can
answer that," Ninhursag said unhappily. "Maybe Anu wasn't as crazy—or
quite as unique in his craziness—as we thought." She shrugged as all eyes
turned to her. "What I'm trying to say is that if things got so bad the
Imperium actually fought a civil war, they weren't Imperials anymore.
I'm the only person in this room who was an adult at the time of the mutiny,
and I know how I would've reacted to the thought of wiping out a Fleet
base. Even those of us who didn't really believe in the Achuultani—even the
'atheists,' I suppose you might call them, who violently rejected their
existence—would have hesitated to do that. That's why Anu lied to us about his
own intent to attack the Imperium."
She looked unhappily at
the holo for a moment, and none of the others intruded upon her silence.
"None of you were
ever Imperial citizens, so you may not understand what I'm trying to say, but
preparing to fight the Achuultani was something we'd societized into ourselves
on an almost instinctual level. Even those who most resented the regimentation,
the discipline, wouldn't have destroyed our defenses. It would be like . . .
like Holland blowing up its dikes because of one dry summer, for Maker's
sake!"
"You're saying that
disbelief in the Achuultani must have become general?" Colin said.
"That if it hadn't, the Fleet would never have let itself be caught up in
something like a civil war in the first place?"
"Exactly. And if
that's true, why rebuild Sheskar as a base against an enemy that doesn't
exist?" Ninhursag gave a short, ugly laugh. "Maybe we were the wave
of the future instead of just a bunch of murderous traitors!"
"Easy,
'Hursag." MacMahan touched her shoulder, and she inhaled sharply.
"Sorry." Her
voice was a bit husky. "It's just that I don't really want to believe what
I'm saying—especially not now that I know how wrong we were!"
"Maybe not, but it
makes sense," Colin said slowly.
"Agreed,
Captain," Dahak said. "Indeed, there is another point. For Fleet
vessels to have participated in this action would require massive changes in
core programming by at least one faction. Without that, Fleet Central Alpha
Priority imperatives would have precluded any warfare which dissipated
resources and so weakened Battle Fleet's ability to resist an incursion. This
would appear to support Fleet Commander Ninhursag's analysis."
"All right. But
even if it's not the Imperium we came to find, there may still be an
Imperium somewhere up ahead of us." Colin tried to project more optimism
than he felt. "Dahak, what was the nearest piece of prime real estate? The
closest star system which wasn't purely a military base?"
"Defram,"
Dahak replied without hesitation. "A G2-K5 binary system with two
inhabited planets. As of the last Imperial census in my data base, the system
population was six-point-seven-one-seven billion. Main industries—"
"That's
enough," Colin interrupted. "How far away is it?"
"One hundred
thirty-three-point-four light-years, Captain."
"Um . . . bit over
two months at max. That means a round trip of just over eleven months before we
could get back to Earth."
"Approximately
eleven-point-three-two months, Captain."
"All right,
people," Colin sighed. "I don't see we have too much choice. Let's go
to Defram and see what we can see."
"Aye,"
Jiltanith agreed. " 'Twould seem therein our best hope doth lie."
"I agree,"
MacMahan said, and Ninhursag nodded silently.
"Okay. I want to
sit here and think a little more. Take the watch, please, 'Tanni. Dismiss from
battle stations, then have Sarah get us underway on sublight. I'll join you in
Command One when I finish here." Jiltanith rose with a silent nod, and he
turned to the others.
"Hector, you and
'Hursag sit down and build me models of as many scenarios as you can. I know
you don't have any hard data, but put your heads together with our other adult
Imperials and Dahak and extrapolate trends."
"Yes, sir,"
MacMahan said quietly, and Colin propped his chin in his hands, elbows on the
table, and stared sadly at the holo as the others filed out the hatch. He
expected no sudden inspiration, for there was nothing here to offer it. He only
knew that he needed to be alone with his thoughts for a while, and, unlike his
subordinates, he had the authority to be that way.
"Well, Marshal
Tsien?"
Tsien regarded Gerald
Hatcher levelly as they strode down the hall. It was the first time either had
spoken since leaving the Lieutenant Governor's office, and Tsien crooked an
eyebrow, inviting amplification. The American only smiled, declining to make
his question more specific, but Tsien understood and, in all honesty,
appreciated his tact.
"I am . . .
impressed, Comrade General," he said. "The Lieutenant Governor is a formidable
man." His answer meant more than the words said, but he had already seen
enough of this American to know he would understand.
"He's all of
that," Hatcher agreed, opening a door and waving Tsien into his own
office. "He's had to be," he added in a grimmer voice.
Tsien nodded as they
crossed the deserted office. It was raining again, he noted, watching the water
roll down the windows. Hatcher gestured to an armchair facing the desk as he
circled to reach his own swiveled chair.
"So I have understood,"
Tsien replied, sitting carefully. "Yet he seems unaware of it. He does not
strike one as so . . . so—"
"Grand?
Self-important?" Hatcher suggested with a grin, and Tsien chuckled despite
himself.
"Both of those
things, I suppose. Forgive me, but you in the West have always seemed to me to
be overly taken with personal pomp and ceremony. With us, the office or
occasion, not the individual, deserves such accolades. Do not mistake me,
Comrade General; we have our own methods of deification, but we have learned
from past mistakes. Those we deify now are—for the most part—safely dead. My
country would understand your Governor. Our Governor, I suppose I must
say. If your purpose is to win my admission that I am impressed by him, you
have succeeded, General Hatcher."
"Good."
Hatcher frowned thoughtfully, his face somehow both tighter and more open.
"Do you also accept that we're being honest with you, Marshal?"
Tsien regarded him for a
moment, then dipped his head in a tiny nod.
"Yes. All of my
nominees were confirmed, and the Governor's demonstration of his
biotechnics—" Tsien hesitated briefly on the still unfamiliar word
"—and those other items of Imperial technology were also convincing. I
believe—indeed, I have no choice but to believe—your warnings of the
Achuultani, and that you and your fellows are making every effort to achieve
success. In light of all those things, I have no choice but to join your
effort. I do not say it will be easy, General Hatcher, but we shall certainly
make the attempt. And, I believe, succeed."
"Good,"
Hatcher said again, then leaned back with a smile. "In that case, Marshal,
we're ready to run the first thousand personnel of your selection through
enhancement as soon as your people in Beijing can put a list together."
"Ah?" Tsien
sat a bit straighter. This was moving with speed, indeed! He had not expected
these Westerners— He stopped and corrected himself. He had not expected these people
to offer such things so soon. Surely there would be a period of testing and
evaluation of sincerity first!
But when he looked
across at the American, the slight, ironic twinkle in Hatcher's eyes told him
his host knew precisely what he was thinking, and the realization made him feel
just a bit ashamed.
"Comrade
General," he said finally, "I appreciate your generosity, but—"
"Not generosity,
Marshal. We've been enhancing our personnel ever since Dahak left, which
means the Alliance has fallen far behind. We need to make up the difference,
and we'll be sending transports with enhancement capability to Beijing and any
other three cities you select. Planetary facilities under your direct control
will follow as quickly as we can build them."
Tsien blinked, and
Hatcher smiled.
"Marshal Tsien, we
are fellow officers serving the same commander-in- chief. If we don't act
accordingly, some will doubt our claims of solidarity are genuine. They are
genuine. We will proceed on that basis."
He leaned back and
raised both hands shoulder-high, open palms uppermost, and Tsien nodded slowly.
"You are correct.
Generous nonetheless, but correct. And perhaps I am discovering that more than
our governor are formidable men, Comrade General."
"Gerald, please. Or
just 'Ger,' if you're comfortable with it."
Tsien began a polite
refusal, then paused. He had never been comfortable with easy familiarity
between serving officers, even among his fellow Asians, yet there was something
charming about this American. Not boyish (though he understood Westerners
prized that quality for some peculiar reason), but charming. Hatcher's
competence and hard-headed, forthright honesty compelled respect, but this was
something else. Charisma? No, that was close, but not quite the proper word.
The word was . . . openness. Or friendship, perhaps.
Friendship. Now was that
not a strange thing to feel for a Western general after so many years? And yet.
. . . Yes, "and yet," indeed.
"Very well . . .
Gerald," he said.
"I know it's like
pulling teeth, Marshal." Hatcher's almost gentle smile robbed his words of
any offense. "We've been too busy thinking of ways to kill each other for
too long for it to be any other way, more's the pity. Do you know, in a weird
sort of way, I'm almost grateful to the Achuultani."
"Grateful?"
Tsien cocked his head for a moment, then nodded. "I see. I had not
previously thought of it in that light, Comr—Gerald, but it is a relief
to face an alien menace rather than the possibility of blowing up our world
ourselves."
"Exactly."
Hatcher extracted a bottle of brandy and two snifters from a desk drawer. He
set them on the blotter and poured, then offered one to his guest and raised
his own. "May I say, Marshal Tsien, that it is a greater pleasure than I
ever anticipated to have you as an ally?"
"You may."
Tsien allowed a smile to cross his own habitually immobile face. It was hardly
proper, but there was no getting around it. For all their differences, he and
this American were too much alike to be enemies.
"And, as you would
say, Gerald, my name is Tao-ling," he murmured, and crystal sang gently as
their glasses touched.
Out of deference to the
still unenhanced Terra-born Council members, Horus had the news footage played
directly rather than relayed through his neural feed. Not that it made it any
better.
The report ended and the
Terran tri-vid unit sank back into the wall amid the silence. The thirty men
and women in his conference room looked at one another, but he noted that none
of them looked directly at him.
"What I want to
know, ladies and gentlemen," he said finally, his voice shattering the
hush, "is how that was allowed to happen?"
One or two Councilors
flinched, though he hadn't raised his voice. He hadn't had to. The screams and
thunder of automatic weapons as the armored vehicles moved in had made his
point for him.
"It was not
'allowed,' " a voice said finally. "It was inevitable."
Horus's cocked head
encouraged the speaker to continue, and Sophia Pariani leaned forward to meet
his eyes. Her Italian accent was more than usually pronounced, but there was no
apology in her expression.
"There is no doubt
that the situation was clumsily handled, but there will be more 'situations,'
Governor, and not merely in Africa. Already the world economy has been
disrupted by the changes we have effected; as the further and greater changes
which lie ahead become evident, more and more of the common men and women of
the world will react as those people did."
"Sophia's right,
Horus." This time it was Sarhantha, one of his ten fellow survivors from Nergal's
crew. "We ought to've seen it coming. In fact, we did; we just
didn't expect it so soon because we'd forgotten how many people are crammed
into this world. Hard and fast as we're working, only a small minority are
actively involved in the defense projects or the military. All the majority see
is that their governments have been supplanted, their planet is threatened by a
menace they don't truly comprehend and are none too sure they believe in, and
their economies are in the process of catastrophic disruption. This particular
riot was touched off by a combination of hunger, inflation, and
unemployment—regional factors that pre-date our involvement but have grown only
worse since we assumed power—and the realization that even those with skilled
trades will soon find their skills obsolete."
"But there'll be
other factors soon enough." Councilor Abner Johnson spoke with a sharp New
England twang despite his matte-black complexion. "People're people,
Governor. The vested interests are going to object—strenuously—once they get reorganized.
Their economic and political power's about to go belly-up, and some of them're
stupid enough to fight. And don't forget the religious aspect. We're sitting on
a powder keg in Iran and Syria, but we've got our own nuts, and you people
represent a pretty unappetizing affront to their comfortable little
preconceptions." He smiled humorlessly.
" 'Mycos? Birhat?'
You don't really think God created planets with names like that, do you?
If you could at least've come from a planet named 'Eden' it might've helped,
but as it is—!" Johnson shrugged. "Once they get organized,
we'll have a real lunatic fringe!"
"Comrade Johnson is
correct, Comrade Governor." Commissar Hsu Yin's oddly British accent was
almost musical after Johnson's twang. "We may debate the causes of Third
World poverty—" she eyed her capitalist fellows calmly "—but it
exists. Ignorance and fear will be greatest there, violence more quickly
acceptable, yet this is only the beginning. When the First World realizes that
it is in precisely the same situation the violence may grow even worse. We may
as well prepare for the worst . . . and whatever we anticipate will most
assuredly fall short of what will actually happen."
"Granted. But this
violent suppression—"
"Was the work of
the local authorities," Geb put in. "And before you condemn them,
what else could they do? There were almost ten thousand people in that mob, and
if a lot of them were unarmed women and children, a lot were neither female,
young, nor unarmed. At least they had the sense to call us in as soon as they'd
restored order, even if it was under martial law. I've diverted a dozen Shirut-class
atmospheric conveyers to haul in foodstuffs from North America. That should
take the worst edge off the situation, but if the local authorities hadn't
'suppressed' the disturbances, however they did it, simply feeding them
wouldn't even begin to help, and you know it."
There were mutters of
agreement, and Horus noted that the Terra-born were considerably more vehement
than the Imperials. Were they right? It was their planet, and Maker knew the
disruptions were only beginning. He knew they were sanctioning expediency, but
wasn't that another way to describe pragmatism? And in a situation like the
present one . . .
"All right,"
he sighed finally, "I don't like it, but you may be right." He turned
to Gustav van Gelder, Councilor for Planetary Security. "Gus, I want you
and Geb to increase the priority for getting stun guns into the hands of local
authorities. And I want more of our enhancement capacity diverted to police
personnel. Isis, you and Myko deal with that."
Doctor Isis Tudor, his
own Terra-born daughter and now Councilor for Biosciences, glanced at her
ex-mutineer assistant with a sort of resigned desperation. Isis was over
eighty; even enhancement could only slow her gradual decay and eliminate aches
and pains, but her mind was quick and clear. Now she nodded, and he knew she'd
find the capacity . . . somehow.
"Until we can get
local peace-keepers enhanced," Horus went on, "I'll have General
Hatcher set up mixed-nationality response teams out of his military personnel.
I don't like it—the situation's going to be bad enough without 'aliens' popping
up to quell resistance to our 'tyrannical' ways—but a dozen troopers in combat
armor could have stopped this business with a tenth the casualties, especially
if they'd had stun guns."
Heads nodded, and he
suppressed a sigh. Problems, problems! Why hadn't he made sufficient allowance
for what would happen once Imperial technology came to Terra in earnest? Now he
felt altogether too much like a warden rather than a governor, but whatever
happened, he had to hold things together—by main force, if necessary—until the
Achuultani had been stopped. If they could be—
He chopped off that
thought automatically and turned to Christine Redhorse, Councilor for
Agriculture.
"All right. On to
the next problem. Christine, I'd like you to share your report on the wheat
harvest with us, and then . . ."
Most of Horus's Council
had departed, leaving him alone with his defense planners and engineers.
Whatever else happened, theirs was the absolutely critical responsibility, and
they were doing better than Horus had hoped. They were actually ahead of schedule
on almost a fifth of the PDCs, although the fortifications slated for the Asian
Alliance were only now getting underway.
One by one, the
remaining Councilors completed their business and left. In the end, only Geb
remained, and Horus smiled wearily at his oldest living friend as the two of
them leaned back and propped their heels on the conference table almost in
unison.
"Maker!" Horus
groaned. "It was easier fighting Anu!"
"Easier, but not as
satisfying." Geb sipped his coffee, then made a face. It was barely warm,
and he rose and circled the table, shaking each insulated carafe until he found
one that was still partly full and returned to his chair.
"True, true,"
Horus agreed. "At least this time we think we've got a chance of
winning. That makes a pleasant change."
"From your lips to
the Maker's ears," Geb responded fervently, and Horus laughed. He reached
out a long arm for Geb's carafe and poured more coffee into his own cup.
"Watch it," he
advised his friend. "Remember Abner's religious fanatics."
"They won't care
what I say or how I say it. Just being what I am is going to offend them."
"Probably."
Horus sipped, then frowned. "By the way, there was something I've been
meaning to ask you."
"And what might
that be, oh dauntless leader?"
"I found an anomaly
in the data base the other day." Geb raised an eyebrow, and Horus
shrugged. "Probably nothing, but I hit a priority suppression code I can't
understand."
"Oh?" If Geb's
voice was just a shade too level Horus didn't notice.
"I was running through
the data we pulled out of Anu's enclave computers, and Colin's imposed a
lock-out on some of the visual records."
"He has?"
"Yep. It piqued my
interest, so I ran an analysis. He's put every visual image of Inanna under a
security lock only he can release. Or, no, not all of them; only for the last
century or so."
"He must have had a
reason," Geb suggested.
"I don't doubt it,
but I was hoping you might have some idea what it was. You were Chief
Prosecutor—did he say anything to you about why he did it?"
"Even if he had, I
wouldn't be free to talk about it, but I probably wouldn't have worried. It
couldn't have had much bearing on the trials, whatever his reasoning. She
wasn't around to be tried, after all."
"I know, I know,
but it bothers me, Geb." Horus drummed gently on the table. "She was
Anu's number two, the one who did all those hideous brain transplants for him.
Maker only knows how many Terra-born and Imperials she personally slaughtered
along the way! It just seems . . . odd."
"If it bothers you,
ask him about it when he gets back," Geb suggested. He finished his coffee
and rose. "For now, though, I've got to saddle back up, my friend. I'm due
to inspect the work at Minya Konka this afternoon."
He waved a cheerful
farewell and strode down the hall to the elevator whistling, but the merry
little tune died the instant the doors closed. The old Imperial seemed to sag
around his bioenhanced bones, and he leaned his forehead against the mirrored
surface of the inner doors.
Maker of Man and Mercy,
he prayed silently, don't let him ask Colin. Please don't let him ask
Colin!
Tears burned, and he
wiped them angrily, but he couldn't wipe away the memory which had driven him
to Colin before the courts martial to beg him to suppress the visuals on Inanna.
He'd been ready to go down on his knees, but he hadn't needed to. If anything,
Colin's horror had surpassed his own.
Against his will, Geb
relived those moments on deck ninety of the sublight battleship Osir,
the very heart of Anu's enclave. Those terrible moments after Colin and 'Tanni
had gone up the crawl way to face Anu, leaving behind a mangled body 'Tanni's
energy gun had cut almost in half. A body which had been Commander Inanna's,
but only because its brain had been ripped away, its original owner murdered
and its flesh stolen to make a new, young host for the mutinous medical
officer.
Geb had used his own
energy gun to obliterate every trace of that body, for once it had belonged to
one of his closest friends, to a beautiful woman named Tanisis . . . Horus's
wife . . . and Jiltanith's own mother.
Fifty Chinese
paratroopers in Imperial black snapped to attention as the band struck up, and
Marshal Tsien Tao-ling, Vice Chief of Staff for Operations to the Lieutenant
Governor of Earth, watched them with an anxiety he had not wasted upon
ceremonial in decades. This was his superior's first official visit to China in
the five months since the Asian Alliance had surrendered to the inevitable, and
he wanted—demanded—for all to go flawlessly.
It did. General Gerald
Hatcher appeared in the hatch of his cutter and started down the ramp, followed
by his personal aide and a very small staff.
"Preeee-sent arms!"
Energy guns snapped up.
The honor guard, drawn from the first batch of Asian personnel to be
bioenhanced, handled their massive weapons with panache, and Tsien noted the
perfection of their drill without a smile as he and Hatcher exchanged salutes.
The twinkle in the American's brown eyes betrayed his own amused tolerance for
ceremonial only to those who knew him very well, and it still surprised Tsien
just a bit that he had become one of those few people.
"Good to see you,
Tao-ling," Hatcher said under cover of the martial music, and Tsien
responded with a millimetric smile before the brief moment of privacy
disappeared into the waiting tide of military protocol.
Gerald Hatcher placed
his cap in his lap and leaned back as the city of Ch'engtu fell away astern.
The cutter headed for Minya Konka, the mountain which had been ripped apart to
hold PDC Huan-Ti, and he grimaced as he ran a finger around the tight collar of
his tunic.
He lowered his hand,
wondering once again if it had been wise to adopt Imperial uniform. While it
had the decided advantage of not belonging to any of the rival militaries they
were trying to merge, it looked disturbingly like the uniform of the SS. Not
surprisingly, considering. He'd done what he could to lessen the
similarities—exaggerating the size of the starbursts the Nazis had replaced
with skulls, restoring the serrated hisanth leaves to the lapels,
adopting the authorized variation of gold braid in place of silver—but the
over-all impact still bothered him.
He put the thought
aside—again—and turned to Tsien.
"It looks like your
people've done a great job, Tao-ling. I wish you didn't have to spend so much
time in Beijing to do it, but I'm impressed."
"I spend too little
time here as it is, Gerald." Tsien gave a very slight shrug. "It is
even worse than it was while you and I were enemies. There are at least eight
too few hours in every day."
"Tell me about
it!" Hatcher laughed. "If we work like dogs for another six months,
you and I may finally be able to hand over to someone else long enough to get
our own biotechnics."
"True. I must
confess, however, that the speed with which we are moving almost frightens me.
There is too little time for proper coordination. Too many projects require
attention, and I have no time to know my officers."
"I know. We're
better off than you are because of how Nergal's people infiltrated our
militaries before we even knew about them. I don't envy your having to start
from scratch."
"We will
manage," Tsien said, and Hatcher took him at his word. The huge Chinese
officer had lost at least five kilos since their first meeting, yet it only
made him even more fearsome, as if he were being worn down to elemental gristle
and bone. And whatever else came of the fusion with the Asian Alliance, Hatcher
was almost prayerfully grateful that it had brought him Tsien Tao-ling.
The cutter dropped
toward the dust-spewing wound which had once been a mountain top, and Hatcher
checked his breathing mask. He hated using it, but the dust alone would make it
welcome, and the fact that PDC Huan-Ti was located at an altitude of almost
seventy-five hundred meters made it necessary. He felt a bit better when he saw
Tsien reaching for his own mask . . . and suppressed a spurt of envy as Major
Allen Germaine ignored his. It must be nice, he thought sourly as he regarded his
bioenhanced aide.
They grounded, and thin,
cold air, bitter with dust, swirled through the hatch. Hatcher hastily clipped
on his mask, and his uniform's collar was a suddenly minor consideration as the
Imperial fabric adjusted to maintain a comfortable body temperature and he led
the way out into the ear-splitting, dust-spouting, eye-bewildering bedlam of
yet another of Geb's mighty projects.
Tsien followed Hatcher,
hiding his impatience. He hated inspection tours, and only the fact that
Hatcher hated them just as badly let him face this time-consuming parade with a
semblance of inner peace. That and the fact that, time-consuming or no, it also
played its part. Morale, the motivation of their human material, was all
important, and nothing better convinced people of the importance of their tasks
than to see their commanders inspecting their work.
Yet despite his
impatience, Tsien was deeply impressed. Enough Imperial equipment was becoming
available to strain the enhancement centers' ability to provide operators, and
the result was amazing for someone who had grown up with purely Terran
technology. The main excavation was almost finished—indeed, the central control
rooms were structurally complete, awaiting installation of the computer
core—and the shield generators were already being built. Incredible.
He bent to listen to an
engineer, and movement caught the corner of his eye as a breath-masked officer
disappeared behind a heap of building material, waving one hand as he spoke to
another officer at his side. There was something familiar about the small
figure, but the engineer was still talking, and Tsien returned his attention to
him.
"I'm impressed,
Geban," Hatcher said, and Huan-Ti's chief engineer grinned. The burly
ex-mutineer was barely a hundred and fifty centimeters tall, but he looked as
if he could have picked up a hover jeep one-handed—before enhancement.
"Really
impressed," Hatcher repeated as the control room door closed off the
cacophony beyond. "You're—what, four weeks ahead of schedule?"
"Almost five,
General," Geban replied with simple pride. "With just a little luck,
I'm going to bring this job in at least two months early."
"Outstanding!"
Hatcher slapped Geban's shoulder, and Tsien hid a smile. He would never
understand how Hatcher's informality with subordinates could work so well, yet
it did. Not simply with Westerners who might be accustomed to such things,
either. Tsien had seen exactly the same broad smile on the faces of Chinese and
Thai peasants.
"In that
case," Hatcher said, turning to the marshal, "I think we—"
A thunderous concussion
drowned his words and threw him from his feet.
Diego McMurphy was a
Mexican-Irish explosives genius from Texas. Off-shore oil rigs and dams, vertol
terminals and apartment complexes—he'd seen them all, but this was the most
damnable, bone-breaking, challenging, wonderful project he'd ever been
involved with, and the fact that he was buying his right to a full set of
biotechnic implants was only icing on the cake. Which is why he was happy as he
waved his crew forward to set the charges on the unfinished western face of
Magazine Twelve.
He died a happy man, and
six hundred and eighty-six other men and women died with him. They died because
one of McMurphy's men activated his rock drill, and that man didn't know
someone had wired his controls to eleven hundred kilos of Imperial blasting
compound.
The explosion rivaled a
three-kiloton nuclear bomb.
Gerald Hatcher bounced
off Tsien Tao-ling, but the marshal's powerful arm caught him before he could
fall. Alarms whooped, sirens screamed, and Geban went paper-white. The door
barely had time to open before he reached it; if it hadn't, he would have torn
it loose with his bare hands.
Hatcher shook his head,
trying to understand what had happened as he followed Tsien to the open door. A
huge mushroom cloud filled the western horizon, and even as he watched, a
five-man gravitonic conveyer with a full load of structural steel turned turtle
in mid-air. It had been caught by the fringes of the explosion, and the pilot
had almost pulled it out. Almost, but not quite. Its standard commercial drive
had never been designed for such abuse, and it impacted nose-first at six
hundred kilometers per hour.
A fresh fireball spewed
up, and the death toll was suddenly six hundred and ninety-one.
"My God!"
Hatcher murmured.
Tsien nodded in silent,
shocked agreement. Whatever the cause, this was disaster, and he despised
himself for thinking of lost time first and lost lives second. He turned toward
the control block ramps in the vanished Geban's wake, then stopped as a knot of
men headed towards him. They were armed, and there was something familiar about
the small officer at their head—
"Quang!"
he bellowed.
The fury in Tsien's
voice jerked Hatcher's eyes away from the smoke. He started to speak, then
gasped as the marshal whirled around and hit him in a diving tackle. The two of
them crashed back into the control room, hard enough to crack ribs, as the
first burst of automatic fire raked the open doorway.
"Forward!"
General Quang Do Chinh screamed. "Kill them! Kill them now!"
His troopers advanced at
the run, closing on the unfinished control block, and Quang's heart flamed with
triumph. Yes, kill the traitors! And especially the arch-traitor who had tried
to shunt him aside! What a triumph to begin their war against the invaders!
As he and his men
sprinted forward, construction workers raced to drag dead and wounded away from
the explosion site, and six other carefully infiltrated assault teams produced
automatic weapons and grenades. They concentrated on picking out Imperials, but
any target would do.
"What the hell is
happening?!" Gerald Hatcher's voice was muffled by his breath mask, but it
would have been hoarse anyway—a hundred kilos of charging Chinese field marshal
had seen to that. He shoved up onto his knees, reaching instinctively for his
holstered automatic.
"I do not
know," Tsien replied tersely, checking his own weapon's magazine.
"But the Vietnamese leading his men this way is named Quang. He was one of
those most opposed to joining our forces to yours."
Another burst of fire
raked the open doorway, ricochets whining nastily, and Hatcher rose higher on
his knees to hit the door button. The hatch slammed instantly, but it was only
lightweight Terran steel; the next burst punched right through it.
"Shit!"
Hatcher scurried across the control room on hands and knees. Major Germaine
already stood with his back to the wall on the left side of the door, and his
grav gun had materialized in his right hand like magic.
"What the fuck do
they think they're going to accomplish?!"
"I do not know,
Gerald. This is pointless. It simply invites reprisals. But their ultimate
objective is immaterial—to us, at least."
"True." Hatcher
flattened himself against the wall as another row of holes appeared in the
door. "Al?"
"I already put out
the word, sir." Unlike his boss, Germaine had a built-in communicator.
"But I don't know how much good it's going to do. More of the bastards are
shooting up the rescue crews. Geban's down—hurt bad—and he's not the only
Imperial."
"Goddamn
them!" Hatcher hissed, and fought to think as the half-forgotten terror
and adrenalin-rush of combat flooded him. Continuous firing raked the panel
now, and he gritted his teeth as bullets and bits of door whined about his
ears. This room was a deathtrap. He tried to estimate where their attackers had
been when Tao-ling tackled him. On the ground to the south. That meant they had
to climb at least three ramps. So whoever was firing at the door was covering
them until they could get here . . . probably with a demolition charge that
would turn them all to hamburger.
"We've got to get
ourselves a field of fire," he grated. His automatic was a toy compared to
what was coming at them, but it was better than nothing. And anything was
better than dying without fighting back.
"I agree,"
Tsien said flatly.
"All right. Tao-ling,
you pop the hatch. Al, I think they're coming up from the south. You can cover
the head of the ramp from where you are. Tao-ling, you get over here with me.
We'll try to slow 'em down if they come the other way, but Al's got our only
real firepower."
"Yes, sir,"
Germaine said, and Tsien nodded agreement.
"Then do
it—now!"
Tsien hit the button and
rolled across the floor, coming up on his knees beside Hatcher. They both
flattened against the wall as yet another burst screamed into the room, and
Hatcher cursed as a ricochet creased his cheek.
"Can you get that
sniper without getting yourself killed, Al?"
"A pleasure,
sir," Germaine said coldly. His eyes were unfocused as his implants sought
the source of the fire, then he crouched and took one step to the side. He
moved with the blinding speed of his biotechnics, and the grav gun hissed out a
brief burst, spitting three-millimeter explosive darts at fifty-two hundred
meters per second.
Quang swore as his
covering fire died. So, they had at least one of the cursed grav guns. That was
bad, but he still had twenty-five men, and they were all heavily armed.
He had no idea how the
rest of the attack was going, but Tsien's reactions had been only too
revealing, and the only man who could identify him must die.
His men pounded up the
ramp ahead of him.
* * *
Her name was Litanil,
and, disregarding time spent in stasis, she was thirty-six. It took her
precious moments to realize what was happening, and a few more to believe it
when she had, but then cold fury filled her.
Litanil hadn't thought
very deeply when Anu's people recruited her, for she'd been both young and
bored. Now she knew she'd also been criminally stupid, and, like her fellows,
she'd labored with the Breaker's own demons on her heels in an effort to atone.
Along the way, she'd come to like and admire the Terra-born she worked with,
and now hundreds of them lay dead, butchered by the animals responsible for
this carnage. She didn't worry about why. She didn't even consider the
monstrous treason to her race the attack implied. She thought only of dead
friends, and something snarled inside her.
She turned her power
bore towards the fighting, and her neural feeds sought out the safety
interlocks. It was supposed to be impossible for any accident to get around
them—but Litanil was no accident.
Allen Germaine went down
on one knee, bracing his grav gun over his left forearm, as the first three
raiders hurled themselves over the lip of the topmost ramp, assault rifles on
full automatic.
They got off one long
burst each before their bodies blew apart in a hurricane of explosive darts.
Litanil goosed her power
bore to max, snarling across the stony plain at almost two hundred kilometers
per hour. Not even a gravitonic drive could hold the massive bore steady at
that speed, but she rode it like a bucking horse, her implant scanners reaching
out, and her face was a mask of fury as she raised the cutting head chest-high.
Private Pak Chung of the
Army of Korea heard nothing, but some instinct made him turn his head. His eyes
widened in horror as he saw the huge machine screaming towards him. Rock dust
and smoke billowed behind it like a curdled wake, and the . . . the thing
at its front was aimed straight at him!
The last thing Private
Pak ever saw was a terrible brilliance in the millisecond before he exploded in
a flash of super-heated body fluids.
General Quang cursed as
his three lead men died, but it had not been entirely unexpected. It must be
the American's African aide, yet there was only one of him, bioenhanced or not,
and the ramp was not the only way up.
"They're spreading
out," Germaine reported. "I can't get a good implant reading through
the ramp, but some of them are swinging round front."
"There is a
scaffold below the edge of the platform," Tsien said.
"Damn! Remind me to
detail armed guards to each construction site when we get home, Al."
"Yes, sir."
* * *
Litanil wiped out
Private Pak's team and raged off after fresh targets. Ahead of her, half a
dozen bioenhanced Terra-born construction workers armed with steel reinforcing
rods and Imperial blasting compound began working their way around the flank of
a second assault group.
Quang poked his head up.
This was taking too long. But there would still be time. His men were in
position at last, and he barked an order.
"Down!"
Germaine shouted, and Hatcher and Tsien dropped instantly as the stubby grenade
launchers coughed. Two grenades hit short or exploded against the outer wall;
the third headed straight into the door, and Germaine's left hand struck it
like a handball. The explosion ripped his hand apart, and shrapnel tore into
his chest and shoulder.
Agony stabbed him, but
his implants stopped the flow of blood to his shredded hand and flooded his
system with a super-charged blast of adrenalin. The first wave came up the ramp
after the grenades, and he cut them down like bloody wheat.
Hatcher fired as a head
rose over the edge of the scaffolding. His first shot missed; his second hit
just above the left eye. Beside him, Tsien was flat on his belly, firing
two-handed. Another attacker dropped.
A sudden burst of
explosions ripped the dusty smoke as the construction workers tossed their
makeshift bombs. The attack squad faltered as three of their number were blown
apart. A fourth emptied a full magazine into a charging man. He killed his
assailant, but he never knew; the steel rod his victim had carried impaled him
like a spear.
His six surviving
comrades broke and ran—directly in front of Litanil's power bore.
Eight more of Quang's
men died, but a ninth slammed a heart-rupturing burst into Allen Germaine.
Major Germaine was a dead man, but he was a bioenhanced corpse. He stayed on
his feet long enough to aim very carefully before he squeezed the trigger.
Gerald Hatcher swore
viciously as his aide toppled without a sound, grav gun bouncing from his
remaining hand. Bastards! Bastards! He squeezed off another shot,
hitting his target in the torso, then dropped him with a second.
It wasn't enough, and he
knew it.
Quang's number four
attack squad had a good position between two huge earth-movers, but there were
no more targets in their field of fire. It was time to go, and they began to
filter back in pairs, each halting in turn to provide covering fire for their
fellows. It was a textbook maneuver.
As the first pair
reached the ends of their shielding earth-movers, a pair of bioenhanced hands
reached out from either side. Fingers ten times stronger than their own closed,
and two tracheas crushed. The twitching bodies were tossed aside, and the
crouching ambushers waited patiently for their next victims.
Quang popped his head up
and saw the grav gun lying two meters beyond the door. Now! He clutched his
assault rifle and rose, waving his surviving men forward, and followed up the
ramp in their wake.
A last attacker crouched
on the scaffolding. He'd seen what happened when his fellows exposed
themselves, and he poked just the muzzle of his rifle over the edge. It was a
sound idea, but in his excitement he rose just too high. The crown of his head
showed, and Gerald Hatcher put a pistol bullet through it in the instant before
the automatic fire shattered both his legs.
Litanil swung her power
bore again and knew they were winning.
The attackers had
achieved the surprise they sought, but they hadn't realized what they were
attacking. Most of the site personnel were unenhanced Terra-born, but a
significant percentage were not, and those who were enhanced had full Fleet
packages, modified at Colin MacIntyre's order to incorporate fold-space coms.
They might be unarmed, but they were strong, tough, fast, and in unbroken
communication.
And, as Litanil herself
had proved, a construction site abounded in improvisational weapons.
Tsien Tao-ling was no
longer a field marshal. He was a warrior alone and betrayed, and Quang was
still out there. Whatever happened, Quang must not be allowed to live.
Tsien tossed aside his
empty pistol, his mind cold and clear, and rose on his hands and toes, like a
runner in the blocks.
General Quang blinked as
Tsien exploded from the control room. He would never have believed the huge man
could move that quickly! But what did he hope to gain? He could not outrun
bullets!
Then he saw Tsien drop
and snatch up the grav gun as he rolled towards the scaffolding. No!
Assault rifles barked,
but the men behind them had been as surprised as Quang. They were late, and
they tried to compensate by leading their target. They would catch him as he
rolled over the edge of the scaffolding into cover.
Tsien threw out one leg,
grunting as a kneecap shattered on concrete, but it had the desired effect. He
stopped dead, clutching Germaine's grav gun, and the bullets which should have
killed him went wide. He raised the muzzle, not trying to rise from where he
lay.
Quang screamed in
frustration as Tsien opened fire. Three of his remaining men were down. Then
four. Five! He raised his own weapon, firing at the marshal, but fury betrayed
his aim.
Tsien grunted again as a
slug ripped through his right biceps. A second shattered his shoulder, but he
held down the grav gun's trigger, and his fire swept the ramp like a broom.
Quang's last trooper was
down, and sudden terror filled him. He threw away his rifle and tried to drop down
the ramp, but he was too late. His last memory on Earth was the cold, bitter
hatred in Tsien Tao-ling's pitiless eyes.
Gerald Hatcher groaned,
then bit his lip against a scream as someone moved his left leg. He shuddered
and managed to raise his eyelids, wondering for a moment why he felt so weak,
why there was so much pain.
Tao-ling bent over him,
and he bit off most of another scream as the marshal tightened something on his
right leg. A tourniquet, Hatcher realized dizzily . . . and then he remembered.
His expression twisted
with more than pain as he saw Allen Germaine's dead face close beside him, but
his mind was working once more. Poorly, slowly, with frustrating dark patches,
but working. The firing seemed to have stopped, and if there was no more
shooting and Tao-ling was working on him, they must have won, mustn't they? He
was rather pleased by his ability to work that out.
Tsien crawled up beside
him. One shoulder was swollen by a makeshift, blood-soaked bandage, and his
left leg dragged uselessly, but his good hand clutched Allen's grav gun as he
lowered himself between Hatcher and the door with a groan.
"T-Tao-ling?"
the general managed.
"You are
awake?" Tsien's voice was hoarse with pain. "You have the
constitution of a bull, Gerald."
"Th-thanks. What .
. . what kind of shape are we . . . ?"
"I believe we have
beaten off the attack. I do not know how. I am afraid you are badly hurt, my
friend."
"I'll . . . live. .
. ."
"Yes, I think you
will," Tsien said so judiciously Hatcher grinned tightly despite his
agony. His brain was fluttering and it would be a relief to give in, but there
was something he had to say first. Ah!
"Tao-ling—"
"Be quiet,
Gerald," the marshal said austerely. "You are wounded."
"You're . . . not?
Looks like . . . I get my . . . implants first."
"Americans! Always
you must be first."
"T-Tell Horus I
said . . . you take over. . . ."
"I?" Tsien
looked at him, his face as twisted with shame as pain. "It was my people
who did this thing!"
"H-Horse shit. But
that's . . . why it's important . . . you take over. Tell Horus!" Hatcher
squeezed his friend's forearm with all his fading strength. It was Tsien's
right arm, but he did not even wince.
"Tell him!"
Hatcher commanded, clinging to awareness through the shrieking pain.
"Very well,
Gerald," Tsien said gently. "I will."
"Good man,"
Hatcher whispered, and let go at last.
* * *
The city echoed
with song and dance as the People of Riahn celebrated. Twelve seasons of war
against Tur had ended at last, and not simply in victory. The royal houses of
Riahn and Tur had brought the endless skirmishes and open battle over
possession of the Fithan copper mines to a halt with greater wisdom than they
had shown in far too long, for the Daughter of Tur would wed the Son of Riahn,
and henceforth the two Peoples would be one.
It was good. It
was very, very good, for Riahn-Tur would be the greatest of all the city-states
of T'Yir. Their swords and spears would no longer turn upon one another but
ward both from their neighbors, and the copper of Fithan would bring them
wealth and prosperity. The ships of Riahn were already the swiftest ever to
swim—with Fithan copper to sheath their hulls against worms and weed, they
would own the seas of T'Yir!
Great was the
rejoicing of Riahn, and none of the People knew of the vast Achuultani
starships which had reached their system while the war still raged. None knew
they had come almost by accident, unaware of the People until they actually
entered the system, or how they had paused among the system's asteroids.
Indeed, none of the People knew even what an asteroid was, much less what would
happen if the largest of them were sent falling inward toward T'Yir.
And because they
did not know such things, none knew their world had barely seven months to
live.
Colin MacIntyre was not
afraid, for "afraid" was too weak a word.
He sat with his back to
the conference room hatch as the others filed in, and he felt their own fear
against his spine. He waited until all were seated, then swung his chair to
meet their eyes. Their faces looked even worse than he'd expected.
"All right,"
he said at last. "We've got to decide what to do next."
Their steady regard
threw his lie back at him, even Jiltanith's, and he wanted to scream at them. We
didn't have to decide; he did, and he wished with all his soul that he
had never heard of a starship named Dahak.
He stopped himself and
drew a deep breath, closing his eyes. When he opened them again, the shadows
within them had retreated just a bit.
"Dahak," he
said quietly, "have you got anything more for us?"
"Negative, Captain.
I have examined all known Imperial weapons and research. Nothing in my data
base can account for the observational data."
Colin managed not to spit
a curse. Observational data. What a neat, concise way to describe two
once-inhabited planets with no life whatever. Not a tree, not a shrub, nothing.
There were no plains of volcanic glass and lingering radioactivity, no
indications of warfare—just bare, terribly-eroded earth and stone and a few
pathetic clusters of buildings sagging into wind and storm-threshed ruin. Even
their precarious existence said much for the durability of Imperial building
materials, for Dahak estimated there had been no living hand to tend
them in almost forty-five thousand years.
No birds, he thought. No
animals. Not even an insect. Just . . . nothing. The only movement was the
wind. Weather had flensed the denuded planet until its stony bones gaped
through like the teeth of a skull, bared in a horrible, grinning rictus of
desecration and death.
"Hector?" he
said finally. "Do you have any ideas?"
"None."
MacMahan's normally controlled face was even more impassive than usual, and he
seemed to hunker down in his chair.
"Cohanna?"
"I can't add much,
sir, but I'd have to say it was a bio-weapon of some sort. Some unimaginable
sort." Cohanna shivered. "I've landed unmanned probes for spot
analyses, but I don't dare send teams down."
Colin nodded.
"I can't imagine
how it was done," the biosciences officer continued. "What kind of
weapon could produce this? If they'd irradiated the place. . . . But
there's simply nothing to go on, Captain. Nothing at all."
"All right."
Colin inhaled deeply. "'Tanni, what can you tell us?"
"Scarce more than
'Hanna. We have found some three score orbital vessels and installations; all
lie abandoned to the dead. As with the planets, we durst not look too close,
yet our probes have scanned them well. In all our servos have attended lie
naught save bones."
"Dahak? Any luck
accessing their computers?"
"Very little,
Captain. I have been unable to carry out detailed study of the equipment, but
there are major differences between it and the technology with which I am
familiar. In particular, the computer nets appear to have been connected with
fold-space links, which would provide a substantial increase in speed over my
own molecular circuitry, and these computers operated on a radically different
principle, maintaining data flow in semi-permanent force fields rather than in
physical storage units. Their power supplies failed long ago, and without
continuous energization—" The computer's voice paused in the electronic
equivalent of a shrug.
"The only instance
in which partial data retrieval has been possible is artifact seventeen, the
Fleet vessel Cordan," Dahak continued. "Unfortunately, the
data core was of limited capacity, as the unit itself was merely a three-man
sublight utility boat, and had suffered from failed fold-space units. Most data
in memory are encoded in a multi-level Fleet code I have not yet been able to
break, though I believe I might succeed if a larger sample could be obtained.
The recoverable data consist primarily of routine operational records and astrogational
material.
"I was able to date
the catastrophe by consulting the last entry made by Cordan's captain.
It contains no indication of alarm, nor, unfortunately, was she loquacious. The
last entry simply records an invitation for her and her crew to dine at the
planetary governor's residence on Defram-A III."
"Nothing
more?" Ninhursag asked quietly.
"No, Commander.
There undoubtedly was additional data, but only Cordan's command
computer utilized hard storage techniques, and it is sadly decayed. I have
located twelve additional auxiliary and special-function computer nets, but
none contain recoverable data."
"Vlad?" Colin
turned to his engineer.
"I wish I could
tell you something. The fact that we dare not go over and experiment leaves us
with little hard data, but the remotes indicate that their technology was
substantially more advanced than Dahak's. On the other hand, we have
seen little real evidence of fundamental breakthroughs—it is more like a highly
sophisticated refinement of what we already have."
"How now,
Vlad?" Jiltanith asked. "Hath not our Dahak but now said their
computers are scarce like unto himself?"
"True enough,
'Tanni, but the differences are incremental." Vlad frowned. "What he
is actually saying is that they moved much further into energy-state
engineering than before. I cannot say certainly without something to take apart
and put back together, but those force field memories probably manifested as
solid surfaces when powered up. The Imperium was moving in that direction even
before the mutiny—our own shield is exactly the same thing on a gross scale.
What they discovered was a way to do the same sorts of things on a scale which
makes even molycircs big and clumsy, but it was theoretically possible from the
beginning. You see? Incremental advances."
Jiltanith nodded slowly,
and Colin leaned his elbows on the table.
"Bearing that in
mind, Dahak, what are the chances of recovering useful data from any other
computers we encounter?"
"Assuming they are
of the variety Fleet Captain (Engineering) Chernikov has been discussing and
that they have been left unattended without power, nil. Please note, however,
that Cordan's command computer was not of that type."
"Meaning?"
"Meaning, Captain,
that it is highly probable Fleet units retained solid data storage for critical
systems precisely because energy data storage was susceptible to loss in the
event of power failure. If that is indeed the case, any large sublight unit
should provide quite considerable amounts of data. Any supralight Fleet
combatant would, in all probability, retain a hard-storage backup of its
complete data core."
"I see." Colin
leaned back and rubbed his eyes.
"All right. We're
five and a half months from Terra, and so far all we've found is one completely
destroyed Fleet base and two totally dead planets. If Dahak's wrong about the
Fleet retaining hard-storage for its central computers, we can't even hope to
find out what happened, much less find help, from any system where this
disaster spilled over.
"If we turn back
right now, we'll reach Sol over a year before the Achuultani scouts, which
would at least permit us to help Earth stand them off. By the same token, it
would be impossible for us to do that and then return to the Imperium—or, at
least, to move any deeper into it—and still get back to Sol before the main
incursion arrives. So the big question is do we go on in the hope of finding something,
or do we turn back now?"
He studied their faces
and found only mirrors of his own uncertainty.
"I don't think we
can give up just yet," he said finally. "We know we can't win without
help, and we don't know there isn't still some help available. In all
honesty, I'm not very optimistic, but I can't see that we have any choice but
to ride it out and pray."
Jiltanith and MacMahan
nodded slightly. The others were silent, then Chernikov raised his head.
"A point,
sir."
"Yes?"
"Assuming Dahak is
right that Fleet units are a more likely source of information, perhaps we
should concentrate on Fleet bases and ignore civilian systems for the
moment."
"My own thought
exactly," Colin agreed.
"Yet 'twould be but
prudent to essay a few systems more ere we leave this space entire,"
Jiltanith mused. "Methinks there doth lie another world scarce fifteen
light-years hence. 'Twas not a Fleet base, yet was it not a richly peopled
world, Dahak?"
"Correct,
ma'am," Dahak replied. "The Kano System lies
fourteen-point-six-six-one light-years from Defram, very nearly on a direct
heading to Birhat. The last census data in my records indicates a system
population of some nine-point-eight-three billion."
Colin thought. At
maximum speed, the trip to Kano would require little more than a week. . . .
"All right,
'Tanni," he agreed. "But if we don't find anything there, we're in
the same boat. Assuming we don't get answers at Kano, I'm beginning to think we
may have to move on to Fleet Central at Birhat itself."
He understood the ripple
of shock that ran through his officers. Birhat lay almost eight hundred
light-years from Sol. If they ventured that far, even Dahak's speed
could not possibly return them to Earth before the Achuultani scouts had
arrived.
Oh, yes, he understood.
Quite possibly, Dahak alone could stop the Achuultani scouts,
particularly if backed by whatever Earth had produced. But if Colin continued
to Birhat, Dahak wouldn't be available to try . . . and the decision was
his to make. His alone.
"I recognize the
risks," he said softly, "but our options are closing in, and time's
too short to scurry around from star to star. Unless we find a definite answer
at Kano, it may run out on us entirely. If we're going to Birhat at all, we
can't afford to deviate or we'll never get back before the main incursion
arrives. If we make a straight run for it from Kano, we should have some months
to look around Fleet Central and still beat the real incursion home. Even
assuming a worst-case scenario, assuming the entire Imperium is like Defram, we
may at least find out what happened and where—if anywhere—a functional portion
of the Imperium remains. I'm not definitely committing us to Birhat; I'm only
saying we may not have another choice."
He fell silent, letting
them examine his logic for flaws, almost praying they would find some, but
instead they nodded one by one.
"All right. Dahak,
have Sarah set course for Kano immediately. We'll go take a look before we
commit to anything else."
"Yes,
Captain."
"I think that's
everything," Colin said heavily, and rose. "If any of you need me,
I'll be on the bridge."
He walked out. This time
Dahak did not call the others to attention, as if he sensed his captain's mood
. . . but they rose anyway.
"Detection at
twelve light-minutes," Dahak announced, and Colin's eyes widened with
sudden hope. The F5 star called Kano blazed in Dahak's display, the planet
Kano-III a penny-bright dot, and they'd been detected. Detected! There was a
high-tech presence in the system!
But Dahak's next words
cut his elation short.
"Hostile
launch," the computer said calmly. "Multiple hostile launches.
Sublight missiles closing at point-seven-eight light-speed."
Missiles?
"Tactical, Red
One!" Colin snapped, and Tamman's acknowledgment flowed back through his
neural feed. The tractor web snapped alive, sealing him in his couch, and Dahak's
mighty weapons came on line as raucous audio and implant alarms summoned his
crew to battle.
"No offensive
action!" Colin ordered harshly.
"Acknowledged."
Tamman's toneless voice was that of a man intimately wedded to his computers. Dahak's
shield snapped up, anti-missile defenses came alive, and Colin fell silent as
others fought his ship.
Sarah Meir was part of
Tamman's tactical net, and she took Dahak instantly to maximum sublight
speed. Evasive action began, and the starfield swooped crazily about them.
Crimson dots appeared in the holographic display, flashing towards Dahak
like a shoal of sharks, tracking despite his attempts to evade.
His jammers filled space
and fold-space alike with interference, and blue dots flashed out from the
center of the display, each a five-hundred-ton decoy mimicking Dahak's
electronic and gravitonic signature. More than half the red dots wavered,
swinging to track the decoys or simply lost in the jamming, but at least fifty
continued straight for them.
They were moving at
almost eighty percent of light-speed, but so great was the range they seemed to
crawl. And why were they moving sublight at all? Why weren't they hyper
missiles? Why—
"Second salvo
launch detected," Dahak announced, and Colin cursed.
Active defenses engaged
the attackers. Hyper missiles were useless, for they could not home on evading
targets, so sublight counter-missiles raced to meet them, blossoming in megaton
bursts as proximity fuses activated. Eye-searing flashes pocked the holographic
display, and red dots began to die.
"They mount quite
capable defenses of their own, Captain," Dahak observed, and Colin felt
them through his feed. ECM systems lured Dahak's fire wide and on-board
maneuvering systems sent the red dots into wild gyrations, and they were faster
than the counter-missiles chasing them.
"Where are they
coming from, Dahak?"
"Scanners have
detected twenty-four identical structures orbiting Kano-III," Dahak
replied as his close-range energy defenses opened fire and killed another dozen
missiles. At least twenty were still coming. "I have detected launches
from only four of them."
Only four? Colin puzzled
over that as the last dozen missiles broke past Dahak's active defenses.
He found himself gripping his couch's armrests; there was nothing else he could
do.
Dahak's display
blanked in the instant of detonation, shielding his bridge crews' optic nerves
from the fury unleashed upon him. Anti-matter warheads, their yields measured
in thousands of megatons, gouged at his final defenses, but Dahak was
built to face things like that, and plasma clouds blew past him, divided by his
shield as by the prow of a ship. Yet mixed with the anti-matter explosions were
the true shipkillers of the Imperium: gravitonic warheads.
The ancient starship
lurched. For all its unimaginable mass, despite the unthinkable power of its
drive, it lurched like a broken-masted galleon, and Colin's stomach
heaved despite the internal gravity field. His mind refused to contemplate the
terrible fury which could produce that effect as gravitonic shield components
screamed in protest, but they, too, had been engineered to meet this test.
Somehow they held.
The display flashed back
on, spalled by fading clouds of gas and heat, and a damage signal pulsed in
Colin's neural feed. A schematic of Dahak's hull appeared above his
console, its frontal hemisphere marred by two wedge-shaped glares of red over a
kilometer deep.
"Minor damage in
quadrants Alpha-One and Three," Dahak reported. "No
casualties. Capability not impaired. Second salvo entering interdiction range.
Third enemy salvo detected."
More counter-missiles flashed
out, and Colin reached a decision.
"Tactical, take out
the actively attacking installations!"
"Acknowledged,"
Tamman said, and the display bloomed with amber sighting circles. Each enclosed
a single missile platform, too tiny with distance for even Dahak to display
visually, and Colin swallowed. Unlike their attackers, Tamman was using hyper
missiles.
"Missiles
away," Dahak said. And then, almost without pause, "Targets
destroyed."
Bright, savage pinpricks
blossomed in the amber circles, but the two salvos already fired were still
coming. Yet Dahak had gained a great deal of data from the first attack, and he
was a very fast thinker. Battle Comp was using his predicted target responses
well, concentrating his counter-missiles to thwart them, alert now for their
speed and the tricks of defensive ECM, killing the incoming missiles with
inexorable precision. Energy weapons added their efforts as the range dropped,
killing still more. Only three of the second salvo got through, and they were
all anti-matter warheads. The final missile of the last salvo died ten
light-seconds short of the shield.
Colin sagged in his
couch.
"Dahak? Any
more?" he asked hoarsely.
"Negative, sir. I
detect active targeting systems aboard seven remaining installations, but no
additional missiles have been launched."
"Any communication
attempts?"
"Negative, Captain.
Nor have they responded to my hails."
"Damn."
Colin's brain began to
work again, but it made no sense. Why refuse all contact and attack on sight?
For that matter, how had Dahak gotten so deep in-system before being
detected? And if attack they must, why use only a sixth of their defensive
bases? The four Tamman had destroyed had certainly gone all out, but if they
meant to mount a defense at all, why hold anything back? Especially now, when Dahak
had riposted so savagely?
"Well," he
said finally, very softly, "let's find out what that was all about. Sarah,
take us in at half speed. Tamman, hold us on Red One."
Acknowledgments flowed
back to him, and Dahak started cautiously forward once more at
twenty-eight percent of light speed. Colin watched the display for a moment,
then made himself lean back.
"Dahak, give me an
all-hands channel."
"All-hands channel
open, sir."
"All right,
people," Colin said to every ear aboard the massive ship, "that was
closer than we'd like, but we seem to've come through intact. If anyone's
interested in exactly what happened—" he paused and smiled; to his
surprise, it felt almost natural "—you can get the details from Dahak
later. But for your immediate information, no one's shooting at us just now, so
we're going on in for a closer look. They're not talking to us, either, so it
doesn't look like they're too friendly, but we'll know more shortly. Hang
loose."
He started to order Dahak
to close the channel, then stopped.
"Oh, one more
thing. Well done, all of you. You did us proud. Out.
"Close channel,
Dahak."
"Acknowledged,
Captain. Channel closed."
"Thank you,"
Colin said softly, and his tone referred to far more than communications
channels and the starship's courtesy. "Thank you very much."
The holo of what had
once been a pleasant, blue-white world called Keerah hung in Command One's
visual display like a leprous, ocher curse. Once-green continents were wind and
water-carved ruins, grooved like a harridan's face and pocked with occasional
sprawls where the works of Man had been founded upon solid bedrock and so still
stood, sentinels to a vanished population.
Colin stared at it,
heartsick as even Defram had not left him. He'd hoped so hard. The missiles
which had greeted them had seemed to confirm that hope, and so he had almost
welcomed them even as they sought to kill him. But dead Keerah mocked him.
He turned away, shifting
his attention to the orbiting ring of orbital forts. Only seven remained even
partially operational, and the nearest loomed in Dahak's display,
gleaming dully in the funeral watch light of Kano. The clumsy-looking base was
over eight kilometers in diameter, and a shiver ran down Colin's spine as he
looked at it.
Even now, its targeting
systems were locked on Dahak, its age-crippled computers sending firing
signals to its weapons. He shuddered as he pictured the ancient launchers
swinging through their firing sequences again and again, dry-firing because
their magazines were empty. It was bad enough to know the long-abandoned war
machine was trying to kill him; it was worse to wonder how many other vessels must
have died under its fire to exhaust its ammunition.
And if Dahak and Hector
were right, most of those vessels had been killed not for attacking Keerah, but
for trying to escape it.
"Probe One is
reporting, Captain." Dahak's mellow voice wrenched Colin away from his
frightening, empty thoughts to more immediate matters.
"Very well. What's
their status?"
"External scans
completed, sir. Fleet Captain (Engineering) Chernikov requests permission to
board."
Colin turned to the holo
image beside his console. "Recommendations?"
"My first
recommendation is to get Vlad out of there," Cohanna said flatly.
"I'd rather not risk our Chief Engineer on the miserable excuse for an
opinion I can give you."
"I tend to agree,
but I made the mistake of asking for volunteers."
"In that
case," Cohanna leaned back behind her desk in sickbay, a thousand
kilometers from Command One, and rubbed her forehead, "we might as well
let them board."
"Are you sure about
that?"
"Of course I'm
not!" she snapped, and Colin's hand rose in quick apology.
"Sorry, 'Hanna.
What I really wanted was a run-down on your reasoning."
"It hasn't
changed." Her almost normal tone was an unstated acceptance of his
apology. "The other bases are as dead as Keerah, but there are at least
two live hydroponics farms aboard that hulk—how I don't know, after all this
time—and there may be more; we can't tell from exterior bio-scans even at this
range. But that thing's entire atmosphere must've circulated through both of
them a couple of million times by now and the plants are still alive. It's
possible they represent a mutant strain that happened to be immune to whatever
killed everything on Keerah, but I doubt it. Whatever the agent was, it doesn't
seem to have missed anything down there, so I think it's unlikely
it ever contaminated the battle station." She shrugged.
"I know that's a
mouthful of qualifiers, but it's all I can tell you."
"But there's no
other sign of life," Colin said quietly.
"None."
Cohanna's holographic face was grim. "There couldn't be, unless they were
in stasis. Genetic drift would've seen to that long ago on something as small
as that."
"All right,"
Colin said after a moment. "Thank you." He looked down at his hands
an instant longer, then nodded to himself.
"Dahak, give me a
direct link to Vlad."
"Link open,
Captain."
"Vlad?"
"Yes,
Captain?" There was no holo image—Chernikov's bare-bones utility boat had
strictly limited com facilities—but his calm voice was right beside Colin's
ear.
"I'm going to let
you take a closer look, Vlad, but watch your ass. One man goes in first—and not
you, Mister. Full bio-protection and total decon before he comes back aboard,
too."
"With all respect,
Captain, I think—"
"I know what you
think," Colin said harshly. "The answer is no."
"Very well."
Chernikov sounded resigned, and Colin sympathized. He would vastly have
preferred to take the risk himself, but he was Dahak's captain. He
couldn't gamble with the chain of command . . . and neither could Vlad.
Vlad Chernikov looked at
the engineer he had selected for the task. Jehru Chandra had come many
light-years to risk his life, but he looked eager as he double-checked the
seals on his suit. Not cheerful or unafraid, but eager.
"Be cautious in
there, Jehru."
"Yes, sir."
"Keep your suit
scanners open. We will relay to Dahak."
"I understand,
sir." Chernikov grinned wryly at Chandra's manifestly patient reply. Did
he really sound that nervous?
"On your way,
then," he said, and the engineer stepped into the airlock.
As per Cohanna's
insistence, there was no contact between Chernikov's workboat and the battle
station, but Chernikov studied the looming hull yet again as Chandra floated
across the kilometer-wide gap on his suit propulsors. This ancient structure
was thousands of years younger than Dahak, but the warship had been
hidden under eighty kilometers of solid rock for most of its vast lifespan. The
battle station had not. The once bright battle steel was dulled by the film of
dust which had collected on its age-sick surface and pitted by micro-meteor
impacts, and its condition made Chernikov chillingly aware of its age as Dahak's
shining perfection never had.
Chandra touched down
neatly beside a small personnel lock, and his implants probed at the controls.
"Hmmmmm. . .
." The tension in his voice was smoothed by concentration. "Dahak was
right, Commander. I've got live computers here, but damned if I recognize the
machine language. Whups! Wait a minute, I've got something—"
His voice broke off for
an agonizing moment, then came back with a most unexpected sound: a chuckle.
"I'll be damned,
sir. The thing recognized my effort to access and brought in some kind of
translating software. The hatch's opening now."
He stepped through it
and it closed once more.
"Pressure in the
lock," he reported, his fold-space com working as well through battle
steel as through vacuum. "On the low side—'bout point-six-nine
atmospheres. My sensors read breathable."
"Forget it right
now, Jehru."
"Never even
considered it, sir. Honest. Okay, inner lock opening now." There was a
brief pause. "I'm in. Inner hatch closed. The main lighting's out, but
about half the emergency lights're up."
"Is the main net
live, or just the lock computers?"
"Looks like the
auxiliary net's up. Just a sec. Yes, sir. Power level's weak, though. Can't
find the main net, yet."
"Understood. Give
me a reading on the auxiliary. Then I want you to head up-ship. Keep an eye out
for . . ."
Colin rested in his
couch, eyes closed, concentrating on his neural feed as Chandra penetrated the
half-dead hulk, gaining in confidence with every meter. It showed even in the
technicalities of his conversation with Vlad.
Colin only hoped they
could ever dare to let him come home again.
* * *
" . . . and that's
about the size of it," Cohanna said, deactivating her personal memo
computer. "We hit Chandra's suit with every decon system we had. As near
as Dahak and I can tell, it was a hundred percent sterile before we let him unsuit,
but we've got him in total isolation. I think he's clean, but I'm not
letting him out of there until I'm certain."
"Agreed. Dahak?
Anything to add?"
"I am still
conversing with Omega Three's core computers, Captain. More precisely, I
am attempting to converse with them. We do not speak the same language, and
their data transmission speed is appreciably higher than my own. Unfortunately,
they also appear to be quite stupid." Colin hid a smile at the peeved note
in Dahak's voice. Among the human qualities the vast computer had internalized
was one he no doubt wished he could have avoided: impatience.
"How stupid?"
he asked after a moment.
"Extremely so. In
fairness, they were never intended for even rudimentary self-awareness, and
their age is also a factor. Omega Three's self-repair capability was
never up to Fleet standards, and it has suffered progressive failure, largely,
I suspect, through lack of spares. Approximately forty percent of Omega
Three's data net is inoperable. The main computers remain more nearly functional
than the auxiliary systems, but there are failures in the core programming
itself. In human terms, they are senile."
"I see. Are you
getting anything at all?"
"Affirmative, sir.
In fact, I am now prepared to provide a hypothetical reconstruction of events
leading to Omega Three's emplacement."
"You are?"
Colin sat straighter, and others at the table did the same.
"Affirmative. Be
advised, however, that much of it is speculative. There are serious gaps in the
available data."
"Understood. Let's hear
it."
"Acknowledged. In
essence, sir, Fleet Captain (Biosciences) Cohanna was correct in her original
hypothesis at Defram. The destruction of all life on the planets we have so far
encountered was due to a bio-weapon."
"What kind
of bio-weapon?" Cohanna demanded, leaning forward as if to will the answer
out of the computer.
"Unknown at this
time. It was the belief of the system governor, however, that it was of
Imperial origin."
"Sweet Jesu,"
Jiltanith breathed. "In so much at least wert thou correct, my Hector.
'Twas no enemy wreaked their destruction; 'twas themselves."
"That is
essentially correct," Dahak said. "As I have stated, the data are
fragmentary, but I have recovered portions of memoranda from the governor. I
hope to recover more, but those I have already perused point in that direction.
She did not know how the weapon was originally released, but apparently there
had been rumors of such a weapon for some time."
"The fools,"
Cohanna whispered. "Oh, the fools! Why would they build something
like this? It violates every medical ethic the Imperium ever had!"
"I fear my data
sample is too small to answer that, yet I have discovered a most interesting
point. It was not the Fourth Imperium which devised this weapon but an entity
called the Fourth Empire."
For just a moment, Colin
failed to grasp the significance. Dahak had used Imperial Universal, and in
Universal, the differentiation was only slightly greater than in English.
"Imperium" was umsuvah, with the emphasis on the last
syllable; "Empire" was umsuvaht, with the emphasis upon the
second.
"What?"
Cohanna blinked in consternation.
"Precisely. I have
not yet established the full significance of the altered terminology, yet it
suggests many possibilities. In particular, the Imperial Senate appears to have
been superseded in authority by an emperor— specifically, by Emperor Herdan
XXIV as of Year Thirteen-One-Seven-Five."
"Herdan the Twenty-Fourth?"
Colin repeated.
"The title would
seem significant," Dahak agreed, "suggesting as it does an extremely
long period of personal rule. In addition, the date of his accession appears to
confirm our dating of the Defram disaster."
"Agreed,"
Colin said. "But you don't have any more data?"
"Not of a political
or societal nature, Captain. It may be that Omega Three will disgorge
additional information, assuming I can locate the proper portion of its data
core and that the relevant entries have not decayed beyond recovery. I would
not place the probability as very high. Omega Three and its companions
were constructed in great haste by local authorities, not by Battle Fleet.
Beyond the programming essential for their design function, their data bases
appear to be singularly uninformed."
Despite his shock, Colin
grinned at the computer's sour tone.
"All right,"
he said after a moment. "What can you tell us about the effects of this
bio-weapon and the reason the fortifications were built?"
"The data are not
rich, Captain, but they do contain the essentials. The bio-weapon appears to
have been designed to mount a broad-spectrum attack upon a wide range of life
forms. If the rumors recorded by Governor Yirthana are correct, it was, in
fact, intended to destroy any life form. In mammals, it functioned as a
neuro-toxin, rendering the chemical compounds of the nervous system inert so
that the organism died."
"But that wouldn't
kill trees and grasses," Cohanna objected.
"That is true,
Commander. Unfortunately, the designers of this weapon appear to have been
extremely ingenious. Obviously we do not have a specimen of the weapon itself,
but I have retrieved very limited data from Governor Yirthana's own bio-staff.
It would appear that the designers had hit upon a simple observation: all known
forms of life depend upon chemical reactions. Those reactions may vary from
life form to life form, but their presence is a constant. This weapon was
designed to invade and neutralize the critical chemical functions of any
host."
"Impossible,"
Cohanna said flatly, then flushed.
"By the standards
of my own data base, you are correct, ma'am. Nonetheless, Keerah is devoid of
life. Empirical evidence thus suggests that it was, indeed, possible to the
Fourth Empire."
"Agreed," the
Biosciences head muttered.
"Governor
Yirthana's bio-staff hypothesized that the weapon had been designed to modify
itself at a very high rate of speed, attacking the chemical structures of its
victims in turn until a lethal combination was reached. An elegant theoretical
solution, although, I suspect, actually producing the weapon would be far from
simple."
"Simple! I'm
still having trouble believing it was possible!"
"As for Omega
Three and its companions," Dahak continued, "they were intended
to enforce a strict quarantine of Keerah. Governor Yirthana obviously was aware
of the contamination of her planet and took steps to prevent its spread. There
is also a reference I do not yet fully understand to something called a
mat-trans system, which she ordered disabled."
"
'Mat-trans'?" Colin asked.
"Yes, sir. As I
say, I do not presently fully understand the reference, but it would appear
that this mat-trans was a device for the movement of personnel over interstellar
distances without recourse to starships."
"What?!"
Colin jerked bolt upright in his chair.
"Current
information suggests a system limited to loads of only a few tons but capable
of transmitting them hundreds—possibly even several thousands—of light-years
almost instantaneously, Captain. Apparently this system had become the
preferred mode for personal travel. The energy cost appears to have been high,
however, which presumably explains the low upper mass limit. Starships remained
in use for bulk cargoes, and the Fleet and certain government agencies retained
courier vessels for transportation of highly-classified data."
"Jesus!" Colin
muttered. Then his eyes narrowed. "Why didn't you mention that
before?"
"You did not ask,
Captain. Nor was I aware of it. Please recall that I am continuing to query Omega
Three's memory even as we speak."
"All right, all
right. But matter transmission? Teleportation?" Colin looked at
Chernikov. "Is that possible?"
"As Dahak would
say, empirical data suggests it is, but if you are asking how, I have no
idea. Dahak's data base contains some journal articles about focused hyper
fields linked with fold-space technology, but the research had achieved nothing
as of the mutiny. Beyond that—?" He shrugged again.
"Maker!" Cohanna's
soft voice drew all eyes back to her. She was deathly pale. "If they
could—" She broke off, staring down at her hands and thinking furiously as
she conferred with Dahak through her neural feed. Her expression changed slowly
to one of utter horror, and when her attention returned to her fellows, her
eyes glistened with sorrow.
"That's it."
Her voice was dull. "That's how they did it to themselves."
"Explain,"
Colin said gently.
"I wondered . . . I
wondered how it could go this far." She gave herself a little shake.
"You see, Hector's right—only maniacs would deliberately dust whole
planets with a weapon like this. But it wasn't that way at all."
They looked at her, most
blankly, but a glimmer of understanding tightened Jiltanith's mouth. She nodded
almost imperceptibly, and Cohanna's eyes swiveled to her face.
"Exactly," the
biosciences officer said grimly. "The Imperium could have delivered it
only via starships. They'd've been forced to transport the bug—the agent, whatever
you want to call it—from system to system, intentionally. Some of that could
have happened accidentally, but the Imperium was huge. By the time a
significant portion of its planets were infected, the contaminating vector
would have been recognized. If it wasn't a deliberate military operation,
quarantine should have contained the damage.
"But the Empire
wasn't like that. They had this damned 'mat-trans' thing. Assuming an
incubation period of any length, all they needed was a single source of
contamination—just one—they didn't know about. By the time they realized
what was happening, it could've spread throughout the entire Imperium, and just
stopping starships wouldn't do a damned thing to slow it down!"
Colin stared at her as
her logic sank home. With something like the "mat-trans" Dahak had
described, the Imperium's worlds would no longer have been weeks or months of
travel apart. They would have become a tightly-integrated, inter-connecting
unit. Time and distance, the greatest barriers to holding an interstellar civilization
together, would no longer apply. What a triumph of technology! And what a
deadly, deadly triumph it had proven.
"Then I was
wrong," MacMahan murmured. "They could wipe themselves
out."
"Could and
did." Ninhursag's clenched fist struck the table gently, for an Imperial,
and her voice was thick with anguish. "Not even on purpose—by accident. By
accident, Breaker curse them!"
"Wait." Colin
raised a hand for silence. "Assume you're right, Cohanna. Do you really
think every planet would have been contaminated?"
"Probably not, but
the vast majority certainly could have been. From the limited information Dahak
and I have on this monster of theirs—and remember all our data is third or
fourth-hand speculation, by way of Governor Yirthana—the incubation time was
quite lengthy. Moreover, Yirthana's information indicates it was capable of
surviving very long periods, possibly several centuries, in viable condition
even without hosts.
"That suggests a
strategic rather than a tactical weapon. The long incubation period was
supposed to bury it and give it time to spread before it manifested itself.
That it in fact did so is also suggested by the fact that Yirthana had time to
build her bases before it wiped out Keerah. Its long-term lethality would mean
no one dared contact any infected planet for a very, very long period. Ideal,
if the object was to cripple an interstellar enemy.
"But look what that
means. Thanks to the incubation period, there probably wasn't any way to know
it was loose until people started dying. Which means the central, most
heavily-visited planets would've been the first to go.
"People being
people, the public reaction was—must have been—panic. And a panicked
person's first response is to flee." Cohanna shrugged. "The result
might well have been an explosion of contamination.
"On the other hand,
they had the hypercom. Warnings could be spread at supralight speeds without
using their mat-trans, and presumably some planets must have been able
to go into quarantine before they were affected. That's where the 'dwell time'
comes in. They couldn't know how long they had to stay quarantined. No
one would dare risk contact with any other planet as long as the smallest
possibility of contamination by something like this existed."
She paused, and Colin
nodded.
"So they would have
abandoned space," he said.
"I can't be
certain, but it seems probable. Even if any of their planets did survive, their
'Empire' still could have self-destructed out of all too reasonable fear. Which
means—" she met Colin's eyes squarely "—that in all probability,
there's no Imperium for us to contact."
Vladimir Chernikov bent
over the work bench, studying the disassembled rifle-like weapon. His enhanced
eyes were set for microscopic vision, and he manipulated his exquisitely
sensitive instruments with care. The back of his mind knew he was trying to
lose himself and escape the numbing depression which had settled over Dahak's
crew, but his fascination was genuine. The engineer in his soul rejoiced at the
beauty of the work before him. Now if he could only figure out what it did.
There was the capacitor,
and a real brute it was, despite its tininess. Eight or nine times a regular
energy gun's charge. And these were rheostats. One obviously regulated the
power of whatever the thing emitted, but what did the second . . . ?
Hmmmmm. Fascinating.
There's no sign of a standard disrupter head in here. But then—aha! What do we
have here?
He bent closer, bending
sensor implants as well as vision upon it, then froze. He looked a moment
longer, then raised his head and gestured to Baltan.
"Take a look at
this," he said quietly. His assistant bent over and followed Chernikov's
indicating test probe to the component in question, then pursed his lips in a
silent whistle.
"A hyper
generator," he said. "It has to be. But the size of the
thing."
"Precisely."
Chernikov wiped his spotless fingers on a handkerchief, drying their sudden
clamminess. "Dahak," he said.
"Yes, sir?"
"What do you make
of this?"
"A moment,"
the computer said. There was a brief period of silence, then the mellow voice
spoke again. "Fleet Commander (Engineering) Baltan is correct, sir. It is
a hyper generator. I have never encountered one of such small size or advanced
design, but the basic function is evident. Please note, however, that the
generator cavity's walls are composed of a substance unknown to me, and that
they extend the full length of the barrel."
"Explanations?"
"It would appear to
be a shielding housing around the generator, sir—one impervious to warp
radiation. Fascinating. Such a material would have obvious applications in such
devices as atmospheric hyper missile launchers."
"True. But am I
right in assuming the muzzle end of the housing is open?"
"You are, sir. In
essence, this appears to be a highly-advanced adaptation of the warp grenade.
When activated, this weapon would project a focused field—in effect, a beam—of
multi-dimensional translation which would project its target into hyper space."
"And leave it
there," Chernikov said flatly.
"Of course,"
Dahak agreed. "A most ingenious weapon."
"Ingenious,"
Chernikov repeated with a shudder.
"Correct. Yet I
perceive certain limitations. The hyper-suppression fields already developed to
counteract warp grenades would also counteract this device's effect, at least
within the area of such a field. I cannot be certain without field-testing the
weapon, but I suspect that it might be fired out of or across
such a suppression field. Much would depend upon the nature of the focusing
force fields. But observe the small devices on both sides of the barrel. They
appear to be extremely compact Ranhar generators. If so, they presumably create
a tube of force to extend the generator housing and contain the hyper field,
thus controlling its area of effect and also tending, quite possibly, to offset
the effect of a suppression field."
"Maker, and I
always hated warp grenades," Baltan said fervently.
"I, too,"
Chernikov said. He straightened from the bench slowly, looking at the next
innocent-seeming device he'd abstracted from Omega Three once Cohanna
had decided her painstaking search confirmed the original suggestion of the
functional hydroponic farms. There was no trace of anything which could
possibly be the bio-weapon aboard the battle station, and Chernikov had
gathered up every specimen of technology he could find. He'd been looking
forward to taking all of them apart.
Now he was almost afraid
to.
Colin MacIntyre sat in
Conference One once more. He'd grown to hate this room, he thought, bending his
gaze upon the tabletop. Hate it.
Silence fell as the last
person found a seat, and he looked up.
"Ladies and
gentlemen," he said, "for the past month I've resisted all arguments
to move on because I believe Keerah represents a microcosm of what probably
happened to the entire Imperium. I now believe we've learned all we can here.
But—" he drew out the slight pause behind the word "—that still
leaves the question of what we do next. Before turning to that, however, I
would like to review our findings, beginning with our Chief Engineer."
He sat back and nodded
to Chernikov, who cleared his throat quietly, as if organizing his thoughts,
then began.
"We have examined
many artifacts recovered from Omega Three. On the basis of what we have
discovered to date, I have reached a few conclusions about the technical base
of the Imperium—that is to say, the Empire.
"They had, as we
would have expected, made major advances, yet not so many as we might have
anticipated. Please bear in mind that I am speaking only of non-biological
technology; neither Cohanna nor I is in a position to say what they had
achieved in the life sciences. The weapon which destroyed them certainly
appears to evidence a very high level of bio-engineering.
"With that
reservation, our initial estimate, that their technology was essentially a
vastly refined version of our own, seems to have been correct. With the
probable exception of their mat-trans—on which, I regret to say, we have been
unable as yet to obtain data—we have encountered nothing Engineering and Dahak
could not puzzle out. This is not to say they had not advanced to a point far
beyond our current reach, but the underlying principles of their advances are
readily apparent to us. In effect, they appear to have reached a plateau of
fully mature technology and, I believe, may very well have been on the brink of
fundamental breakthroughs into a new order of achievement, but they had not yet
made them.
"In general, their
progress may be thought of as coupling miniaturization with vast increases in
power. A warship of Dahak's mass, for example, built with the technology we
have so far encountered—which, I ask you to bear in mind, represents an
essentially civilian attempt to create a military unit—would possess
something on the order of twenty times his combat capability."
He paused for emphasis,
and there were signs of awe on more than one face.
"Yet certain
countervailing design philosophies and trends, particularly in the areas of
computer science and cybernetics, also have become apparent to us.
Specifically, the hardware of their computer systems is extremely
advanced compared to our own; their software is not. Assuming that Omega
Three is a representative sample of their computer technology, their
computers had an even lower degree of self-awareness than that of Comp Cent
prior to the mutiny. The data storage capacity of Omega Three's Comp
Cent, whose mass is approximately thirty percent that of Dahak's central memory
core, exceeded his capacity, including all subordinate systems, by a factor of
fifty. The ability of Omega Three, on the other hand, despite a
computational speed many times higher than his, did not approach even that of Comp
Cent prior to the mutiny.
"Clearly, this
indicates a deliberate degradation of performance to meet some philosophical
constraint. My best guess—and I stress that it is only a guess—is that it
results from the period of civil warfare which apparently converted the
Imperium into the Empire. Fleet computers would have resisted firing on other
Fleet units, and while this could have been compensated for by altering their
Alpha Priority core programming, the combatants may have balked at allowing
semi-aware computers to decide whether or not to fire on other humans. This is
only a hypothesis, but it is certainly one possibility.
"In addition, we
have confirmed one other important point. While Omega Three's computers
did use energy-state technology, they also incorporated non-energy backups,
which appears to reflect standard Imperial military practice. This means a
deactivated Fleet computer would not experience a complete core loss as did the
civilian units discovered at Defram. If powered up once more, thus restoring
its energy-state circuitry, it should remain fully functional.
"Further, even
civilian installations which have been continuously powered could remain
completely operational. Omega Three's capabilities, for example,
suffered not because it relied upon energy-state components, but because it was
left unattended for so long that solid-state components failed. Had the
battle station's computers possessed adequate self-repair capability and
spares, Omega Three would be fully functional today."
He paused, as if
rechecking his thoughts, then glanced at Colin.
"That concludes my
report, sir. Detailed information is in the data base for anyone who cares to
peruse it."
"Thank you."
Colin pursed his lips for a moment, inviting questions, but there were none.
They were waiting for the other shoe, he thought dourly.
"Commander
Cohanna?" he said finally.
"We still don't
know how they did it," Cohanna replied, "but we're pretty sure what
they did. I'm not certain I can accept Dahak's explanation just yet, but it
fits the observed data, assuming they had the ability to implement it.
"For all practical
purposes, we can think of their weapon as a disease lethal to any living
organism. Obviously, it was a monster in every sense of the word. We may never
learn how it was released, but the effect of its release was the inevitable
destruction of all life in its path. Any contaminated planet is dead,
ladies and gentlemen.
"On the other
hand—" as Colin had, she drew out the pause for emphasis, "—we've
also determined that the weapon had a finite lifespan. And whatever that
lifespan was, it was less than the time which has passed. We've established
test habitats with plants and livestock from our own hydroponic and
recreational areas, using water and soil collected by remotes from all areas of
Keerah's surface. From Governor Yirthana's records, we know the weapon took
approximately thirty Terran months to incubate in mammals, and we've employed
the techniques used in accelerated healing to take our sample habitats through
a forty-five-month cycle with no evidence of the weapon. While I certainly
don't propose to return those test subjects to Dahak's life-support
systems, I believe the evidence is very nearly conclusive. The bio-weapon
itself has died, at least on Keerah and, by extension, upon any planet which
was contaminated an equivalent length of time ago.
"That concludes my
report, Captain."
"Thank you."
Colin squared his shoulders and spoke very quietly as the full weight of his
responsibility descended upon him. "On the basis of these reports, I
intend to proceed immediately to Birhat and Fleet Central."
Someone drew a sharply
audible breath, and his face tightened.
"What we've
discovered here makes it extremely unlikely Birhat survived, but that,
unfortunately, changes nothing.
"I don't know what
we'll find there, but I do know three things. One, if we return with no aid for
Earth, we lose. Two, the best command facilities at the Imperium's—or Empire's—disposal
would be at Fleet Central. Three, logic suggests the bio-weapon there will be
as dead as it is here. Based on those suppositions, our best chance of finding
usable hardware is at Birhat, and it's likely we can safely reactivate any we
find. At the very least, it will be our best opportunity to discover the full
extent of this catastrophe."
"We will depart
Keerah in twelve hours. In the meantime, please carry on about your duties.
I'll be in my quarters if I'm needed."
He stood, catching the
surprise on more than one face when his audience realized he did not intend to
debate the point.
"Attention on
deck," Dahak intoned quietly, and the officers rose.
Colin walked out in
silence, wondering if those he'd surprised realized why he'd foreclosed all
debate.
The answer was as simple
as it was bitter. In the end, the decision was his, but if he allowed them to
debate it they must share in it, however indirectly, and he would not permit
them to do so.
He couldn't know if Dahak's
presence was required to stand off the Achuultani scouts, but he hoped
desperately that it was not, for he, Colin MacIntyre, had elected to chase a
tattered hope rather than defend his home world. If he'd guessed wrong about
Horus's progress, he had also doomed that home world—a world which it had
become increasingly obvious might well be the only planet of humanity which
still existed—whatever he found at Birhat.
And the fact that logic
compelled him to Birhat meant nothing against his fear that he had guessed
wrong. Against his ignorance of Horus's progress. His agonizing suspicion that
if Fleet Central still existed, it might be another Omega Three, senile
and crippled with age . . . the paralyzing terror of bearing responsibility for
the death of his own species.
He would not—could
not—share that responsibility with another soul. It was his alone, and as he
stepped into the transit shaft, Senior Fleet Captain Colin MacIntyre tasted the
full, terrible burden of his authority at last.
The moss was soft and
slightly damp as he lay on his back, staring up at the projected sky. He was
coming to understand why the Imperium had provided its captains with this
greenery and freshness. He could have found true spaciousness on one of the
park decks, where breezes whipped across square kilometers of "open"
land, but this was his. This small, private corner of creation belonged to him,
offering its soothing aliveness and quiet bird-song when the weight of
responsibility crushed down upon him.
He closed his eyes,
breathing deeply, extending his enhanced senses. The splash of the fountains
caressed him, and a gentle breeze stroked his skin, yet the sensations only
eased his pain; they did not banish it.
He hadn't noted the time
when he stretched out upon the moss, and so he had no idea how long he'd been
there when his neural feed tingled.
Someone was at the
hatch, and he was tempted to deny access, for his awareness of what he'd done
was too fresh and aching. But that thought frightened him suddenly. It would be
so easy to withdraw into a tortured, hermit-like existence, and it was over six
months to Birhat. A man alone could go mad too easily in that much time.
He opened the hatch, and
his visitor stepped inside. She came around the end of a thicket of azaleas and
laurel, and he opened his eyes slowly.
"Art troubled, my
Colin," she said softly.
He started to explain,
but then he saw it in her eyes. She knew. One, at least, of his officers knew
exactly why he'd refused to discuss his decision.
"May I sit with
thee?" she asked gently, and he nodded.
She crossed the carpet
of moss with the poised, cat-like grace which was always so much a part of her,
straight and slim in her midnight-blue uniform, tall for an Imperial, yet
delicate, her gleaming black hair held back by the same jeweled clasp she'd
worn the day they met. The day when he'd seen the hate in her eyes. The hate
for what he'd done, for the clumsy, cocksure fumbling which had cost the lives
of a grandnephew and great-nieces she loved, but even more for what he was. For
the threat of punishment he posed to her mutineer-father. For the fullness of
his enhancement while she had but bits and pieces. And for the fact that he,
who had never known of Dahak's existence, never suspected her own
people's lonely, hopeless fight against Anu, had inherited command of the
starship from which she had been exiled for a crime others had committed.
There was a killer in
Jiltanith. He'd seen it then, known it from the first. The mutiny had cost her
her mother and the freedom of the stars, and the endless stealth of her
people's shadowy battle on Earth had been slivered glass in her throat, for she
was a fighter, a warrior who believed in open battle. Those long, agonizing
years had left dark, still places within her. Far more than he could ever hope
to be, she was capable of death and destruction, incapable of asking or
offering quarter.
But there was no hate in
her eyes now. They were soft and gentle under the atrium's sun, their black
depths jewel-like and still. Colin had grown accustomed to the appearance of
the full Imperials, yet in this moment the subtle alienness of her beauty smote
him like a fist. She had been born before his first Terran ancestor crawled
into a cave to hide from the weather, yet she was young. Twice his age and
more, yet they were both but children against the lifespan of their enhanced
bodies. Her youthfulness lay upon her, made still more precious and perfect by
the endless years behind her, and his eyes burned.
This, he thought. This
girl-woman who had known and suffered so much more than he, was what this all
was about. She was the symbol of humankind, the avatar of all its frailties and
the iron core of all its strength, and he wanted to reach out and touch her.
But she was the mythic warrior-maid, the emblem, and the weight of his decision
was upon him. He was unclean.
"Oh, my
Colin," she whispered, looking deep into his own weary, tormented eyes,
"what hast thou taken upon thyself?"
He clenched his hands at
his sides, gripping the moss, and refused to answer, but a sob wrenched at the
base of his throat.
She came closer slowly,
carefully, like a hunter approaching some wild, snared thing, and sank to her
knees beside him. One delicate hand, slender and fine-boned, deceiving the eye
into forgetting its power, touched his shoulder.
"Once," she
said, "in a life I scarce recall, I envied thee. Yea, envied and hated
thee, for thou hadst received all unasked for the one treasure in all the
universe I hungered most to hold. I would have slain thee, could I but have
taken that treasure from thee. Didst thou know that?"
He nodded jerkily, and
she smiled.
"Yet knowing, thou
didst name me thy successor in command, for thine eyes saw more clear than mine
own. 'Twas chance, mayhap, sent thee to Dahak's bridge, yet well hast thou
proven thy right to stand upon it. And never more than thou hast done this
day."
Her hand stroked gently
from his shoulder to his chest, covering the slow, strong beating of his
bioenhanced heart, and he trembled like a frightened child. But her fingers
moved, gentling his strange terror.
"Yet thou art not
battle steel, my Colin," she said softly. "Art flesh and blood for
all thy biotechnics, whate'er thy duty may demand of thee."
She bent slowly, laying
her head atop her hand, and the fine texture of her hair brushed his cheek, its
silken caress almost agony to his enhanced senses. Tears brimmed in the corners
of his eyes, and part of him cursed his weakness while another blessed her for
proving it to him. The sob he had fought broke free, and she made a soft,
soothing sound.
"Yea, art flesh and
blood, though captain to us all. Forget that not, for thou art not Dahak, and
thy humanity is thy curse, the sword by which thou canst be wounded." She
raised her head, and his blurred eyes saw the tears in her own. One
moss-stained hand rose, stroking her raven's-wing hair, and she smiled.
"Yet wounds may be
healed, my Colin, and I am likewise flesh, likewise blood," she murmured.
She bent over him, and her mouth tasted of the salt of their mingled tears. His
other hand rose, drawing her down beside him on the moss, and he rose on an
elbow as she smiled up at him.
"Thou wert my
salvation," she whispered, caressing his unruly sandy hair. "Now let
me be thine, for I am thine and thou art mine. Forget it never, my
dearest dear, for 'tis true now and ever shall be."
And she drew him down to
kiss her once again.
The computer named Dahak
closed down the sensors in the captain's quarters with profound but slightly
wistful gratitude. He had made great strides in understanding these
short-lived, infuriatingly illogical, occasionally inept, endlessly inventive,
and stubbornly dauntless descendants of his long-dead builders. More than any
other of his kind, he had learned to understand human emotions, for he had
learned to share many of them. Respect. Friendship. Hope. Even, in his own way,
love. He knew his presence would embarrass Colin and Jiltanith if it occurred
to them to check for it, and while he did not fully understand the reason, they
were his friends, and so he left them.
He gave the electronic
equivalent of a sigh, knowing that he could never comprehend the gentle
mysteries which had enfolded them. But he did not need to comprehend to know
how important they were, and to feel deeply grateful to his new friend 'Tanni
for understanding and loving his first friend Colin.
And now, he thought,
while they were occupied, he might add that tiny portion of his attention which
constantly attended his captain's needs and desires to another problem. Those
encoded dispatches from the courier Cordan still intrigued him.
His latest algorithm had
failed miserably, though he had finally managed to crack the scramble and
reduce the messages to symbol sets. Unfortunately, the symbols were
meaningless. Perhaps a new value-substitution subprogram was in order? Yet
pattern analysis suggested that the substitution was virtually random.
Interesting. That implied a tremendous symbol set, or else there was a method
to generate the values which only appeared random. . . .
The computer worried
happily away at the fascinating problem with a fragment of his capacity while
every tiny corner of his vast starship body pulsed and quivered with his
awareness.
All the tiny corners
save one, where two very special people enjoyed a priceless gift of privacy
made all the more priceless because they did not even know it had been given.
The last crude
spacecraft died, and the asteroid battered through their wreckage at three
hundred kilometers per second. Bits of debris struck its frontal arc, vanishing
in brief, spiteful spits of flame against its uncaring nickel-iron bow.
Heat-oozing wounds bit deep where the largest fragments had struck, and the
asteroid swept onward, warded by the defenders' executioners.
Six Achuultani
starships rode in formation about the huge projectile as it charged down upon
the blue-and-white world which was its target. They had been detached to guard
their weapon against the pygmy efforts of that cloud-swirled sapphire's
inhabitants, and their task was all but done.
They spread out,
distancing themselves from the asteroid, energy weapons ready as the first
missiles broke atmosphere. The clumsy chemical-fueled rockets sped outward,
tipped with their pathetic nuclear warheads, and the starships picked them off
with effortless ease. The doomed planet flung its every weapon against its
killers in despair and desperation . . . and achieved nothing.
The asteroid
hurtled onward, an energy state hungry for immolation, and the starships
wheeled up and away as it tasted air at last and changed. For one fleeting
instant it was no longer a thing of ice-bound rock and metal. It was alive, a
glorious, screaming incandescence pregnant with death.
It struck, spewing its
flame back into the heavens, stripping away atmosphere in a cataclysm of fire,
and the Achuultani starships hovered a moment longer, watching, as the
planetary crust split and fissured. Magma exploded from the gaping wounds, and
they spread and grew, racing like cracks in ice, until the geologically
unstable planet itself blew apart.
The starships
lingered no longer. They turned their bows from the ruin they had wrought and
raced outward. Twenty-one light-minutes from the primary they crossed the hyper
threshold and vanished like soap bubbles, hastening to seek their fellows at
the next rendezvous.
Horus stood on the
command deck of the battleship Nergal, almost unrecognizable in its
refurbished state, and watched her captain take her smoothly out of atmosphere.
A year ago, Adrienne Robbins, one of the US Navy's very few female attack
submarine skippers, had never heard of the Fourth Imperium; now she performed
her duties with a competence which gave him the same pleasure he took from a
violin virtuoso and a Mozart concerto. She was good, he decided, watching her
smooth her gunmetal hair. Better than he'd ever been, and she had the
confident, almost sleepy smile of a hungry tiger.
He turned from the
bridge crew to the holo display as Nergal slid into orbit. Marshal
Tsien, Acting Chief of the Supreme Chiefs of Staff, towered over his right
shoulder, and Vassily Chernikov stood to Horus' left. All three watched
intently as Nergal leisurely overtook the half-finished bulk of Orbital
Defense Center Two, and Horus suddenly snapped his fingers and turned to Tsien.
"Oh, Marshal
Tsien," he said, "I meant to tell you that I spoke with General
Hatcher just before you arrived, and he expects to return to us within the next
four or five weeks."
Relief lit both
officers' eyes, for it had been touch and go for Gerald Hatcher. Though Tsien's
first aid had saved his life, he would have lost both legs without Imperial
medical technology, assuming he'd lived at all, yet that same technology had
nearly killed him.
Hatcher was one of those
very rare individuals, less than one tenth of a percent of the human race, who
were allergic to the standard quick-heal drugs, but the carnage at Minya Konka
had offered no time for proper medical work-ups, and the medic who first
treated him guessed wrong. The general's reaction had been quick and savage,
and only the fact that that same medic had recognized the symptoms so quickly
had prevented it from being fatal.
Even so, it had taken
months to repair his legs to a point which permitted bioenhancement, for if the
alternate therapies were just as effective, they were also far slower. Which
also meant his recuperation from enhancement itself was taking far longer than
normal, so it was a vast relief to all his colleagues and friends to know he would
soon return to them.
And, Horus thought,
remembering how Hatcher had chuckled over Tsien's remark at Minya Konka, as the
first enhanced member of the Chiefs of Staff.
"I am relieved to
hear it, Governor," Tsien said now. "And I am certain you will be relieved
to have him back."
"I will, but I'd
also like to congratulate you on a job very well done these past months. I
might add that Gerald shares my satisfaction."
"Thank you,
Governor." Tsien didn't smile—Horus didn't think he'd ever seen the big
man smile—but his eyes showed his pleasure.
"You deserve all
the thanks we can give you, Marshal," he said quietly.
In a sense, Hatcher's
injuries had been very much to their advantage. If any other member of the
chiefs of staff was his equal in every way, it was Tsien. They were very
different; Tsien lacked Hatcher's ease with people and the flair which made
exquisitely choreographed operations seem effortless, but he was tireless,
analytical, eternally self-possessed, and as inexorable as a Juggernaut yet flexibly
pragmatic. He'd streamlined their organization, moved their construction and
training schedules ahead by almost a month, and—most importantly of all—stamped
out the abortive guerrilla war in Asia with a ruthlessness Hatcher himself
probably could not have displayed.
Horus had been more than
a little horrified at the way Tsien went about it. He hadn't worried about
taking armed resisters prisoner, and those he'd taken had been summarily
court-martialed and executed, usually within twenty-four hours. His reaction
teams had been everywhere, filling Horus with the fear that Hatcher had made a
rare and terrible error in recommending him as his replacement. There'd been an
elemental implacability about the huge Chinese, one that made Horus wonder if
he even cared who was innocent and who guilty.
Yet he'd made himself
wait, and time had proved the wisdom of his decision. Ruthless and implacable,
yes, and also a man tormented by shame; Tsien had been those things, for it had
been his officers who had betrayed their trust. But he'd been just as
ruthlessly just. Every individual caught in his nets had been sorted out under
an Imperial lie detector, and the innocent were freed as quickly as they had
been apprehended. Nor had he permitted any unnecessary brutality to taint his
actions or those of his men.
Even more importantly,
perhaps, he was no "Westerner" punishing patriots who had struck back
against occupation but their own commander-in-chief, acting with the full
support of Party and government, and no one could accuse Tsien Tao-ling of
being anyone's puppet. His reputation, and the fact that he had been
selected to replace the wounded Hatcher, had done more to cement Asian support
of the new government and military than anything else ever could have.
Within two weeks, all
attacks had ended. Within a month, there was no more guerrilla movement. Every
one of its leaders had been apprehended and executed; none were imprisoned.
Nor had the chilling
message been lost upon the rest of the world. Horus had agonized over the
brutal suppression of the African riots, but Tsien's lesson had gone home.
There was still unrest, but the world's news channels had carried live coverage
of the trials and executions, and outbursts of open violence had ended almost
overnight.
Tsien bobbed his head
slightly in acknowledgment of the compliment, and Horus smiled, turning back to
the display as ODC Two grew within it.
The eye-searing
fireflies of robotic welders crawled over the vast structure while suited
humans floated nearby or swung through their hard-working mechanical minions
with apparently suicidal disregard for life and limb. Shuttles of components
from the orbital smelters arrived with the precision of a well-run Terran
railroad, disgorging their loads and wheeling away to return with more.
Construction ships, raw and naked-looking in their open girder-work, seized
structural members and frame units on tractors, placing them for the swarm of
welders to tack into place and then backing away for the next. Conduits of Terran
cable for communication nets, crystalline icicles of Imperial molycircs for
computer cores and fire control, the huge, glittering blocks of prefabricated
shield generators, Terran lighting and plumbing fixtures, and the truncated,
hollow stubs of missile launchers—all vanished into the seeming confusion as
they watched, and always there were more awaiting the frantically laboring
robots and their masters.
It was impressive, Horus
thought. Even to him—or, possibly, especially to him. Geb had shared
Tegran's remarks about the Terra-born with him, and Horus could only agree.
Unlike these fiercely determined people, he'd known their task was all but
impossible. They hadn't accepted that, and they were making liars of his own fears.
He and the generals
watched the seething construction work for several minutes, then Horus turned
away with a sigh, followed by his subordinates. They stepped into the transit
shaft with him, and he hid a smile at Tsien's uneasy expression. Interesting
that this should bother him when facing totally unexpected ambush by traitors
within his own military hadn't even fazed him.
They arrived at the
conference room Captain Robbins had placed at their disposal, and he waved them
towards the table as he seated himself at its head and crossed his legs
comfortably.
"I'm impressed,
gentlemen," he said. "I had to see that in person before I could
quite believe it, I'm afraid. You people are producing miracles."
He saw the pleasure in
their eyes. Flattery, he knew, was anathema to these men, however much of it
they'd heard during their careers, but knowing their competence was
appreciated—and, even more importantly, recognized for what it was—was
something else.
"Now," he
said, planting his forearms on the table and looking at Tsien, "suppose
you tell me what other miracles you plan on working."
"With your
permission, Governor, I shall begin by presenting a brief overview," the
marshal replied, and Horus nodded approval.
"In general,"
Tsien continued, "we are now only one week behind General Hatcher's
original timetable. The resistance in Asia has delayed completion of certain of
our projects—in particular, PDCs Huan-Ti and Shiva suffered severe damage which
has not yet been made entirely good—but we are from one month to seven weeks
ahead of schedule on our non-Asian PDCs. Certain unanticipated problems have
arisen, and I will ask Marshal Chernikov to expand upon them in a moment, but
the over all rate of progress is most encouraging.
"Officially, the
merger of all existing command structures has been completed. In fact, disputes
over seniority have continued to drag on. They are now being brought to an
end."
Tsien's policy was
simple, Horus reflected; officers who objected to the distribution of
assignments were simply relieved. It might have cost them some capable people,
but the marshal did have a way of getting his points across.
"Enhancement is,
perhaps, the brightest spot of all. Councilor Tudor and her people have,
indeed, worked miracles in this area. We are now two months ahead of schedule
for military enhancement and almost five weeks ahead for non-military
enhancement, despite the inclusion of additional occupational groups. We now
have sufficient personnel to man all existing warships and fighters. Within
another five months, we will have enhanced staffs for all PDCs and ODCs. Once
that has been achieved, we will be able to begin enhancement of crews for the
warships now under construction. With good management and a very little good
fortune, we should be able to crew each unit as it commissions."
"That is
good news! You make me feel we may pull this off, Marshal."
"We shall certainly
attempt to, Governor," Tsien said calmly. "The balance between
weapons fabrication and continued industrial expansion remains our worst
production difficulty, but resource allocation is proving more than adequate. I
believe Marshal Chernikov's current plans will overcome our remaining problems
in this area.
"General Chiang
faces some difficulties in his civil defense command, but the situation is
improving. In terms of organization and training, he is two months ahead of
schedule; it is construction of the inland shelters which poses the greatest
difficulty, then food collection."
Horus nodded. Chiang
Chien-su, one of Tsien's nominees to the Supreme Chiefs of Staff, was a short,
rotund martinet with the mind of a computer. He smiled a lot, but the granite
behind the smile was evident. Less evident but no less real was his deep
respect for human life, an inner gentleness which, conversely, made him
absolutely ruthless where saving lives was concerned.
"How far behind is
shelter construction running?"
"Over three
months," Tsien admitted. "We anticipate that some of that will be
made up once PDC construction is complete. I must point out, however, that our
original schedules already allowed for increases in building capacity after our
fortification projects were completed. I do not believe we will be able to compensate
completely for the time we have lost. This means that a greater proportion of
our coastal populations will be forced to remain closer to their homes."
Horus frowned. Given the
ratio of seas to land, anything that broke through the planetary shield was
three times more likely to be an ocean strike than to hit land. That meant
tsunamis, flooding, salt rains . . . and heavy loss of life in coastal areas.
"I want that
program expedited, Marshal Tsien," he said quietly.
"Governor,"
Tsien said, equally quietly, "I have already diverted eighty percent of
our emergency reserve capacity to the project. Every expedient is being
pursued, but the project is immense and there is more civilian opposition to
the attendant disruptions than your Council anticipated. The situation also is
exacerbated by the food program. Collection of surpluses even in First World
areas places severe strains on available transport; in Third World areas
hoarding is common and armed resistance is not unknown. All of this diverts manpower
and transport from population relocation efforts, yet the diversion is
necessary. There is little point saving lives from bombardment only to lose
them to starvation."
"Are you saying we
won't make it?"
"No, Governor, I do
not say we will fail. I only caution you that despite the most strenuous
exertions, it is unlikely that we will succeed entirely."
Their eyes held for a
moment, then Horus nodded. If they were no more than three months behind, they
were still working miracles. And the marshal's integrity was absolute; if he
said every effort would be made, then every effort would be made.
"On a more cheerful
note," Tsien resumed after a moment, "Admiral Hawter and General
Singhman are doing very well with their training commands. It is unfortunate that
so much training must be restricted to simulators, but I am entirely satisfied
with their progress—indeed, they are accomplishing more than I had hoped for.
General Tama and General Amesbury are performing equally well in the management
of our logistics. There remain some personnel problems, principally in terms of
manpower allocation, but I have reviewed General Ki's solutions to them and
feel confident they will succeed.
"In my own opinion,
our greatest unmet training needs lie in the operational area. With your
permission, I will expand upon this point following Marshal Chernikov's
report."
"Of course,"
Horus said.
"Then, if I may, I
will ask Marshal Chernikov to begin."
"Certainly."
Horus turned his bright old eyes to Chernikov, and the Russian rubbed a
fingertip thoughtfully over the table as he spoke.
"Essentially,
Horus, we are well ahead of schedule on our PDC programs. We have managed this
through allocation of additional manufacturing capacity to construction
equipment and the extraordinary efforts of our personnel.
"We are not so
advanced on our orbital work, but Geb and I agree that we should be on schedule
by the end of next month, though it is unlikely we will complete the projects
very much ahead of schedule. Nonetheless, we believe we will at least make our
target dates in all cases.
"Despite this, two
problems concern me. One is the planetary power grid; the other is the relative
priority of munitions and infrastructure. Allow me to take them in turn.
"First,
power." Chernikov folded his arms across his broad chest, his blue eyes
thoughtful. "As you know, our planning has always envisioned the use of
existing Terran generator capacity, but I fear that our estimates of that
capacity were overly optimistic. Even with our PDCs' fusion plants, we will be
hard put to provide sufficient power for maximum shield strength, and the
situation for our ODCs is even worse."
"Excuse me,
Vassily, but you said you were on schedule," Horus observed.
"We are, but, as
you know, our ODC designs rely upon fold-space power transmission from Earth.
This design decision was effectively forced upon us by the impossibility of
building full-scale plants for the ODCs in the time available. Without
additional power from Earth, the stations will not be able to operate all
systems at peak efficiency."
"And you're afraid
the power won't be there," Horus said softly. "I see."
"Perhaps you do not
quite. I am not afraid it will not be available; I know it will
not. And without it—" He shrugged slightly, and Horus nodded.
Without that power net,
the ODCs would lose more than half their defensive strength and almost as much
of their offensive punch. Their missile launchers would be unaffected, but
energy weapons were another matter entirely.
"All right,
Vassily, you're not the sort to dump a problem on me until you think you've got
an answer. So what rabbit's coming out of the hat this time?"
"A core tap,"
Chernikov said levelly, and Horus jerked in his chair.
"Are you out of
your—?! No. Wait." He waved a hand and made himself sit back. "Of
course you're not. But you do recognize the risks?"
"I do. But we must
have that power, and Earth cannot provide it."
Maker, tell me what to
do, Horus thought fervently. A core tap on a planet? Madness! If
they lose control of it, even for an instant—!
He shuddered as he
pictured that demon of power, roused and furious as it turned upon the
insignificant mites who sought to master it. A smoldering wasteland, scoured of
life, and raging storm fronts, hurricanes of outraged atmosphere which would
rip across the face of the planet. . . .
"There's no other
choice?" His tone was almost pleading. "None?"
"None that my staff
have been able to discover," Chernikov said flatly.
"Where—" Horus
paused and cleared his throat. "Where would you put it?"
"Antarctica,"
Chernikov replied.
There's a fitting irony
in that, Horus thought. Anu's enclave hid there for millennia. But a polar
position? So close to the Indian Ocean bio-system? Yet where would I prefer it?
New York? Moscow? Beijing?
"Have you
calculated what happens if you lose control?" he asked finally.
"As well as we can.
In a worst-case scenario, we will lose approximately fifty-three percent of the
Antarctic surface. Damage to the local eco-system will be effectively total.
Damage to the Indian Ocean bio-system will be severe but, according to the
projections, not irrecoverable. Sea-level worldwide will rise, with consequent
coastal flooding, and some global temperature drop may be anticipated. Estimated
direct loss of life: approximately six-point-five million. Indirect deaths and
the total who will be rendered homeless are impossible to calculate. We had
considered an arctic position, but greater populations would lie in relative
proximity, the flooding would be at least as severe, and the contamination of
salt rains would be still worse when the sea water under the ice sheet
vaporized."
"Maker!" Horus
whispered. "Have you discussed this with Geb?"
"I have. It is only
fair to tell you he was utterly opposed, yet after we had discussed it at some
length, he modified his position somewhat. He will not actively oppose a core
tap, but he cannot in good conscience recommend it. On the other hand—"
agate-hard blue eyes stabbed Horus "—this is his planet only by adoption.
I do not say that in any derogatory sense, Horus, yet it is true. Worse, he
continues to feel—as, I believe, do you—a guilt which produces a certain
protective paternalism within him. If he could refute the logic of my
arguments, he would oppose them; his inability to support them suggests to me
that his own logic is unable to overrule his emotions. Perhaps," the hard
eyes softened slightly, "because he is so good a man."
"And despite that,
you want to go ahead."
"I see no option.
We risk seven million dead and severe damage to our world if we proceed; we run
a far greater risk of the total destruction of the planet if we do not."
"Marshal
Tsien?"
"I am less
conversant with the figures than Marshal Chernikov, but I trust his calculations
and judgment. I endorse his recommendation unreservedly, Governor. I will do so
in writing if you wish."
"That won't be
necessary," Horus sighed. His shoulders slumped, but he shook his head
wryly. "You Terra-born are something else, Vassily!"
"If so, we have had
good teachers," Chernikov replied, eyes warming with true affection.
"Thanks to you, we have a possibility of saving ourselves. We will not
throw away the chance you have given us."
Horus felt his face heat
and turned quickly to another point.
"Maker! I hope you
didn't plan on discussing your concerns in order of severity. If your munitions
problem is worse—!"
"No, no!"
Chernikov laughed. "No, this is not quite so grave. Indeed, one might
almost call it planning for the future."
"Well that
has a cheerful ring."
"Russians are not
always melancholy, Horus. Generally, but not always. No, my major concern stems
from the high probability that our planetary shield will be forced back into
atmosphere. Our ODCs will be fairly capable of self-defense, although we
anticipate high losses among them if the planetary shield is forced
back, but our orbital industrial capacity will, unfortunately, also be exposed.
Nor will it be practical to withdraw it to the planetary surface."
That was true enough, Horus
reflected. They'd accepted that from the beginning, but by building purely for
a weightless environment they'd been able to produce more than twice the
capacity in half the time.
"What do you have
in mind?"
"I am about to
become gloomy again," the Russian warned, and Horus chuckled. "Let us
assume we have succeeded in driving off the scouts but that Dahak has
not returned when the main incursion arrives. I realize that our chances of
survival in such an eventuality are slight, yet it is not in me to say there
are none. Perhaps it is unrealistic of me, but I admire the American John Paul
Jones and respect his advice. Both the more famous quote, and another: It seems
a law inflexible unto itself that he who will not risk cannot win. I may not
have it quite correct, but I believe the spirit comes through."
"This is heading
somewhere?" Horus asked quizzically.
"It is. If we lose
our orbital industry, we lose eighty percent of our total capacity. This will
leave us much weaker when we confront the main incursion. Even if we beat off
the scouts quickly and with minimal losses—a happy state of affairs on which we
certainly cannot depend—we will be hard-pressed to rebuild even to our current
capacity out of our present Imperial planetary industry. I therefore propose
that we should place greater emphasis on increasing our planetary industrial
infrastructure."
"I agree it's
desirable, but where do you plan to get the capacity?"
"With your
permission, I will discontinue the production of mines."
"Ah?"
"I have studied
their capabilities, and while they are impressive, I feel they will be less
useful against the scouts than an increase in planetary industrial capacity
will be to our defense against the main incursion."
"Why?"
"Essentially, the
mines are simply advanced hunter-killer satellites. Certainly their ability to
attack vessels as they emerge from hyper is useful, yet they will be required
in tremendous numbers to cover effectively the volume of space we must protect.
Their attack radius is no more than ninety thousand kilometers, and mass
attacks will be required to overpower the defenses of any alert target. Because
of these limitations, I doubt our ability to produce adequate numbers in the
time available to us. I would prefer to do without them in order to safeguard
our future industrial potential."
"I see." Horus
pursed his lips, then nodded. "All right, I agree."
"Thank you."
"Now,
Marshal," Horus turned to Tsien, "you mentioned something about
operational problems?"
"Yes, Governor.
General Amesbury's Scanner Command is well prepared to detect the enemy's
approach, but we do not know whether we would be better advised to send our
units out to meet them as they move in-system after leaving hyper or to
concentrate closer to Earth for sorties from within the shield after they have
closed with the planet. The question also, of course, is complicated by the
possibility that the Achuultani might attempt a pincer attack, using one group
of scouts to draw our sublight units out of position and then micro-jumping
across the system to attack from another direction."
"And you want to
finalize operational doctrine?"
"Not precisely. I
realize that this almost certainly will not be possible for some time and that
much ultimately will depend upon the differences between Achuultani technology
and our own. For the moment, however, I would like to grant Admiral Hawter's
request to deploy our existing units for operational training and war games in
the trans-asteroidal area. It will give the crews valuable experience with
their weapons, and, more importantly, I believe, give our command personnel
greater confidence in themselves."
"I agree
entirely," Horus said firmly. "And it'll also let us use some of the
larger asteroids for target practice—which means the Achuultani won't be
able to use them for target practice on us! Proceed with it immediately, by all
means, Marshal Tsien. Vassily, I'll take your recommendations to the Council.
Unless someone there can give me an overpowering counter-argument, they'll be
approved within forty-eight hours. Is that good enough?"
"Eminently,
Governor."
"Good. In that
case, gentlemen, let's get into our suits. I want to see ODC Two
firsthand."
* * *
The Achuultani
scouts gathered their strength once more, merging into a single huge formation
about their flagship. A brilliant F5 star lay barely five light-years distant,
but it held no interest for them. Their instruments probed and peered,
listening for the electromagnetic voices they had come so far to find. The
universe was vast. Not even such accomplished killers as they could sweep it of
all life, and so worlds such as T'Yir were safe unless the scouts literally
stumbled across them.
But other worlds
were not, and the sensor crews caught the faint signals they had sought.
Directional antennae turned and quested, and the scouts reoriented themselves.
A small, G2 star called to them, and they went to silence it forever.
"Barbarian!"
Tamman shook his head mournfully as he took a fresh glass of lemonade from his
wife and buried his sorrows in its depths.
"And why might that
be, you effete, over-civilized, not to say decadent, epicure?" Colin
demanded.
"That ought to be
obvious. Mesquite charcoal? How . . . how Texan!"
Colin stuck out his
tongue, and meat juices hissed as he turned steaks. A fragrant cloud of smoke
rose on the heat shimmer of the grill, pushed out over the lake by the park
deck's cool breezes, and the volley ball tournament was in full cry. He glanced
up in time to see Colonel Tama Matsuo, Tamman's grandson, launch a vicious
spike. One of the German team's forwards tried to get under it, but not even an
enhanced human could have returned that shot.
"Banzai!"
the Sendai Division's team screamed, and the Germans muttered darkly. Jiltanith
applauded, and Matsuo bowed to her, then prepared to serve. His hand struck the
ball like a hammer, and Colin winced as it bulleted across the net.
"Now, Tamman, don't
be so harsh," his critic's wife chimed in. "After all, Colin's doing
the best he knows how."
"Oh, thank
you, kind lady! Thank you! Just remember—your wonderful husband is the one who
courted bad luck by broiling tai in miso last week."
Recon Captain Amanda
Givens laughed, her cafe-au-lait face wreathed in a lovely smile, and Tamman
pulled her down beside him to kiss her ear.
"Nonsense," he
said airily. "Just doing my bit to root out superstition. Anyway, I was
out of salt."
Amanda snuggled closer
to him, and Colin grinned. Dahak's sickbay had regenerated the leg she'd
lost in the La Paz raid in time for her wedding, and the sheer joy she and
Tamman took in one another warmed Colin's heart, even though their marriage had
caused a few unanticipated problems.
Dahak had always seemed
a bit pettish over the Terran insistence that one name wasn't good enough. He'd
accepted it—grumpily—but only until he got to attend the first wedding on his
decks in fifty thousand years. In some ways, he'd seemed even more delighted
than the happy couple, and he'd hardly been able to wait for Colin to log the
event officially.
That was when the
trouble started, for Imperial conventions designating marital status sounded
ridiculous applied to Terran names, and Dahak had persisted in trying to make
them work. Colin usually wound up giving in when Dahak felt moved to true
intransigence—talking the computer out of something was akin to parting the Red
Sea, only harder—but he'd refused pointblank to let Dahak inflict a name
like Amandacollettegivens-Tam on a friend. The thought of hearing that
every time Dahak spoke to or of Amanda had been too much, and if Tamman had
originally insisted (when he finally stopped laughing) that it was a lovely
name which fell trippingly from the tongue, his tune quickly changed when he
found out what Dahak intended to call him. Tamman-Amcolgiv was shorter;
that was about all you could say for it.
"Methinks it little
matters what thou sayst, Tamman," Jiltanith's mournful observation drew
Colin back to the present as she opened another bottle of beer. "Our Colin
departeth not from his fell intent to poison one and all with his noxious
smokes and fumes."
"Listen, all of
you," Colin retorted, propping his fists on his hips, "I'm captain of
this tub, and we'll fix food my way!"
"Didst'a hear thy
captain speak of thee, Dahak, my tub?" Jiltanith caroled, and Colin shook
a fist at her.
"I believe the
proper response is 'Sticks and stones may break my bones, but words will never
hurt me,' " a mellow voice replied, and Colin groaned.
"What idiot
encouraged him to learn cliches?"
"Nay, Colin, acquit
us all. 'Tis simply that we discouraged him not."
"Well you should
have."
"Stop complaining
and let the man cook." Vlad Chernikov lay flat on his back in the shade of
a young oak. Now he propped one eye open. "If you do not care for his
cuisine, you need not eat it, Tamman."
"Fat chance!"
Colin snorted, and stole Jiltanith's beer.
He swallowed, enjoying
the "sun" on his shoulders, and decided 'Tanni had been right to talk
him into the party. The anniversary of the fall of Anu's enclave deserved to be
celebrated as a reminder of some of the "impossible" things they'd
already accomplished, even if uncertainty over what waited at Birhat continued
to gnaw at everyone. Or possibly because it did.
He looked out over the
happy, laughing knots of his off-watch crewmen. Some of them, anyway. There was
a null-grav basketball tournament underway on Deck 2460, and General Treshnikov
had organized a "Top Gun" contest on the simulator deck for the
non-fighter pilots of the crew. Then there was the regatta out on the
thirty-kilometer-wide park deck's lake.
He glanced around the
shaded picnic tables. Cohanna and Ninhursag sat at one, annihilating one
another in a game of Imperial battle chess with a bloodthirsty disregard for
losses that would turn a line officer gray, and Caitrin O'Rourke and Geran had
embarked on a drinking contest—in which Caitrin's Aussie ancestry appeared to
be a decided advantage—at another. General von Grau and General Tsukuba were
wagering on the outcome of the volley ball tournament, and Hector wore a dreamy
look as he and Dahak pursued a discussion, complete with neural-feed visual
aids, of Hannibal's Italian tactics. Sarah Meir sat with him, listening in and
reaching down occasionally to scratch the ears of Hector's huge half-lab,
half-rottweiler bitch Tinker Bell as she drowsed at her master's feet.
Colin returned
Jiltanith's beer, and his smile grew warmer as her eyes gleamed at him. Yes,
she'd been right—just as she'd been right to insist they make their own
"surprise" announcement at the close of the festivities. And thank
God he'd been firm with Dahak! He didn't know how she would have reacted to
Jiltanith-Colfranmac, but he knew how he would have felt over
Colinfrancismacintyre-Jil!
"Supralight
shutdown in ten minutes," Dahak announced into the fiery tension of
Command One's starlit dimness, and Colin smiled tightly at Jiltanith's holo
image, trying to wish she were not far away in Command Two.
He inhaled deeply and
concentrated on the reports and commands flowing through his neural feed. Not
even the Terra-born among Dahak's well-drilled crew needed to think
through their commands these days. Which might be just as well. There had been
no hails or challenges, but they'd been thoroughly scanned by someone (or
something) while still a full day short of Birhat.
Colin would have felt
immeasurably better to know what had been on the other end of those scanners .
. . and how whatever it was meant to react. One thing they'd learned at Kano:
the Fourth Empire's weaponry had been, quite simply, better than Dahak's
best. Vlad and Dahak had done all they could to upgrade their defenses, but if
an active Fleet Central was feeling belligerent, they might very well die in
the next few hours.
"Sublight in three
minutes."
"Stand by,
Tactical," Colin said softly.
"Standing by,
Captain."
The last minutes raced
even as they trickled agonizingly slowly. Then Colin felt the start of
supralight shutdown in his implants, and suddenly the stars were still.
"Core tap
shutdown," Dahak reported, and then, almost instantly, "Detection at
ten light-minutes. Detection at thirty light-minutes. Detection at five
light-hours."
"Display
system," Colin snapped, and the sun Bia, Birhat's G0 primary, still twelve
light-hours away, was suddenly ringed with a system schematic.
"God's Teeth!"
Jiltanith's whisper
summed up Colin's sentiments admirably. Even at this range, the display was
crowded, and more and more light codes sprang into view with mechanical
precision as Sarah took them in at half the speed of light. Dahak's
scanners reached ahead, adding contact after contact, until the display gleamed
with a thick, incredible dusting of symbols.
"Any response to
our presence, Dahak?"
"None beyond
detection, sir. I have received no challenges, nor has anyone yet responded to
my hails."
Colin nodded. It was a
disappointment, for he'd felt a spurt of hope when he saw all those light
codes, but it was a relief, as well. At least no one was shooting at them.
"What the hell are
all those things?" he demanded.
"Unknown, sir.
Passive scanners detect very few active power sources, and even with fold-space
scanners, the range remains very long for active systems, but I would estimate
that many of them are weapon systems. In fact—"
The computer paused
suddenly, and Colin quirked an eyebrow. It was unusual, to say the least, for
Dahak to break off in the middle of a sentence.
"Sir," the
computer said after a moment, "I have determined the function of certain
installations."
An arc of light codes
blinked green. They formed a ring forty light-minutes from Bia—no, not a ring.
As he watched, new codes, each indicating an installation much smaller than the
giants in the original ring, began to appear, precisely distanced from the
circle, curving away from Dahak as if to embrace the entire inner
system. And there—there were two more rings of larger symbols, perpendicular to
the first but offset by thirty degrees. There were thousands—millions—of the
things! And more were still appearing as they came into scanner range, reaching
out about Bia in a sphere.
"Well? What are
they?"
"They appear,
sir," Dahak said, "to be shield generators."
"They're what?"
Colin blurted, and he felt Vlad Chernikov's shock echoing through the
engineering sub-net.
"Shield
generators," Dahak repeated, "which, if activated, would enclose the
entire inner system. The larger stations are approximately ten times as massive
as the smaller ones and appear to be the primary generators."
Colin fought a sense of
incredulity. Nobody could build a shield with that much surface area! Yet if Dahak
said they were shield generators, shield generators they were . . . but the scope
of such a project!
"Whatever else it
was, the Empire was no piker," he muttered.
"As thou
sayst," Jiltanith agreed. "Yet methinks—"
"Status
change," Dahak said suddenly, and a bright-red ring circled a massive
installation in distant orbit about Birhat itself. "Core tap activation
detected."
"Maker!"
Tamman muttered, for the power source which had waked to sudden life was many
times as powerful as Dahak's own.
"New detection at
nine-point-eight light-hours. I have a challenge."
"Nature?"
Colin snapped.
"Query for
identification only, sir, but it carries a Fleet Central imperative. It is
repeating."
"Respond."
"Acknowledged."
There was another brief silence, and then Dahak spoke again, sounding—for
once—a bit puzzled. "Sir, the challenge has terminated."
"What do you mean?
How did they respond?"
"They did not, sir,
beyond terminating the challenge."
Colin raised an eyebrow
at Jiltanith's holo-image, and she shrugged.
"Ask me not, my
Colin. Thou knowest as much as I."
"Yeah, and neither
of us knows a whole hell of a lot," he muttered. Then he drew a deep
breath. "Dahak, give me an all-hands link."
"Acknowledged. Link
open."
"People,"
Colin told his crew, "we've just responded to a challenge—apparently from
Fleet Central itself—and no one's shooting at us. That's the good news. The bad
news is no one's talking to us, either. We're moving in. We'll keep you informed.
But at least there's something here. Hang loose.
"Close link,
Dahak."
"Link closed,
sir."
"Thank you,"
Colin said, and leaned back, rubbing his hands up and down the arm rests of his
couch as he stared at the crowded, enigmatic display. More light codes were
still appearing as Dahak moved deeper in-system, and the active core
tap's crimson beacon pulsed at their center like a heart.
"Well, we found
it," Colin said, rising from the captain's couch to stretch hugely,
"but God knows what it is."
"Aye."
Jiltanith once more manned her own console in Command Two, but her hologram sat
up and swung its legs over the side of her couch. "I know not what chanced
here, my Colin, but glad am I Geb is not here to see it."
"Amen," Colin
said. He'd once wondered why Geb was the only Imperial with a single-syllable
name. Now, thanks to Jiltanith and Dahak's files, he knew. It was the custom of
his planet, for Geb had been one of those very rare beings in Battle Fleet: a
native-born son of Birhat. It was a proud distinction, but one Geb no longer
boasted of; his part in the mutiny had been something like George Washington's
grandson proclaiming himself king of the United States.
"But whate'er hath
chanced, these newest facts do seem stranger still than aught else we have
encountered." Jiltanith coiled a lock of hair about her index finger and
stared at Command Two's visual display, her eyes perplexed.
With good reason, Colin
thought. In the last thirty-two hours, they'd threaded deeper into the Bia
System's incredible clutter of deep-space and orbital installations until, at
last, they'd reached Birhat itself. There should have been plenty of room, but
the Bia System had not escaped unscathed. Twice they passed within less than
ten thousand kilometers of drifting derelicts, and that was much closer than
any astrogator cared to come.
Yet despite that
evidence of ruin, Colin had felt hopeful as Birhat herself came into sight, for
the ancient capital world of the Imperium was alive, a white-swirled sapphire
whose land masses were rich and green.
But with the wrong kind
of green.
Colin sat back down,
scratching his head. Birhat lay just over a light-minute further from Bia than
Terra did from Sol, and its axial tilt was about five degrees greater, making
for more extreme seasons, but it had been a nice enough place. It still was,
but there'd been a few changes.
According to the
records, Birhat's trees should be mostly evergreens, but while there were
trees, they appeared exclusively deciduous, and there were other things: leafy,
fern-like things and strange, kilometer-long creepers with cypress-knee
rhizomes and upstanding plumes of foliage. Nothing like that was
supposed to grow on Birhat, and the local fauna was even worse.
Like Earth, Birhat had
belonged to the mammals, and there were mammals down there, if not the
right ones. Unfortunately, there were other things, too, especially in the
equatorial belt. One was nearly a dead ringer for an under-sized Stegosaurus,
and another one (a big, nasty looking son-of-a-bitch) seemed to combine the
more objectionable aspects of Tyrannosaurus and a four-horned Triceratops. Then
there were the birds. None of them seemed quite right, and he knew the
big Pterodactyl-like raptors shouldn't be here.
It was, he thought, the
most God-awful, scrambled excuse for a bio-system he'd ever heard of, and none
of it—not a single plant, animal, saurian, or bird they'd yet examined—belonged
here.
If it puzzled him, it
was driving Cohanna batty. The senior biosciences officer was buried in her
office with Dahak, trying to make sense of her instrument readings and snarling
at any soul incautious enough to disturb her.
At least the
sadly-eroded mountains and seas were where they were supposed to be, loosely
speaking, and there were still some clusters of buildings. They were
weather-battered ruins (not surprisingly given the worn-away look of the
mountain ranges) liberally coated in greenery, but they were there. Not that it
helped; most were as badly wrecked as Keerah's had been, and there was
nothing—absolutely nothing—where Fleet Central was supposed to be.
Yet some of the Bia
System's puzzles offered Colin hope. One of them floated a few thousand
kilometers from Dahak, serenely orbiting the improbability which had
once been the Imperium's capital, and he turned his head to study it anew,
tugging at the end of his nose to help himself think.
The enigmatic structure
was even bigger than Dahak, which was a sobering thought, for a quarter
of Dahak's colossal tonnage was committed to propulsion. This
thing—whatever it was—clearly wasn't intended to move, which made all of its
mass available for other things. Like the weapon systems Dahak's
scanners had picked up. Lots of weapon systems. Missile launchers,
energy weapons, and launch bays for fighters and sublight parasites Nergal's
size or bigger. Yet for all its gargantuan firepower, much of its tonnage was
obviously committed to something else . . . but what?
Worse, it was also the
source of the core tap Dahak had detected. Even now, that energy sink roared
away within it, sucking in all that tremendous power. Presumably it meant to do
something with it, but as yet it had shown no signs of exactly what that was.
It hadn't even spoken to Dahak, despite his polite queries for information. It
just sat there, being there.
"Captain?"
"Yes, Dahak?"
"I believe I have
determined the function of that installation."
"Well?"
"I believe, sir,
that it is Fleet Central."
"I thought Fleet
Central was on the planet!"
"So it was,
fifty-one thousand years ago. I have, however, been carrying out systematic
scans, and I have located the installation's core computer. It is, indeed, a
combination of energy-state and solid-state engineering. It is also
approximately three-hundred-fifty-point-two kilometers in diameter."
"Eeep!" Colin
whipped around to stare at Jiltanith, but for once she looked as stunned as he
felt. Dear God, he thought faintly. Dear, sweet God. If Vlad and Dahak's
projections about the capabilities of energy-state computer science were
correct, that thing was . . . it was . . .
"I beg your pardon,
sir?" Dahak said courteously.
"Uh . . . never
mind. Continue your report."
"There is very
little more to report. The size of its computer core, coupled with its obvious
defensive capability, indicates that it must, at the very least, have been the
central command complex for the Bia System. Given that Birhat remained the
capital of the Empire as it had been of the Imperium, this certainly suggests
that it was also Fleet Central."
"I . . . see. And
it still isn't responding to your hails?"
"It is not. And
even the Empire's computers should have noticed us by now."
"Could it have done
so and chosen to ignore us?"
"The possibility
exists, but while it is probable Fleet procedures have changed, we were
challenged and we did reply. That should have initiated an automatic request
for data core transmission from any newly-arrived unit."
"Even if there's no
human crew aboard?"
"Sir," Dahak
said with the patience of one trying not to be insubordinate to a dense
superior, "we were challenged, which indicates the initiation of an
automatic sequence of some sort. And, sir, Fleet Central should not have
permitted a vessel of Dahak's size and firepower to close to this proximity
without assuring itself that the vessel in question truly was what it claimed
to be. Since no information has been exchanged, there is no way Fleet Central
could know my response to its challenge was genuine. Hence we should at the
very least be targeted by its weapons until we provide a satisfactory account
of ourselves, yet that installation has not even objected to my scanning it.
Fleet Central would never permit an unknown unit to do that."
"All right, I'll
accept that—even if that does seem to be exactly what it's doing—and God knows
I don't want to piss it off, but sooner or later we'll have to get some sort of
response out of it. Any suggestions?"
"As I have
explained," Dahak said even more patiently, "we should already have
elicited a response."
"I know that,"
Colin replied, equally patiently, "but we haven't. Isn't there any sort of
emergency override procedure?"
"No, sir, there is
not. None was ever required."
"Damn it, do you
mean to tell me there's no way to talk to it if it doesn't respond to
your hails?"
There was a pause
lengthy enough to raise Colin's eyebrows. He was about to repeat his question
when his electronic henchman finally answered.
"There might be one
way," Dahak said with such manifest reluctance Colin felt an instant twinge
of anxiety.
"Well, spit it
out!"
"We might attempt
physical access, but I would not recommend doing so."
"What? Why
not?"
"Because, Captain,
access to Fleet Central was highly restricted. Without express instructions
from its command crew to its security systems, only two types of individuals
might demand entrance without being fired upon."
"Oh?" Colin
felt a sudden queasiness and was quite pleased he'd managed to sound so calm.
"And what two types might that be?"
"Flag officers and
commanders of capital ships of Battle Fleet."
"Which means . .
." Colin said slowly.
"Which means,"
Dahak told him, "that the only member of this crew who might make the
attempt is you."
He looked up and saw
Jiltanith staring at him in horror.
They went to their
quarters to argue.
Jiltanith opened her
mouth, eyes flashing dangerously, but Dahak's electronic reflexes beat her to
it.
"Senior Fleet
Captain MacIntyre," he said with icy formality, "what you propose is
not yet and may never become necessary, and I remind you of Fleet Regulation
Nine-One-Seven, Subsection Three-One, Paragraph Two: 'The commander of any
Fleet unit shall safeguard the chain of command against unnecessary risk.' I
submit, sir, that your intentions violate both the spirit and letter of this
regulation, and I must, therefore, respectfully insist that you immediately
abandon this ill-advised, hazardous, and most unwise plan."
"Dahak," Colin
said, "shut up."
"Senior Fl—"
"I said shut
up," Colin repeated in a dangerously level voice, and Dahak shut up.
"Thank you. Now. We both know the people who wrote the Fleet Regs never
envisioned this situation, but if you want to quote regs, here's one for
you. Regulation One-Three, Section One. 'In the absence of orders from
higher authority, the commander of any Battle Fleet unit or formation shall
employ his command or any sub-unit or member thereof in the manner best
calculated, in his considered judgment, to preserve the Imperium and his race.'
You once said I had a command mentality. Well, maybe I do and maybe I don't,
but this is a command decision and you're damned well going to live with
it."
"But—"
"The discussion is
closed, Dahak."
There was a long moment
of silence before the computer replied.
"Acknowledged,"
he said in his frostiest tones, but Colin knew that was the easy part. He
smiled crookedly at Jiltanith, glad they were alone, and gave it his best shot.
"'Tanni, I don't
want to argue with my XO, either."
"Dost'a not,
indeed?" she flared. "Then contend with thy wife, lackwit! Scarce one
thin day in this system, and already thou wouldst risk thy life?! What maggot
hath devoured thy brain entire?! Or mayhap 'tis vanity speaks, for most
assuredly 'tis not wisdom!"
"It isn't vanity,
and you know it. We simply don't have time to waste."
"Time, thou
sayst?!" she spat like an angry cat. "Dost'a think my wits addled as
thine own? Howsoe'er thou dost proceed, yet will we never return to Terra ere
the Achuultani scouts! And if that be so, then where's the need o' witless haste?
Four months easily, mayhap five, may we spend here and still out-speed the true
incursion back to Earth—and well thou knowest!"
"All right,"
he said, and her eyes narrowed at his unexpected agreement, "but assume
you're right and we start poking around. What happens when we do something
Fleet Central doesn't like, 'Tanni? Until we know what it might object to, we
can't know what might get everyone aboard this ship killed. So until we
establish communications with it, we can't do anything else,
either!"
Jiltanith's fingers
flexed like the cat she so resembled, but she drew a breath and made herself
consider his argument.
"Aye, there's
summat in that," she admitted, manifestly against her will. "Yet
still 'tis true we have spent but little time upon the task. Must thou so soon
essay this madness?"
"I'm afraid
so," he sighed. "If this is Fleet Central, it's either Ali
Baba's Cave or Pandora's Box, and we have to find out which. Assuming any of
Battle Fleet's still operational—and the way this thing powered itself up is
the first sign something may be—we don't know how long it'll take to assemble
it. We need every minute we can buy, 'Tanni."
She turned away, pacing,
arms folded beneath her breasts, shoulders tight with a fear Colin knew was not
for herself. He longed to tell her he understood, but he knew better than to .
. . and that she knew already.
She turned back to him
at last, eyes shadowed, and he knew he'd won.
"Aye," she
sighed, hugging him tightly and pressing her face into his shoulder. "My
heart doth rail against it, yet my mind—my cursed mind—concedeth. But, oh, my
dearest dear, would I might forbid thee this!"
"I know," he
whispered into the sweet-smelling silk of her hair.
Colin felt like an ant
beneath an impending foot. Fleet Central's armored flank seemed to trap him,
ready to crush him between itself and the blue-white sphere of Birhat, and he
hoped Cohanna wasn't monitoring his bio read-outs.
He nudged his cutter to
a stop. A green and yellow beacon marked a small hatch, but though his head
ached from concentrating on his implants, he felt no response. He timed the
beacon's sequence carefully.
"Dahak, I have a
point-seven-five-second visual flash, green-amber-amber-green-amber, on a Class
Seven hatch."
"Assuming Fleet
conventions have not changed, Captain, that should indicate an active access
point for small craft."
"I know."
Colin swallowed, wishing his mouth weren't quite so dry. "Unfortunately,
my implants can't pick up a thing."
Colin felt a sudden,
almost audible click deep in his skull and blinked at a brief surge of vertigo
as a not quite familiar tingle pulsed in his feed.
"I've got
something. Still not clear, but—" The tingle suddenly turned sharp and
familiar. "That's it!"
"Acknowledged, Captain,"
Dahak said. "The translation programs devised for Omega Three did
not perfectly meet our requirements, but I believe my new modifications to your
implant software should suffice. I caution you again, however, that additional,
inherently unforeseeable difficulties may await."
"Understood."
Colin edged closer, insinuating his thoughts cautiously into the hatch
computers, and something answered. It was an ID challenge, but it tasted . . .
odd.
He keyed his personal
implant code with exquisite care, and for an instant just long enough to feel
relieved disappointment, nothing happened. Then the hatch slid open, and he
dried his palms on his uniform trousers.
"Well,
people," he murmured, "door's open. Wish me luck."
"So do we
all," Jiltanith told him softly. "Take care, my love."
The next half-hour was
among the most nerve-wracking in Colin's life. His basic implant codes had
sufficed to open the hatch, but that only roused the internal security systems.
There was a strangeness
to their challenges, a dogged, mechanical persistence he'd never encountered
from Dahak, but they were thorough. At every turn, it seemed, there were
demands for identification on ever deeper security levels. He found himself
responding with bridge officer codes he hadn't known he knew and realized that
the computers were digging deep into his challenge-response conditioning. No
wonder Druaga had felt confident Anu could never override his own final orders
to Dahak! Colin had never guessed just how many security codes Dahak had buried
in his own implants and subconscious.
But he reached the
central transit shaft at last, and felt both relief and a different tension as
he plugged into the traffic sub-net and requested transport to Fleet Central's
Command Alpha. He half-expected yet another challenge, but the routing
computers sent back a ready signal, and he stepped out into the shaft.
One thing about the
terror of the unknown, he thought wryly as the shaft took him and hurled him
inward: it neatly displaced such mundane fears as being mashed to paste by the
transit shaft's gravitonics!
The shaft deposited him
outside Command Alpha in a brightly-lit chamber big enough for an assault
shuttle. The command deck hatch bore no unit ensign, as if Fleet Central was
above such things. There was only the emblem of the Fourth Empire: the
Imperium's starburst surmounted by an intricate diadem.
Colin looked about,
natural senses and implants busy, and paled as he detected the security systems
guarding this gleaming portal. Heavy grav guns in artfully hidden housings were
backed up by the weapons Vlad had dubbed warp guns, and their targeting systems
were centered on him. He tried to straighten his hunched shoulders and
approached the huge hatch with a steady tread.
Almost to his surprise,
it licked aside, and more silent hatches—twice as many as guarded Dahak's
Command One—opened as he walked down the brightly lit tunnel, fighting a sense
of entrapment. And then, at last, he stepped out into the very heart and brain
of Battle Fleet, and the last hatch closed behind him.
It wasn't as impressive
as Command One, was his first thought—but only his first. It lacked the
gorgeous, perfect holo projections of Dahak's bridge, but the softly
bright chamber was far, far larger. Dedicated hypercom consoles circled its
walls, labeled with names he knew in flowing Imperial script, names which had
been only half-believed-in legends in his implant education from Dahak. Systems
and sectors, famous Fleet bases and proud formations—the names vanished into unreadable
distance, and Quadrant Command nets extended out across the floor, the ranked
couches and consoles too numerous to count, driving home the inconceivable
vastness of the Empire.
It made him feel very,
very insignificant.
Yet he was here . . .
and those couches were empty. He had come eight hundred light-years to reach
this enormous room, come from a planet teeming with humanity to this silence no
voice had broken in forty-five millennia, and all this might and power of
empire were but the work of Man.
He crossed the shining
deck, bootheels ringing on jeweled mosaics, and ghosts hovered in the corners,
watchful and measuring. He wondered what they made of him.
It took ten minutes to
reach the raised dais at the center of the command deck, and he climbed its
broad steps steadily, the weight of some foreordained fate seeming to press
upon his shoulders, until he reached the top at last.
He lowered himself into
the throne-like couch before the single console. It conformed smoothly to his
body, and he forced himself to relax and draw a deep, slow breath before he
reached out through his feed.
There was a quick
flicker of response, and he felt a surge of hope—then grunted and flinched as
he was hurled violently out of the net.
"Implant interface
access denied," a voice said. It was a soft, musical contralto . . .
utterly devoid of life or emotion.
Colin rubbed his
forehead, trying to soothe the sudden ache deep inside his brain, and looked
around the silent command deck for inspiration. He found none, and reached out
again, more carefully.
"Implant interface
access denied." The voice threw him out of the net even more violently.
"Warning. Unauthorized access to this installation is punishable by
imprisonment for not less than ninety-five standard years."
"Damn," Colin
muttered. He was more than half-afraid of how Fleet Central might react to
activating his fold-space com but saw no option. "Dahak?"
"Yes,
Captain?"
"I'm getting an
implant access denial warning."
"Voice or neural
feed?"
"Voice. The damned
thing won't even talk to my implants."
"Interesting,"
Dahak mused, "and illogical. You have been admitted to Command Alpha;
logically, therefore, Fleet Central recognizes you as an officer of Battle
Fleet. Assuming that to be true, access should not be denied."
"The same thought
had occurred to me," Colin said a bit sarcastically.
"Have you attempted
verbal communication, sir?"
"No."
"I would recommend
that as the next logical step.".
"Thanks a
lot," Colin muttered, then cleared his throat.
"Computer," he
said, feeling just a bit foolish addressing the emptiness.
"Acknowledged,"
the emotionless voice said, and his heart leapt. By damn, maybe there was a way
in yet!
"Why have I been
denied implant access?"
"Improper implant
identification," the voice replied.
"Improper in what
way?"
"Data anomaly
detected. Implant interface access denied."
"What
anomaly?" he asked, far more patiently than he felt.
"Implant
identification not in Fleet Central data base. Individual not recognized by
core access programs. Implant interface access denied."
"Then why have you
accepted voice communication?"
"Emergency
subroutines have been activated for duration of the present crisis," the
voice replied, and Colin paused, wondering what "emergency
subroutines" were and why they allowed verbal access. Not that he meant to
ask. The last thing he needed was to change this thing's mind!
"Computer," he
said finally, "why was I admitted to Command Alpha?"
"Unknown. Security
is not a function of Computer Central."
"I see." Colin
thought more furiously than ever, then nodded to himself. "Computer, would
Fleet Central Security admit an individual with invalid implant identification
codes to Command Alpha?"
"Negative."
"Then if Security
admitted me, the security data base must recognize my implants."
Silence answered his
observation.
"Hm, not very
talkative, are you?" Colin mused.
"Query not
understood," the voice said.
"Never mind."
He drew a deep breath. "I submit that a search might locate my implant
codes in Fleet Central Security's data base. Would you concur?"
"The possibility
exists."
"Then I instruct
you," Colin said very carefully, "to search the security data base
and validate my implant codes."
There was a brief pause,
and he bit his lip.
"Verbal
instructions require authorization overrides," the voice said finally.
"Identify source of authority."
"My own, as Senior
Fleet Captain Colin MacIntyre, commanding officer, ship-of-the-line Dahak,
Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One." Colin was amazed by how level
his own voice sounded.
"Authorization
provisionally accepted," the voice said. "Searching security data
base."
There was another moment
of silence, then the voice spoke again.
"Search completed.
Implant identification codes located. Anomalies."
"Specify
anomalies."
"Specification one:
identification codes not current. Specification two: no Senior Fleet Captain
Colinmacintyre listed in Fleet Central's data base. Specification Three: Dahak,
Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One, lost fifty one thousand six hundred
nine point-eight-four-six standard years ago."
"My codes were
current as of Dahak's departure for the Noarl System on picket duty. I
should be added to your data base as a descendant of Dahak's core crew,
promoted to fill a vacancy left by combat losses."
"That is not
possible. Dahak, Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One, no longer
exists."
"Then what's my
non-existent command doing here?" Colin demanded.
"Null-value
query."
"Null-value?! Dahak's
in orbit with Fleet Central right now!"
"Datum
invalid," Fleet Central observed. "No such unit is present."
Colin resisted an urge
to smash a bioenhanced fist through the console.
"Then what is
the object accompanying Fleet Central in orbit?" he snarled.
"Data
anomaly," Fleet Central said emotionlessly.
"What data
anomaly, damn it?!"
"Perimeter Security
defensive programming prohibits approach within eight light-hours of Planet
Birhat without valid identification codes. Dahak, Hull Number
One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One, no longer exists. Therefore, no such unit can be
present. Therefore, scanner reports represent data anomaly."
Colin punched a couch
arm in sudden understanding. For some reason, this dummy—or its outer
surveillance systems, anyway—had accepted Dahak's ID and let him in. For
some other reason, the central computers had not accepted that ID. Faced
with the fact that no improperly identified unit could be here, this moron had
labeled Dahak a "data anomaly" and decided to ignore him!
"Computer," he
said finally, "assume—hypothetically—that a unit identified as Dahak
was admitted to the Bia System by Perimeter Security. How might that situation
arise?"
"Programming
error," Fleet Central said calmly.
"Explain."
"No Confirmation of
Loss report on Dahak, Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One, was filed
with Fleet Central. Loss of vessel is noted in Log Reference
Rho-Upsilon-Beta-Seven-Six-One-Niner-Four, but failure to confirm loss report
resulted in improper data storage." Fleet Central fell silent, satisfied
with its own pronouncement, and Colin managed not to swear.
"Which means?"
"ID codes for Dahak,
Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One, were not purged from memory."
Colin closed his eyes.
Dear God. This brainless wonder had let Dahak into the system because
he'd identified himself and his codes were still in memory, but now that he was
here, it didn't believe in him!
"How might that
programming error be resolved?" he asked at last.
"Conflicting data
must be removed from data base."
Colin drew another deep
breath, aware of just how fragile this entire discussion was. If this computer
could decide something Dahak's size didn't exist, it could certainly do
the same with the "data anomaly's" captain.
"Evaluate
possibility that Log Reference Rho-Upsilon-Beta-Seven-Six-One-Niner-Four is an
incorrect datum," he said flatly.
"Possibility
exists. Probability impossible to assess," Fleet Central replied, and Colin
allowed himself a slight feeling of relief. Very slight.
"In that case, I
instruct you to purge it from memory," he said, and held his breath.
"Incorrect
procedure," Fleet Central responded.
"Incorrect in what
fashion?" Colin asked tautly.
"Full memory purge
requires authorization from human command crew."
Colin cocked a mental
ear. Full memory purge?
"Can data
concerning my command be placed in inactive storage on my authority pending
proper authorization?"
"Affirmative."
"Then I instruct
you to do so with previously specified log entry."
"Proceeding. Data
transferred to inactive storage."
Colin shuddered in
explosive relaxation, then gave himself a mental shake. He might well be
relaxing too soon.
"Computer, who am
I?" he asked softly.
"You are Senior
Fleet Captain Colinmacintyre, commanding officer HIMP Dahak, Hull Number
One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One," the voice said emotionlessly.
"And what is the
current location of my command?"
"HIMP Dahak,
Hull Number One-Seven-Two-Two-Niner-One, is currently in Birhat orbit, ten
thousand seventeen point-five kilometers distant from Fleet Central," the
musical voice told him calmly, and Colin MacIntyre breathed a short, soft,
fervent prayer of thanks before jubilation overwhelmed him.
"All right!"
Colin's palms slammed down on the couch arms in triumph.
"What passeth, my
Colin?" an urgent voice demanded through his fold-space link, and he
realized he'd left it open.
"We're in, 'Tanni!
Tell all hands—we're in!"
"Bravely done! Oh,
bravely, my heart!"
"Thank you,"
he said softly, then straightened and returned to business.
"Computer."
"Yes, Senior Fleet
Captain?"
"What's your name,
Computer?"
"This unit is
officially designated Fleet Central Computer Central," the musical voice
replied.
"Is that what your
human personnel called you?"
"Negative, Senior
Fleet Captain."
"Well, then, what did
they call you?" Colin asked patiently.
"Fleet Central
personnel refer to Comp Cent as 'Mother.' "
"Mother,"
Colin muttered, shaking his head in disbelief. Oh, well, if that was what Fleet
Central was used to . . .
"All right, Mother,
prepare to accept memory core download from Dahak."
"Ready,"
Mother said instantly.
"Dahak, initiate
core download but do not purge."
"Initiating,"
Dahak replied calmly, and Colin felt an incredible surge of data. He caught
only the fringes of it through his feed, but it was like standing on the brink
of a river in flood. It was almost frightening, making him suddenly and humbly
aware of the storage limitations of a human brain, yet for all its titanic
proportions, it took barely ten minutes to complete.
"Download
completed," Mother announced. "Data stored."
"Excellent! Now,
give me a report on Fleet status."
"Fleet Central
authorization code required," Mother told him, and Colin frowned as his
enthusiasm was checked abruptly. He didn't know the authorization codes.
He pulled on the end of
his nose, thinking hard. Only Mother "herself" could give him the
codes, and the one absolute certainty was that she wouldn't. She accepted him
as a senior fleet captain, which entitled him to a certain authority in areas
pertaining to his own command but did not entitle him to access the
material he desperately needed. Which was all the more maddening because he'd
become used to instant information flow from Dahak.
Well, now, why did he
have that information from Dahak? Because he was Dahak's commander. And
how had he become the CO? Because authority devolved on the senior crew member
present and Dahak had chosen to regard a primitive from Earth as a
member of his crew. Which suggested one possible approach.
To his surprise, he shrank
from it. But why? He'd learned to accept his persona as Dahak's captain
and even as Governor of Earth, so why did this bother him?
Because, he thought,
this brightly lit mausoleum whispered too eloquently of power and crushing
responsibility, and it frightened him. Which was foolish in someone who'd
already been made to accept responsibility for the very survival of his race,
but nonetheless real.
He shook himself. The
Empire was dead. All that could remain were other artifacts like Mother, and he
needed any of those he could lay hands on. Even if that meant assuming command
of a long-abandoned headquarters crewed only by ghosts and computers.
He only wished it didn't
feel so . . . impious.
"Mother," he
said finally.
"Yes, Senior Fleet
Captain?" the computer replied, and he spoke very slowly and carefully.
"On this day, I,
Senior Fleet Captain Colin MacIntyre, commanding officer—" he remembered
the designation Fleet Central had tacked onto Dahak "—HIMP Dahak,
do, as senior Battle Fleet officer present, pursuant to Fleet Regulation
Five-Three-Three, Section Niner-One, Article Ten, assume command of Fl—"
"Invalid
authorization," Mother interrupted.
"What?" Colin
blinked in surprise.
"Invalid
authorization," Mother repeated unhelpfully.
"What's invalid
about it?" he demanded, unreasonably irritated at the delay now that he
had steeled himself to it.
"Fleet Regulation
Five-Three-Three does not pertain to transfer of command authority."
"It does so!"
he shot back, but it was neither a question nor a command, and Mother remained
silent. He gritted his teeth in frustration. "All right, if it doesn't
pertain to transfer of command, what does it pertain to?"
"Regulation
Five-Three-Three and subsections," Mother said precisely, "pertains
to refuse disposal aboard Battle Fleet orbital bases."
"What?!"
Colin glared at the
console. Of course Reg Five-Three-Three referred to transfer of command!
It was how Dahak had mousetrapped him into this entire absurdity! He'd read it
for himself when he—
Understanding struck.
Yes, he'd read it—in a collection of regulations written fifty-one millennia
ago.
Damn.
"Please download
current Fleet Regulations and all relevant data to my command."
"Acknowledged.
Download beginning. Download completed," Mother said almost without pause,
and Colin reactivated his com.
"Dahak?"
"Yes,
Captain?"
"I need some help
here. What regulation replaced Five-Three-Three?"
"Fleet Regulation
Five-Three-Three has been superseded by Fleet Regulation
One-Niner-One-Five-Seven-Three-Niner, sir."
Colin winced. For seven
thousand years, the Imperium had managed to hold Fleet regulations to under
three thousand main entries; apparently the Empire had discovered the joys of
bureaucracy.
No wonder Mother had so
much memory.
"Thank you,"
he said, preparing to turn his attention back to Mother, but Dahak stopped him.
"A moment, Captain.
Is it your intent to use this regulation to assume command of Fleet
Central?"
"Of course it
is," Colin said testily.
"I would advise
against it."
"Why?"
"Because it will
result in your immediate execution."
"What?" Colin
asked faintly, certain he hadn't heard correctly.
"The attempt will
result in your execution, sir. Regulation One-Niner-One-Five-Seven-Three-Niner
does not apply to Fleet Central."
"Why not? It's a
unit of Battle Fleet."
"That," Dahak
said surprisingly, "is no longer true. Fleet Central is Battle
Fleet; all units of Battle Fleet are subordinate to it. Battle Fleet command
officers are not promoted to Fleet Central command duties."
"Then where the
hell does its command staff come from?"
"They are drawn
from Battle Fleet; they are not promoted from it. Fleet Central command
officers are selected by the Emperor from all Battle Fleet flag officers and
serve solely at his pleasure. Any attempt to assume command other than by
direction of the Emperor is high treason and punishable by death."
Colin went white as he
realized only Mother's interruption to correct an incorrect regulation number
had saved his life.
He shuddered. What other
tripwires were buried inside Fleet Central? Damn it, why couldn't Mother be
smart enough to tell him things like this?!
Because, a small, calm
voice told him, she hadn't been designed to be.
Which was all very well,
but if he couldn't assume command, Mother wouldn't tell him the things he had
to know, and if he tried to assume command, she'd kill him on the spot!
"Dahak," he
said finally, "find me an answer. I've got to be able to exercise
command authority here, or we might as well not have come."
"Fleet Central
command authority lies in the exclusive grant of the Emperor, Captain. There is
no other way to obtain it."
"Goddamn it, there isn't
any emperor!" Colin half-shouted, battling incipient hysteria as he felt
the situation crumbling in his hands. All he needed was for Dahak to catch
Mother's lunatic literal-mindedness! "Look, can you invade the core
programming? Redirect it?"
"The attempt would
result in Dahak's destruction," the computer told him. "In
addition, it would fail. Fleet Central's core programming contains certain
imperatives, of which this is one, which may not be reprogrammed even on the
Emperor's authority."
"That's
insane," Colin said flatly. "My God, a computer you can't reprogram
running your entire military establishment?!"
"I did not say all
reprogramming was impossible, nor do I understand why these particular portions
cannot be altered. I am not privy to the content of the imperatives or the
reasons for them. I base my statement on technical data included in the
material downloaded to me."
"But how the hell can
anything be unalterable? Couldn't you simply shut the thing down, dump its
entire memory, and reprogram from scratch?"
"Negative, sir. The
imperatives are not embodied in software. In Terran parlance, they are
'hard-wired' into the system. Removal would require actual destruction of a
sizable portion of the central computer core."
"Crap." Colin
pondered a moment longer, then widened the focus of his com link. "Vlad?
'Tanni? Have you been listening in on this?"
"Aye, Colin,"
Jiltanith replied.
"Any ideas?"
"I'faith, none do
spring to mind," his wife said. "Vlad? Hast some insight which might
aid our need?"
"I fear not,"
Chernikov said. "I am currently viewing the technical data Dahak refers to,
Captain. So far as I can tell, his analysis is correct. To alter this would
require a complete shutdown of Fleet Central. Even assuming 'Mother' would
permit it, the required physical destruction would cripple Comp Cent and
destroy the data we require. In my opinion, the system was designed precisely
to preclude the very possibility you have suggested."
"Goddamn better
mousetrap-builders!" Colin muttered, and Chernikov stifled a laugh. It
made Colin feel obscurely better . . . but only a little.
"Dahak," he
said finally, "can you access the data we need?"
"Negative."
"And you can't
think of any way to sneak around these damned imperatives?"
"Negative."
"Then we're SOL,
people," Colin sighed, slumping back in his couch, his sense of defeat
even more bitter after the glow of victory he'd felt such a short time before.
"Damn it. Damn it! We need an emperor to get into the goddamned
system, and the last emperor died forty-five thousand years ago!"
"Captain,"
Dahak said after a moment, "I believe there might be a way."
"What?" Colin
jerked back upright. "You just said there wasn't one!"
"Inaccurate. I said
there was no way to 'sneak around these damned imperatives,' " the
computer replied precisely. "There may, however, be a way in which you can
use them, instead. I point out, however, that—"
"A way to use
them? How?!"
"Under Case Omega,
sir, you can—"
"I can take control
of Fleet Central?" Colin broke in on him.
"Affirmative. Under
the circumstances, you may be considered the highest ranking officer of Battle
Fleet, and, in your capacity as Governor of Earth, the senior civil official,
as well. As such, you may instruct Fleet Central to implement Case Omega, so assuming—"
"Great,
Dahak!" Colin said. "I'll get back to you in a minute." Hot
damn! He found himself actually rubbing his hands in glee.
"But,
Captain—" Dahak said.
"In a minute,
Dahak. In a minute." Elation boiled deep within him, a terrible, wonderful
elation, compounded by the emotional whipsaw which had just ravaged him.
"Mother," he said.
"Yes, Senior Fleet
Captain Colinmacintyre?"
"Colin," Dahak
said again, "there are—"
"Mother,"
Colin said firmly, rushing himself before whatever Dahak was trying to
tell him could undercut his determination, "implement Case Omega."
There was a moment of
profound silence, and then Hell itself erupted. Colin cringed back into his
couch, hands rising to cover his eyes as Command Alpha exploded with light. A
bolt of pain shot through his left arm as a bio-probe of pure force snipped
away a scrap of tissue, but it was tiny compared to the fury boiling into his
brain through his neural feed. A clumsy hand thrust deep inside him, flooding
through his implants to wrench a gestalt of his very being from him. For one
terrible moment he was Fleet Central, writhing in torment as his merely
mortal brain and the ancient, bottomless computers of Battle Fleet merged,
impressing their identities imperishably upon one another.
Colin screamed in the
grip of an agony too vast to endure, and yet it was over before he could truly
experience it. Its echoes shuddered away down his synapses, stuttering in the
racing pound of his heart, and then they were gone.
"Case Omega
executed," Mother said emotionlessly. "The Emperor is dead; long live
the Emperor!"
"I attempted to
warn you, Colin," Dahak said softly.
Colin shuddered. Emperor?
That was . . . was . . . Words failed. He couldn't think of any that even came
close.
"Colin?"
Jiltanith's voice was gentler than Dahak's, and far more anxious.
"Yes, 'Tanni?"
he managed in a strangled croak.
"How dost thou, my
love? We did hear thee scream. Art thou—?"
"I-I'm fine,
'Tanni," he said, and, physically, it was true. He cleared his throat.
"There were a few rough moments, but I'm okay now. Honest."
"May I not come to
thee?" She sounded less anxious—but not a lot.
"I'd like
that," he said, and he had never spoken more sincerely in his life. Then
he shook his head. "Wait. Let me make sure it's safe."
He gathered himself and
raised his voice.
"Mother?"
"Yes, Your Imperial
Majesty?" the voice replied, and he flinched.
"Mother, I'd like
one of my officers to join me. Her implant signatures won't be in your data
base either. Can you have Security pass her through?"
"If Your Imperial
Majesty so instructs," Mother responded.
"My Imperial
Majesty certainly does," Colin said, and smiled crookedly. Maybe he wasn't
going to crack up entirely, after all.
"Query: please
identify the officer to be admitted."
"Uh? Oh. Fleet
Captain Jiltanith, Dahak's executive officer. My wife."
"Acknowledged."
"'Tanni?" he
returned his attention to his com. "Come ahead."
"I come, my
love," she said, and he stretched out in his couch, knowing she would soon
be there. His shudders drained outward along his limbs until the final echoes
tingled in his fingers and his breathing slowed.
"Mother."
"Yes, Your Imperial
Majesty?"
"What was all that?
What happened when you executed Case Omega, I mean?"
"Emergency
subroutines were terminated, ending Fleet Central's caretaker role upon Your
Imperial Majesty's assumption of the throne."
"I figured that
part out. I want a specific explanation of what you did."
"Fleet Central
performed its function as guardian of the succession, Your Imperial Majesty. As
senior Fleet officer and civil official listed in Fleet Central's data base,
Your Imperial Majesty, as per the Great Charter, became the proper successor
upon the demise of the previous dynasty. However, Your Imperial Majesty was
unknown to Fleet Central prior to Your Imperial Majesty's accession. It was
therefore necessary for Fleet Central to obtain gene samples for verification
of the heirs of Your Imperial Majesty's body and to evaluate Your Imperial
Majesty's gestalt and implant it upon Fleet Central's primary data
cortex."
Colin frowned. There
were too many things here he didn't yet understand, but there were were a few
others to get straight right now.
"Mother, can't we
do something about the titles?"
"Query not
understood, Your Imperial Majesty."
"I mean— Look, just
what titles have I saddled myself with?
"Your principle
title is 'His Imperial Majesty Colinmacintyre the First, Grand Duke of Birhat,
Prince of Bia, Warlord and Prince Protector of the Realm, Defender of the Five
Thousand Suns, Champion of Humanity, and, by the Maker's Grace, Emperor of
Mankind.' Secondary titles are: 'Prince of Aalat,' 'Prince of Achon,' 'Prince
of Anhur,' 'Prince of Apnar,' 'Prince of Ardat,' 'Prince of Aslah,' 'Prince of
Avan,' 'Prince of Bachan,' 'Prince of Badarchin,' 'Prin—' "
"Stop," Colin
commanded. Jesus! "Uh, just how many titles are there?"
"Excluding those
already specified," Mother replied, "four thousand eight hundred and
twenty-one."
"Gaaa." Not
bad for the product of a good, republican upbringing, he thought. "Let's
get one thing straight, Mother. My name is Colin MacIntyre—two words—not
'Colinmacintyre.' Can you remember that in future?"
"You are listed in
Fleet and Imperial records as His Imperial Majesty Colinmacintyre the First,
Grand Duke of Birhat, Prince of Bia, War—"
"I understand all
that," Colin interrupted. "The point is, I don't want to go around
with everyone 'Imperial Majesty'-ing me, and I prefer to be called 'Colin,' not
'Colinmacintyre.' Can't we do something to meet my wishes?"
"As Your Imperial
Majesty commands. You have not yet designated your choice of reign name. Until
such time as you have done so, you will be known as Colinmacintyre the First;
thereafter, only your dynasty will bear your complete pre-accession name. Is
that satisfactory?"
"It's a
start," Colin muttered, refusing to contemplate the thought of his
"dynasty." He tugged on his nose, then stopped himself. At the rate
surprises were coming at him lately, he was going to start looking like
Pinocchio. "All right. My 'reign name' will be 'Colin.' Please log
it."
"Logged,"
Mother replied.
"Now, about those
titles. Surely past emperors didn't get called 'Your Imperial Majesty' every
time they turned around, did they?"
"Acceptable
alternatives are 'Your Majesty,' 'Majesty,' 'Highest,' and 'Sire.' Nobles of
the rank of Planetary Duke are permitted 'My Lord.' Flag officers and
Companions of The Golden Nova are permitted 'Warlord.' "
"Crap. Uh, I don't
suppose I could get you to forget titles entirely?"
"Negative, Your
Imperial Majesty. Protocol imperatives must be observed."
"That's what you
think," Colin muttered. "Just wait till I get my hands on your
'protocol' programming!" He shook his head. "All right, if I'm stuck
with it, I'm stuck, but from now on you'll use only 'Sire' when addressing
me."
"Acknowledged."
"Good! Now—"
He broke off as a soft chime sounded.
"Your pardon, Sire.
Empress Jiltanith has arrived. Shall I admit her?"
"You certainly
shall!" Colin leapt down the steps from the dais and reached the innermost
hatch by the time it opened. Jiltanith gasped as his embrace threatened to pop
her bioenhanced ribs, and her cheek was wet where it pressed against his.
"Am I ever glad to
see you!" he whispered against the side of her neck.
"And I thee."
She turned her head to kiss his ear. "Greatly did I fear for thee, yet
such timorousness ill beseemed one who knoweth thee so well. Hast more lives
than any cat, my sweet, yet 'twould please me the better if thou wouldst spend
them less freely!"
"Goddamn
right," he said fervently, drawing back to kiss her mouth. "Next
time, I listen to you, by God!"
"So thou sayst . .
. now," she laughed, tugging on his prominent ears with both hands.
A sudden thought woke a
mischievous smile as he tucked an arm around her waist to escort her back to
the dais, and he raised his voice.
"Mother, say hello
to my wife."
"Hello, Your
Imperial Majesty," Mother said obediently, and Jiltanith stopped dead.
"What foolishness
is this?" she demanded.
"Get used to it,
honey," Colin said, squeezing her again. "For whatever it's worth,
your shiftless husband's brought home the bacon this time." He grinned
wryly. "In spades!"
Several hours later, a
far less chipper Colin groaned and scrubbed his face with his hands. Jiltanith
and he sat side-by-side on Fleet Central's command couch while Mother reported
Battle Fleet's status, running down every fleet and sub-unit in numerical
order. So far, she'd provided reports on just under two thousand fleets, task
forces, and battle squadrons.
And, so far, nothing
she'd had to report was good.
"Hold report,
Mother," he said, breaking into the computer's flow.
"Holding,
Sire," Mother agreed, and Colin laughed hollowly. "Emperor"—that
was a laugh. And "Warlord" was even funnier. He was a commander
without a fleet! Or, more precisely, with a fleet that was useless to him.
The Empire had been too
busy dying for an orderly shutdown. Herdan XXIV had lived long enough to
activate Fleet Central's emergency subroutines, placing Mother on powered-down
standby to guard Birhat until relief might someday arrive, but most of Battle Fleet
hadn't been even that lucky. A few score supralight vessels had simply
disappeared from Fleet Central's records, which probably indicated that their
crews had elected to flee in an effort to outrun the bio-weapon, but most of
Battle Fleet's units had been contaminated in their efforts to save civilians
in the weapon's path. The result had been both predictable and grisly, and,
unlike Dahak, their computers hadn't been smart enough to do anything about it
when they found themselves without crews. Except for a handful whose core taps
had been active when their last crewmen died, they'd simply returned to the
nearest Fleet base and remained on station until their fusion plants exhausted
their on-board mass, then drifted without life or power.
Unfortunately, none
seemed to have returned to Bia itself—which made sense, given that Birhat, the
first victim of the bio-weapon, had been quarantined at the very start of the
Empire's death agony. Less than a dozen active units had responded to Mother's
all-ships hypercom rally signal, and the nearest was upwards of eight hundred
light-years away; Earth would be dead long before Colin could return if he
waited for them them to reach Birhat.
There was a bitter irony
in the fact that Birhat's defenses remained almost fully operational. Bia's
mammoth shield, backed by Perimeter Security's prodigious firepower, could have
held anything anyone could throw at them. But everyone who needed
defending was on Earth.
"Mother," he
said finally, "let's try something different. Instead of reporting in
sequence, list all mobile forces in order of proximity to Birhat."
"Acknowledged.
Listing Bia System deployments. Birhat Near-Orbit Watch Squadron: twelve heavy
cruisers. Bia Deep-System Patrol Squadron: ten heavy cruisers, forty-one destroyers,
nine frigates, sixty-two corvettes. Imperial Guard Flotilla: fifty-two Asgerd-class
planetoids, sixteen—"
"What?
Stop!" Colin shouted.
"Acknowledged,"
Mother said calmly.
"What the fuck is
the Imperial Guard Flotilla?!"
"Imperial Guard
Flotilla," Mother replied. "The Warlord's personal command. Strength:
fifty-two Asgerd-class planetoids and attached parasites, sixteen Trosan-class
planetoids and attached parasites, and ten Vespa-class assault
planetoids and attached planetary assault craft. Current location: parking
orbit thirty-eight light-minutes from Bia. Status: inactive."
"Jesus H.
Christ!" Colin stared at Jiltanith. Her face was as shocked as his own,
and they turned as one to glare accusingly at the console.
"Why," Colin
asked in a dangerously calm voice, "didn't you mention them earlier?"
"Sire, you had not
asked about them," Mother said.
"I certainly did! I
asked for a complete listing of Battle Fleet units!" Mother was silent,
and he growled a curse at all computers which could not recognize the need to
respond without specific cues. "Didn't I?" he snarled.
"You did,
Sire."
"Then why didn't
you report them?"
"I did, Sire."
"But you didn't
report this Imperial Guard Flotilla—" Flotilla! Jesus, it was a fleet!
"—did you? Why not?"
"Sire, the Imperial
Guard is not part of Battle Fleet. The Imperial Guard is raised and manned
solely from the Emperor's personal demesne."
Colin blinked. Personal
demesne? An Emperor whose personal fiefdoms could raise that kind of
firepower? The thought sent a shiver down his spine. He sagged back, trembling,
and a warm arm crept about him and tightened.
"All right."
He shook his head and inhaled deeply, drawing strength from Jiltanith's
presence. "Why is the Guard Flotilla inactive?"
"Power exhaustion
and uncontrolled shutdown, Sire."
"Assess probability
of successful reactivation."
"One hundred
percent," Mother said emotionlessly, and a jolt of excitement crashed
through him. But slowly, he told himself. Slowly.
"Assume resources
of one hundred seven thousand Battle Fleet personnel, one Utu-class
planetoid, and current active and inactive automated support available in the
Bia System," he said carefully, "and compute probable time required
to reactivate the Imperial Guard Flotilla to full combat readiness."
"Impossible to
reactivate to full combat readiness," Mother replied. "Specified
personnel inadequate for crews."
"Then compute time
to reactivate to limited combat readiness."
"Computing,
Sire," Mother responded, and fell silent for a disturbingly long period.
Almost a full minute passed before she spoke again. "Computation complete.
Probable time required: four-point-three-nine months. Margin of error
twenty-point-seven percent owing to large numbers of imponderables."
Colin closed his eyes
and felt Jiltanith tremble against him. Four months—five-and-a-half outside. It
would be close, but they could do it. By all that was holy, they could do
it!
"There,"
Tamman said quietly as a green circle bloomed on Dahak's visual display,
ringing a tiny, gleaming dot. The dot grew as Dahak approached, and
additional dots appeared, spreading out in a loose necklace of worldlets.
"I see them,"
Colin replied, still luxuriating in his return to Command One and a world he
understood. "Big bastards, aren't they, Dahak?"
"I compute that the
largest out-mass Dahak by over twenty-five percent. I am not prepared to
speculate upon the legitimacy of their parentage."
Colin chuckled. Dahak
had been much more willing to engage in informality since his return from Fleet
Central, as if he recognized Colin's shock at suddenly finding himself an
emperor. Or perhaps the computer was simply glad to have him back. Dahak was a
worrier where friends were concerned.
He watched the
planetoids grow. If Vlad was right about the Empire's technology, those ships
would be monsters in action—and monsters were exactly what they needed.
"Captain, look
here." Ellen Gregory, Sarah Meir's Assistant Astrogator, placed a sighting
circle of her own on the display, picking out a single starship. "What do
you make of that, sir?"
Colin looked, then
looked again. The stupendous sphere floating in space was only roughly similar
to the only Imperial planetoid he'd ever seen, but one thing was utterly
familiar. A vast, three-headed dragon spread its wings across the gleaming
hull.
"Well looky
there," he murmured. "Dahak, what d'you make of that?"
According to the data
Fleet Central downloaded to my data base," Dahak replied, "that is
His Imperial Majesty's Planetoid Dahak, Hull Number
Seven-Three-Six-Four-Four-Eight-Niner-Two-Five."
"Another Dahak?"
"It is a proud name
in Battle Fleet." Dahak sounded a bit miffed. "Rather like the many
ships named Enterprise in your own United States Navy. According to the
data, this is the twenty-third ship to bear the name."
"It is, huh? Well,
which one are you?"
"This unit is the
eleventh of the name."
"I see. Well, in
order to avoid confusion, we'll just refer to this young whippersnapper as Dahak
Two, if that's all right with you, Dahak."
"Noted," Dahak
said calmly, and continued to close on the silently waiting, millennia-dead
hulls they intended to resurrect.
"By the Maker, I've
got it!"
Colin jumped half out of
his couch as Cohanna's holo image materialized on Command One. The biosciences
officer looked terrible, her hair awry and her uniform wrinkled, but her eyes
were bright with triumph.
"Try
penicillin," he advised sourly, and she looked blank, then grinned.
"Sorry, sir. I
meant I've figured out what happened on Birhat—why it's got that incredible
bio-system. I found it in Mother's data base."
"Oh?" Colin
sat straighter, his eyes more intent. "Give!"
"It's simple,
really. The zoos—the Imperial Family's zoos."
"Zoos?" It was
Colin's turn to look blank.
"Yes. You see, the
Imperial Family had an immense zoological garden. Over thirty different
planets' flora and fauna in sealed, self-sufficient planetary habitats.
Apparently, they lasted out the plague. I'd guess the automated systems
responsible for restraining plant growth failed first in one of them, and the
thing cracked. Once it did, its inhabitants could get out, and the same
vegetation attacked the exterior of other surviving habitats. Over the years,
still more oxy-nitrogen habitats were opened up and started spreading to
reclaim the planet. That's why we've got such a screwy damned ecology. We're
looking at the survivors of a dozen different planetary bio-spheres
after forty-five thousand years of natural selection!"
"Well I'll be
damned," Colin mused. "Good work, Cohanna. I'm impressed you could
keep concentrating on that kind of problem at a time like this."
"Time like
this?"
"While we're making
our final approach to the Imperial Guard," Colin said, raising his
eyebrows, and Cohanna wrinkled her nose.
"What's an Imperial
Guard?"
Vlad Chernikov shuddered
as he and Baltan floated down the lifeless, lightless transit shaft. This, he
thought, is what Dahak would have become if Anu had succeeded all those
years ago.
It was depressing in
more ways than one. Actually seeing this desolation gnawed away at the
confidence that anything could be done about it, and even if he succeeded in
rejecting the counsel of despair, he could see it would be a horrific task.
Dead power rooms, exhausted fuel mass, control rooms and circuit runs which had
never been properly stasissed when the ship died. There was even meteor damage,
for the collision shields had died with everything else. One of the planetoids
might well be beyond repair, judging by the huge hole punched into its south
pole.
Still, he reminded
himself, everyone had his or her own problems. Caitrin O'Rourke was practically
in tears over the hydroponic farms, and Geran was furious to find so much
perfectly good equipment left out of stasis. But Tamman was probably the most
afflicted of all, for the magazines had been left without stasis, as well, and
the containment fields on every anti-matter weapon had failed. At least the
warhead fail-safes had worked as designed and rotated them into hyper as the
fields went down, but huge chunks of magazine bulkheads had gone with them. Of
course, if they hadn't worked . . .
He shuddered again,
concentrating on the grav sled he and Baltan rode. It was far slower than an
operable transit shaft, but they dared not use even its full speed. They were
no transit computer to whip around unexpected bends in the system!
He craned his neck,
reading the lettering above a hatch. Gamma-One-One-Nine-One-One. According to
Dahak's downloaded schematics, they were getting close to Engineering.
So they were. He tapped
Baltan's shoulder and pointed, and the commander nodded inside the force bubble
of his helmet. The sled angled for the side of the shaft and nudged against the
hatch—which, of course, stayed firmly shut.
Chernikov smothered a
curse, then grinned as he recalled Colin's account of his
"coronation." The Captain—Emperor!—had exhausted the entire crew's
allocation of profanity for at least a month, by Chernikov's estimate. He
chuckled at the thought and climbed off the sled, dragging a cable from its
power plant behind him and muttering Slavic maledictions. No power meant no
artificial gravity, which—unfortunately—did not mean no gravity. A
planetoid generated an impressive grav field all its own, and turned bulkheads
into decks and decks into bulkheads when the power failed.
He found the emergency
power receptacle and plugged in, and the hatch slid open. He waved, and Baltan
ghosted the sled inside, angling its powerful lamps to pick out the emergency
lighting system.
Chernikov did some more
cable-dragging and, after propitiating Murphy with a few curses, brought it
alive. Light bathed Central Engineering, and the two engineers began to
explore.
The long-dead core tap
drew them like a magnet, and Chernikov felt a tingle of awe as his eyes and
implants traced circuit runs and control systems. This thing was at least five
times as powerful as Dahak's, and he wouldn't have believed it could be
without seeing it. But what in the galaxy could they have needed that
much power for? Even allowing for the more powerful energy armament and shield,
there had to be some other reason—
His thoughts died as his
implants followed a massive power shunt which shouldn't have been there. He
clambered over a control panel which had become the floor, slightly vertiginous
as he tried to orient himself, then gasped.
"Baltan! Look at
this!"
"I know," his
assistant said softly, approaching from the far side. "I've been following
the control runs."
"Can you believe
this?"
"Does it matter?
And it would certainly explain all the power demand."
"True." Chernikov
moved a few more yards, examining his find carefully, then shook his head.
"I must tell the Captain about this."
He keyed his com
implant, and Colin answered a moment later, sounding a bit harassed—not
surprisingly, considering that every other search party must be finding marvels
of its own to report.
"Captain, I am in Mairsuk's
Central Engineering, and you would not believe what I am looking at."
"Try me,"
Colin said wearily. "I'm learning to believe nineteen impossible things
before breakfast every day."
"Very well, here is
number twenty. This ship has both Enchanach and hyper capability."
There was a pregnant
pause.
"What," Colin
finally asked very carefully, "did you say?"
"I said, sir, that
we have here both an Enchanach and a hyper drive, engineered down to a size
that fits both into a single hull. I am not yet positive, but I would judge
that the combined mass of both units is less than that of Dahak's
Enchanach Drive, alone."
"Great day in the
morning," Colin muttered. Then, "All right. Take a good look, then
get back over here. We're having an all-departments meeting in four hours to
discuss plans for reactivation.
"Understood,"
Chernikov said, and broke the connection. He and Baltan exchanged eloquent
shrugs and bent back to the study of their prize.
" . . . can't be
specific until we've got the computers back up and run a complete
inventory," Geran said, "but about ten percent of all spares required
controlled condition storage. Without that—" He shrugged.
Most of Colin's department
heads were present in the flesh, but a sizable force from the recon group was
prowling around other installations, and Hector MacMahan and Ninhursag attended
via holo image from the battleship Osir's command deck. Now all eyes,
physical and holographic alike, swiveled to Colin.
"All right."
He spoke quietly, leaning his forearms on the crystalline tabletop to return
their gazes. "Bottom line. Mother's time estimate is based on sixteen-hour
shifts for every man and woman after we put at least one automated repair yard
back on line. According to the reports from Hector's people, we can probably do
that, but I expect to find ourselves pushing closer to twenty-hour shifts by
the time we're done. We could increase the odds and decrease the
workload by concentrating on a dozen or so units. I'm sure that's going to
occur to a lot of people in the next few weeks. However—" his eyes circled
their faces "—we aren't going to do it that way. We need as many of these
ships as we can get, and, ladies and gentlemen, I mean to have every single
one of them."
There was a sound like a
soft gasp, and he smiled grimly.
"God only knows how
hard they're working back on Earth, but we're about to make up for our
nice vacation on the trip out. Every one of them, people. No exceptions. We
will leave this system no later than five months from today, and the entire
Imperial Guard Flotilla will go with us when we do."
"But, sir,"
Chernikov said, "we may ask for too much and lose it all. I do not fear
hard work, but we have only a finite supply of personnel. A very finite
supply."
"I understand,
Vlad, but the decision is not negotiable. We've got highly motivated, highly
capable people aboard this ship. I feel certain they'll understand and give of
their very best. If not, however, tell them this.
"I'll be working my
ass off right beside them, but that doesn't mean I won't be keeping tabs on
what they're doing. And, people, if I catch anyone shirking, I'm going
to be the worst nightmare he ever had."
His smile was grim, but
even its micrometric amusement looked out of place on his rock-hard face.
"Tell them they can
depend on that," he finished very, very softly.
Assistant Servant of
Thunders Brashieel of the Nest of Aku'Ultan folded all four legs under him on
his duty pad as he bent his long-snouted head, considering his panel, and slid
both hands into the control gloves. Eight fingers and four thumbs twitched, activating
each test circuit in turn, and he noted the results cheerfully. He had not had
a major malfunction in three twelves of twelve watches.
Equipment tests
completed, he checked Vindicator's position. It was purely automatic,
for there could be no change. Once a vessel entered hyper space it remained
there, impotent but inviolate, until it reached the pre-selected coordinates
and emerged into normal space once more.
Brashieel did not
understand those mysteries particularly well, for he was no lord—not even of
thunders, much less of star-faring—but because Small Lord of Order Hantorg was
a good lord, he had made certain Vindicator's nestlings all knew whither
they were bound. Another yellow sun, this one with nine planets. Once it had
boasted ten, but that had been before the visit of Great Lord Vaskeel's fleet
untold high twelves of years before. Now it was time to return, and Vindicator
and his brothers would sweep through it like the Breath of Tarhish, trampling
the nest-killers under hooves of flame.
It was well. The
Protectors of the Nest would feed their foes to Tarhish's Fire, and the Nest
would be safe forever.
"Outer perimeter
tracking confirms hyper wakes approaching from galactic east," Sir
Frederick Amesbury said.
Gerald Hatcher nodded without
even looking up. His neural feed hummed with readiness reports, and his eyes
were unfocused.
"Got an emergence
locus and ETA, Frederick?"
"It's bloody rough,
but Plotting's calling it fifty light-minutes and forty-five degrees above the
ecliptic. Judging from the wake strength, the buggers should be arriving in
about twelve hours. Tracking promises to firm that up in the next two
hours."
"Fine."
Hatcher acknowledged the last report and blinked back into focus, wishing yet
again that Dahak had returned. If Colin MacIntyre had been gone this
long, it meant he hadn't found aid at Sheskar and must have decided he had no
choice but to hope Earth could hold without him while he sought it elsewhere.
And that he might not be back for another full year.
He activated his com
panel, and Horus's taut face appeared instantly.
"Governor,"
the general reported, knowing full well that Horus already knew what he was
about to say and that he was speaking for the record, "I have to report
that I have placed our forces on Red Two. Hyper wakes presumed to be hostile
have been detected. ETA is approximately—" he checked the time through his
neural feed "—seventeen-thirty hours, Zulu. System defense forces are now
on full alert. Civil defense procedures have been initiated. All PDC and ODC
commanders are in the net. Interceptor squadrons are at two-hour readiness.
Planetary shield generators and planetary core tap are at stand-by readiness.
Battle Squadrons One and Four are within thirty minutes of projected n-space
emergence; Squadrons Two and Six should rendezvous with them by
oh-seven-hundred Zulu. Squadrons Three, Five, Seven, Eight, Nine, and Ten, with
escorts, are being held in-system as per Plan Able-One.
"Have you any
instructions at this time, Governor?"
"Negative, General
Hatcher. Please keep me informed."
"I will, sir."
"Good luck,
Gerald," Horus said softly, his tone much less formal.
"Thanks, Horus.
We'll try to make a little luck of our own."
The screen blanked, and
Gerald Hatcher turned back to his console.
Assistant Servant
Brashieel checked his chronometer. Barely four day twelfths until emergence,
and tension was high in Vindicator, for this was the Demon Sector. It
was not often the Protectors of the Nest encountered a foe with an advance
technical base—that was why they came, to crush the nest-killers before they
armed themselves—but five of the last twelve Great Visits to this sector had
been savaged. They had triumphed, but at great cost, and the last two had been
the most terrible of all. Perhaps, Brashieel thought, that was the reason Great
Lord Tharno's Great Visit had been delayed: to amass the strength the Nest
required for certain success.
That alone was cause
enough for concern, yet the disquiet among his nestmates had grown far worse
since the first nest-killer scanner stations had been detected. More than one
scout ship had been lured to his death by the fiendish stations, and the
explosions which slew them meant their surviving consorts had learned
absolutely nothing about the technology which built those stations . . . except
that it was advanced, indeed.
But this star system
would offer no threat. Small Lord Hantorg had revealed the latest data scan
shortly after Vindicator entered hyper for this last jump to the target.
It was barely three twelves of years old, and though electronic and neutrino
emissions had been detected (which was bad enough), there had been none of the
more advanced signals from the scanner arrays. Clearly the Protectors must see
to this threat, yet these nest-killers would have only the lesser thunder, not
the greater, and they would be crushed. Nothing could have changed enough in so
short a time to alter that outcome.
Captain Adrienne Robbins
sat in her command couch aboard the sublight battleship Nergal. Admiral
Isaiah Hawter, the senior member of the Solarian Defense Force actually in
space, rode Nergal's bridge with her, but he might as well have been on
another planet. His attention was buried in his own console as he and his staff
controlled Task Force One.
Captain Robbins had been
a sub-driver, and she'd never expected to command any flagship (subs still
operated solo, after all), far less one leading the defense of her world
against homicidal aliens, but she was ready. She felt the tension simmering
within her and adjusted her adrenalin levels, pacing her energy. The bastards
would be coming out of hyper in less than two hours, and tracking had them
pegged to a fare-thee-well. TF One knew where to find them; now all they had to
do was wreck as many as they could before the buggers micro-jumped back out on
them.
And, she reminded
herself, pray that these Achuultani hadn't upgraded their technology too
terribly in the last sixty thousand years or so.
She did pray, but she
also remembered her mother's favorite aphorism: God helps those who help
themselves.
"Task Force in
position for Charlie-Three."
"Thank you,"
Hatcher said absently.
The images of Marshals
Tsien and Chernikov shared his com screen with Generals Amesbury, Singhman,
Tama, and Ki. Chiang Chien-su had a screen all to himself as he waited tensely
in his civil defense HQ, and Hatcher could see the control room of PDC Huan Ti
behind Tsien. The marshal had made it his HQ for the Eastern Hemisphere Defense
Command, and a brief flicker of shared memory flashed between them as their
eyes met. Tama and Ki sat in their Fighter Command operations rooms, and
Singhman was aboard ODC Seven, serving as Hawter's second-in-command as well as
commanding the orbital fortifications.
"Gentlemen, they'll
emerge in thirty minutes, well inside our own heavy hyper missile range of a
planetary target, so I want the shield brought to maximum power. Keep this com
link open." Heads nodded. "Very well, Marshal Chernikov; activate
core tap."
Lieutenant Andrew Samson
winced as the backlash echoed in his missile targeting systems. ODC Fifteen,
known to her crew as the Iron Bitch, floated in her geosynchronous orbit above
Tierra del Fuego. Which, Samson now discovered, was entirely too close to
Antarctica for his peace of mind.
He adjusted his systems,
edging away from the core tap's hyper bands, and sighed with relief. Maybe it
wouldn't be so bad, after all, but that was one hell of a jump from the test
runs! God help us all if they lose it, he prayed—and not just because of what
it'll do to the Bitch's power curves.
Howling wind and flying
ice spicules flayed a night-struck land. The kiss of that wind was death, its
frigid embrace lethal. There was no life here. There was only the cold, the
keening dirge of the wind, and the ice.
But the frigid night was
peeled back in an instant of fiery annunciation. A raging column of energy,
pent by invisible chains, impaled the heavens, glittering and terrible as it pierced
the low-bellied clouds.
The beacon of war had
been lit, and its fury flowed into the mighty fold-space power transmitters.
Man returned Prometheus's gift to the heavens, and Earth's Orbital Defense
Command drank deep at Vassily Chernikov's fountain.
"Here they come,
people," Captain Robbins said softly. "Stand by missile crews. Energy
weapons to full power."
Acknowledgments flowed
back through her neural feed, and she hunkered deeper into her couch without
realizing she had.
Assistant Servant of
Thunders Brashieel gave his instruments one last check, though there could be
no danger here. They would pause only to select a proper asteroid, then be on
their way, for there were many worlds of nest-killers to destroy. But he was a
Protector. It was a point of pride to be prepared for anything.
My God, the size
of those things! They've got to be twenty kilometers long!
The observation flared
over the surface of Captain Robbins' brain, but beneath that surface trained
reactions and responses flowed smoothly.
"Tactical, missiles
on my command. Take target designation from the Flag." She paused a
fraction of a second, letting the computers digest the latest updates from the
admiral's staff while more monster starships emerged from hyper. Ship after cylindrical
ship. Dozens of them. Scores. And still they came, popping into reality like
demon djinn from a flask of curses.
"Fire!" she
snapped.
Brashieel gaped at his
read-outs. Those ships could not exist!
But his panic eased—a
bit—as he digested more data. There were but four twelves of them, and they
were tiny things. Bigger than anyone had expected, with no right to be here,
but no threat to Vindicator and his brothers.
He did not have time to
note the full peculiarity of the energy readings before the enemy fired.
Adrienne Robbins winced
as the universe blew apart. She'd fired gravitonic and anti-matter warheads
before (the Fleet had reduced significantly the number of Sol's asteroids
during firing practices) but never at a live target. The hyper missiles flicked
up into hyper space, then back down, and their timing was impeccable. The
Achuultani shields had not yet stabilized when the first mighty salvo arrived.
Brashieel cried out in
shock, shaming himself before his nestmates, but he was not alone. What were
those things?
A twelve of ships
vanished in a heartbeat, and then another. His scanners told the tale, but he
could not believe them. Those weapons were coming through hyper space! From
such tiny vessels? Incredible!
He felt his folded legs
tremble as those insignificant pygmies ravaged the lead squadrons. Ships died,
blown apart in fireballs vast beyond belief, and others tumbled away, glowing,
half-molten, more than half-destroyed by single hits. Such power! And those
strange warheads—the ones which did not explode, but tore a ship apart in new
and horrible ways. What were they?
But he was a Protector,
and Vindicator had a reputation to uphold. His hands were rock-steady in
the control gloves, arming his own weapons, and Small Lord Hantorg's furious
voice pounded in his ears.
"Open fire!"
the Small Lord snarled.
Adrienne Robbins made
herself throttle her exultation. Sixty of the buggers in the opening salvo!
They knew they'd been nudged, by God! But those had been the easy kills, the
sitting ducks with unstable shields. Now her sensors felt those shields
slamming into stability, and the first return fire spat towards TF One.
She opened her cross
feed to the electronic warfare types as decoys went out and jammers woke. She
would have felt better with some idea of Achuultani capabilities before the
engagement, but that was what this was all about. Task Force One was fighting
for the data Earth needed to plan her own defense, and she studied the enemy
shields. Pretty tough, but they damned well should be with the power
reserves those monsters must have. Technically, they weren't as good as Nergal's;
only the difference in power levels made them stronger. Which was all very
well, but didn't change facts.
The first Achuultani
missiles slashed in, and Captain Robbins got another surprise. They were
normal-space weapons, but they were fast little mothers. Seventy, eighty
percent light-speed, and that was better than anything of Nergal's could
do in n-space. They were going to give missile defense fits.
Assistant Servant of
Thunders Brashieel snarled as his first salvo smote the nest-killers. Half a
twelve of missiles burst through all their defenses, ignoring their infernally
effective decoys, and the Furnace roared. Matter and anti-matter merged,
gouging at the nest-killers' shield, and Brashieel's inner eyelids narrowed at
its incredible resistance. But his thunder was too much for it. It crumbled,
and Tarhish's Breath swept the ship into death.
* * *
Captain Robbins cursed
as Bolivia burned. Those fucking warheads were incredible! Their
emission signatures said they were anti-matter, and great, big, nasty
ones. At least as big as anything Earth's defenders had.
Bolivia was the first
to go, but Canada followed, then Shirhan and Poland.
Please, Jesus, she prayed. Slow them down!
But the huge Achuultani
ships were still dying faster than TF One. Which was only because they were
getting in each other's way, perhaps, but true nonetheless, and Adrienne
Robbins felt a fierce exultation as yet another fell to Nergal's
missiles.
"Close the
range," Admiral Hawter said grimly, and Adrienne acknowledged. Nergal
drove into the teeth of the Achuultani fire.
"Stand by energy
weapons," she said coldly.
They were not fleeing.
Whatever else these nest-killers might be, they had courage. More of them
perished, blazing like splinters of resinous mowap wood, but the others
advanced. And their defenses were improving. The efficiency of their jammers
had gone up thirty percent while he watched.
Captain Robbins smiled
thinly. Her EW crews were getting good, hard data on the Achuultani targeting
systems, and they knew what to do with it. Another three ships were gone, but
the others were really knocking down the incoming missiles now.
Whatever happened, that
data would be priceless to the rest of the Fleet and to Earth herself. Not that
Adrienne had any intention of dying out here, but it was nice to know.
Aha! Energy range.
Brashieel gaped as those
preposterous warships opened a heavy energy fire. Tiny things like that couldn't
pack in batteries that heavy!
But they did, and
quarter-twelves of them synchronized their fire to the microsecond, slashing at
their Aku'Ultan victims. Overload signals snarled, and frantic engineers threw
more and more power to their shields, but there simply was not enough. Not to
stop missiles and beams alike.
He watched in horror as Avenger's
forward quadrant shields went down. A single nest-killer beam pierced the chink
in his armor and ripped his forward twelfth apart. Hard as it was for any Protector
to admit another race could match the Aku'Ultan, Brashieel knew the chilling
truth. He had never heard of weapons which could do what that one was doing.
He groaned as Avenger's
hull split like a rotten istham, and then another impossible, Tarhish-spawned
warhead crumpled the wreckage into a mangled ball. Avenger's power
plants let go, and Vindicator's brother was no more.
But Brashieel bared his
teeth as his display changed. Now the nest-killers would learn, for his hyper
launchers had been given time to charge at last!
"Hyper
missiles!" Tactical shouted, and Adrienne threw Nergal into evasive
action. Ireland and Izhmit were less fortunate. Ireland's
shield stopped the first three; the next four—or five, or possibly six—got
through. Izhmit went with the first shot. How the hell had they popped
her shield that way?
It didn't matter. TF One
was losing too many ships, but the Achuultani were dying at a three-to-one
ratio even now. A hyper missile burst into n-space, exploding just outside the
shield, shaking Nergal as a terrier shook a rat, but the shield held,
and she and her ship were one. They closed in, energy weapons raving, and her
own sublight missiles were going out now.
Lord of Order Furtag was
gone with his flagship, and command devolved upon Lord Chirdan. Chirdan was a
fighter, but not blind. They were destroying the nest-killers, but his
nestlings were dying in unreasonable numbers, for they had no weapon to equal
those deadly beams. He could smash these defenders even at this low range, but
only at the cost of too many of his own. He gave the order, and the scouts of
the Aku'Ultan micro-jumped away.
The enemy vanished.
They shouldn't be able
to do that, Adrienne Robbins thought. Not to just disappear that way. We should
have detected the hyper field charging up on something that size, even for an
itty-bitty micro-jump. But we didn't. Well, that's worth knowing. Won't help
the bastards much when they get too far in-system to micro-jump, but it's going
to be a bitch out here.
And the buggers can fight,
she thought grimly, shaken by her read-outs. Task Force One had gone in with
forty-eight ships; it came out with twenty-one. The enemy had lost ten times
that many, possibly more . . . but the enemy had more than ten times as
many starships as Earth had battleships.
Admiral Hawter turned
in-system. Magazines were down to sixty percent, thirty percent for hyper
missiles, and half his survivors were damaged. If the enemy was willing to run,
then so was he. He'd gotten the information Earth needed for analysis; now it
was time to get his surviving people home.
The first clash was
over, and humanity had won—if fifty-six percent losses could be called a
victory. And both sides knew it could. The Aku'Ultan had lost a vastly lower
percentage of their total force, but there came a point at which terms like
"favorable rate of exchange" were meaningless.
Yet it was only the
first clash, and both sides had learned much. It remained to be seen which
would profit most from the lessons they had purchased with so much blood.
The great ringed planet
of this accursed system floated far below him, but Lord of Order Chirdan had no
eyes for its beauty as he watched his engineers prepare their final system
tests.
The asteroids they had already
hurled against the nest-killers' planetary shield had shown Battle Comp that
small weapons would not penetrate, while those of sufficient mass were
destroyed by the nest-killers' weapons before impact. They would continue to
hurl asteroids against it, but only to force it back so that they might smite
the fortresses with other thunders.
But this, Chirdan
thought, was another matter. It would move slowly, at first, but only at first,
and it was large enough to mount shields which could stop even the
nest-killers' weapons. His nestlings would protect it with their lives, and it
would end these demon-spawned nest-killers for all time. Battle Comp had
promised him that, and Battle Comp never lied.
"I don't like
it," Horus said. "I don't like it, and I want a way around it. Do any
of you have one?"
His chiefs of staff
looked back from his com screen, weary faces strained. Gerald Hatcher's temples
were almost completely white, but Isaiah Hawter's eyes were haunted, for he'd
seen seventy percent of his warships blown out of existence in the last four
months.
One face was missing.
General Singhman had been aboard ODC Seven when the Achuultani warhead broke
through her shield.
There were other gaps in
Earth's defenses, and the enemy ruled the outer system. They were slow and
clumsy in normal space, but their ability to dart into hyper with absolutely no
warning more than compensated as long as they stayed at least twenty
light-minutes out.
Earth had learned enough
in the last few months to know her technology was better, but it was beginning
to appear her advantage might not be great enough, for the Achuultani had
surprises of their own.
Like those damned hyper
drives. Achuultani ships were slow even in hyper, but their hyper drives did
things Horus had always thought were impossible. They could operate twice as
deep into a stellar gravity well as an Imperial hypership, and their missile
launchers were incredible. Achuultani sublight missiles, though fast, weren't
too dangerous—Earth's defenders had better computers, better counter-missiles,
and more efficient shield generators—but their hyper missiles were another
story. Somehow, and Horus would have given an arm to know how, the Achuultani
generated external hyper fields around their missiles, without the
massive on-board hyper drives human missiles required.
Their launchers' rate of
fire was lower, but they were small enough the Achuultani could pack them in in
unbelievable numbers, and they tended to fire their salvos in shoals, scattered
over the hyper bands. A shield could cover only so many bands at once, and with
luck, they could pop a missile through one the shield wasn't guarding—a trick
which had cost Earth's warships dearly.
Their energy weapons, on
the other hand, relied upon quaint, short-ranged developments of laser
technology, which left a gap in their defenses. It wasn't very wide, but if
Earth's defenders could get into it, they were too close for really accurate
Achuultani hyper missile-fire and beyond their effective energy weapon range.
The trick was surviving to get there.
And they really did like
kinetic weapons. So far, they'd managed to hit the planetary shield with scores
of projectiles, the largest something over a billion tons, and virtually wiped
out Earth's orbital industry. They'd nailed two ODCs, as well, picking them off
with missiles when the main shield was slammed back into atmosphere behind them
by kinetic assault.
To date, Vassily had
managed to hold that shield against everything they threw at him, but the big,
blond Russian was growing increasingly grim-faced. The PDC shield generators
had been designed to provide a fifty percent reserve—but that was before they
knew about Achuultani hyper missiles. Covering the wide-band attacks coming at
him took every generator he had, and at ruinous overload. Without the core tap,
not even the PDCs could have held them.
Which was largely what
this conference was about.
"I don't see
an option, Horus," Hatcher said finally. "We've got to have that tap.
If we shut down and they hit us before we power back up—"
"Gerald,"
Chernikov said, "we never meant this tap to carry such loads so long. The
control systems are collapsing. I am into the secondary governor ring in
places; if it goes, there are only the tertiaries to hold it."
"But even if we
shut down, will it be any safer to power back up?"
"No,"
Chernikov conceded unhappily. "Not without repairs."
"Then, Vassily, it
is a choice between a possibility of losing control and the probability of
losing the planet," Tsien said quietly.
"I know that. But
it will do us no good to blow up Antarctica and lose the
tap—permanently—into the bargain."
"Agreed."
Horus's quiet voice snapped all eyes back to him. "Are your replacement
components ready for installation, Vassily?"
"They are. We will
require two-point-six hours to change over, but I must shut down to do
it."
"Very well."
Horus felt responsibility crushing down upon him. "When the first
secondary system goes down, we'll shut down long enough for complete control
replacement."
Tsien and Hatcher looked
as if they wanted to argue, but they were soldiers. They recognized an order
when they heard it.
"Now." Horus
turned his attention to Admiral Hawter. "What can you tell us about your own
situation, Isaiah?"
"It's not
good," Hawter said heavily. "The biggest problem is the difference in
our shield technologies. We generate a single bubble around a unit; they
generate a series of plate-like shields, each covering one aspect of the target,
with about a twenty percent overlap at the edges. They pay for it with a much
less efficient power ratio, but it gives them redundancy we don't have and
lets them bring them in closer to the hull. That's our problem."
Heads nodded. Hyper
missiles weren't seeking weapons; they went straight to their pre-programmed
coordinates, and the distance between shield and hull effectively made Earth's
ships bigger targets. All too often, a hyper missile close enough to penetrate
a human warship's shield detonated outside an Achuultani ship's shields—which,
coupled with the Achuultani's greater ability to saturate the hyper bands, left
Hawter's ships at a grievous disadvantage.
"Our missiles
out-range theirs, and we've refined our targeting systems to beat their jammers—which,
by the way, are still losing ground to our own—but if we stay beyond their
range, we can't get our warheads in close enough, either. Not without
bigger salvos than most of our ships can throw. As long as they stay far enough
out to use their micro-jump advantage, as well, we can only fight them on their
terms, and that's bad business."
"How bad?"
General Ki asked.
"Bad. We started
out with a hundred and twenty battleships, twice that many cruisers, and about
four hundred destroyers. We're down to thirty-one battleships, ninety-six
cruisers, and one hundred and seven destroyers—that's a loss of five hundred
and thirty-six out of an initial strength of seven hundred and seventy. In
return, we've knocked out about nine hundred of their ships. I've got confirmed
kills on seven hundred eighty-two and probables on another hundred fifty or so.
That's one hell of a lot more tonnage than we've lost, and, by our original
estimates, that should have been all of them; as it is, it looks like a bit
less than fifty percent.
"What it boils down
to is that they've ground us away. If they move against us in force, we no
longer have the mobile units to meet them in deep space."
"In short,"
Horus interjected softly, "they've won control of the Solar System beyond
the reach of Earth's own weapons."
"Exactly,
Governor," Hawter said grimly. "We're holding so far, but by the skin
of our teeth. And this is only the scouting force."
They were still staring
at one another in glum silence when the alarms shrieked.
Both of Brashieel's
stomachs tightened as Vindicator moved in-system. The Demon Sector was
living up to its name, Tarhish take it! Almost half the scouts had died
striving against this single wretched planet, and if the scouts were but a few
pebbles in the avalanche of Great Lord Tharno's fleet, there were many suns in
this sector—including the ones which must have built those scanner arrays. It
could not have been these nest-killers, for none of their ships were even
hyper-capable. But if these nest-killers had such weapons, who knew what
else awaited the Protectors?
Yet they were pushing
the nest-killers back. Lord of Thought Mosharg had counted the nest-killers
they had sent to Tarhish carefully, and few of their foes' impossibly powerful
warships could remain.
Still, it seemed rash to
press an attack so deep into the inner system. The nest-killers were twice as
fast as Vindicator when he could not flee into hyper. If this was an
ambush, the Great Visit's scouts could lose heavily.
But Brashieel was no
lord. Perhaps the purpose was to evaluate the nest-killers' close defenses
before the Hoof of Tarhish was released upon them? That made sense, even to an
assistant servant like him, especially in light of their orders to attack the
sunward pole of the planet. Yet to risk a half-twelve of twelves of scouts in
this fashion took courage. Which might be why Lords Chirdan and Mosharg were
lords and Brashieel was an assistant servant.
He settled tensely upon
his duty pad as they emerged from hyper and headed for the blue-white world
they had come so far to slay.
"Seventy-two
hostiles, inbound," Plotting reported. "Approximately two hundred
forty additional hostiles following at eight light-minutes. Evaluate this as a
major probe."
Isaiah Hawter winced.
Over three hundred of them. He could go out to meet them and kick hell out of
them, but it would leave him with next to nothing. Those bastards lying back to
cover their fellows with hyper missiles made the difference. He'd lose half his
ships before his energy weapons even engaged the advanced force.
No, this time he was
going to have to let them in.
"All task forces,
withdraw behind the primary shield," he said. "Instruct Fighter
Command to stand by. Bring all ODC weaponry to readiness."
Adrienne Robbins swore
softly as she retreated behind the shield. She knew going out to meet that much
firepower would be a quick form of suicide, but Nergal had twenty-seven
confirmed kills and nine probables, more than any other unit among Earth's
tattered survivors, and letting these vermin close without a fight galled her.
More, it frightened her, because whether anyone chose to admit it or not, she
knew what it meant.
They were losing.
Vassily Chernikov made a
minute adjustment through his neural feed, nursing his core tap like an old cat
with a single kitten. He'd been right to insist on building it, but all he felt
now was hatred for the demon he had chained. It was breaking its bonds, slowly
but surely, under the strain of continuous overload operation in a planetary
atmosphere; when they snapped, it would be the end.
* * *
Lieutenant Samson's
belly tightened as he watched the developing attack pattern. They were coming
in from the south this time—had they spotted the core tap? Realized how vital
to Earth it was?
Either way, it made
little difference to Samson's probable fate. The Iron Bitch was right in their
path, floating with five other ODCs to help her bar the way . . . and the
planetary shield was drawn in behind them.
"Red Warning!
Prepare for launch! Prepare for Launch! Red Warning!"
The fighter crews,
Terra-born and Imperials distinguishable now only by their names, charged up
the ladders to their cockpits. General Ki Tran Thich settled into the pilot's
couch of his command fighter and flashed the commit signal over his neural
feed. Drives hummed to life, EW officers tuned their defensive systems and
weaponry, and the destruction-laden little craft howled up from their PDC homes
on the man-made thunder of their sonic booms.
Brashieel blinked inner
and outer lids alike as his display blossomed with sudden threat sources. Great
Nest! Sublight missiles at this range?
But his consternation
eased slightly as he saw the power readings. No, not missiles. They were
something else, some sort of very small warships. He had never heard of
anything like them, but, then, he had never heard of most of the
Tarhish-spawned surprises these demon nest-killers had produced.
"Missile batteries,
stand by," Gerald Hatcher ordered softly. This was going to be tricky. He
and Tao-ling had trained to coordinate their southern-hemisphere PDCs, but this
was the first time the bastards had come really close.
He spared a moment to be
thankful Sharon and the girls were safely under the protection of Horus's
Shepard Center HQ. It was just possible something was coming through this time.
Andrew Samson swallowed
as the interceptors drilled through the shield's polar portal and it closed
behind them. They were such tiny things to pit themselves against those
kilometers-long Leviathans. It didn't seem—
"Stand by missile
crews." Captain M'wange's voice was cold. "Shield generators to max.
Deploy first hyper salvo."
The hyper missiles
floated out of their bays, moored to the Bitch by chains of invisible force,
and the Achuultani swept closer.
"All ODCs
engage—now!" Isaiah Hawter snapped.
Nest Lord! Those
were missiles!
Slayer and War Hoof
vanished from his scanners, and Brashieel winced. The nest-killers no longer
used the greater thunder; they had come to rely almost entirely on those
terrible warheads which did not explode . . . and for which the Nest had no
counter. Slayer crumpled in on himself as a missile breached his
shields; War Hoof simply disappeared, and the range was far too long for
his own hyper missiles. What devil among the nest-killers had thought of
putting hyper drives inside their missiles that way?
More missiles dropped out
of hyper, and Vindicator lurched as his shields trembled under a
near-miss. And another. But Small Lord Hantorg had nerves of steel. He held his
course, and Brashieel's own weapons would range soon.
He made his fingers and
thumbs relax within the control gloves. Soon, he promised himself. Soon, my
brothers!
The small warships
darted closer, and he wondered what they meant to do.
Andrew Samson whooped as
the huge ship died. That had been one of the Bitch's missiles! Maybe even one
of his!
"All fighters—execute
Bravo-Three!" General Ki barked, and Earth's interceptors slashed into the
Achuultani formation, darting down to swoop up from "below" at the
last moment. They bucked and twisted, riding the surges from the heavy
gravitonic warheads Terra hurled to meet her attackers, and their targeting
systems reached out.
Brashieel twitched in
astonishment as the tiny warships wheeled, evading the close-in energy
defenses. Only a few twelves perished; the others opened fire at pointblank
range, and a hurricane of missiles lashed the Aku'Ultan ships. They lacked the
brute power of the nest-killers' heavy missiles, but there were many of them. A
great many of them.
Half a twelve of Vindicator's
brothers perished, like mighty qwelloq pulled down by tiny, stinging sulq.
Clearly the nest-killers' lords of thought had briefed them well. They fought
in teams, many units striking as one, concentrating their fire on single
quadrants of their victims' shields, and when those isolated shields died under
the tornadoes of flame blazing upon them, the ships they had been meant to save
died with them.
In desperation,
Brashieel armed his own launchers without orders. Such a breach of procedure
might mean his own death in dishonor, yet he could not simply crouch upon his duty
pad and do nothing! His fingers twitched and sent forth a salvo of
normal-space missiles, missiles of the greater thunder. They converged on a
quarter-twelve of attacking sulq, and when their thunder merged, it
washed over the nest-killers and gave them to the Furnace.
"Good,
Brashieel!" It was Small Lord Hantorg. "Very good!"
Brashieel's crest rose
with pride as he heard Vindicator's lord ordering other missile crews to
copy his example.
General Ki Tran Thich
watched the tremendous Achuultani warship rip apart under his fire. He and
Hideoshi had drawn lots for the right to lead the first interception, and he
smiled wolfishly as he wheeled his fighter. The full power of the Seventy-First
Fighter Group rode at his back as he searched for another target. There. That
one would do nicely.
He never saw the
ten-thousand-megaton missile coming directly at him.
* * *
"Missile armaments
exhausted," General Tama Hideoshi's ops officer reported, and Tama
grunted. His own feeds had already told him, and he could feel his fighters
dying . . . just as Thich had died. Who would have thought of turning
shipkillers into proximity-fused SAMs? His interceptors' energy armaments
weren't going to be enough against that kind of overkill!
"All fighters
withdraw to rearm," he ordered. "Launch reserve strike. Instruct all
pilots to maintain triple normal separation. They are to engage only with
missiles—I repeat, only with missiles—then withdraw to rearm."
"Yes, sir."
Earth's fighters
withdrew. Over three hundred of them had perished, yet that was but a tithe of
their total strength, and the Achuultani probe had been reduced to twenty-seven
units.
The flight crews
streamed back past the ODCs, heading for their own bases. It was up to the
orbital fortifications, now—them, and the fire still slamming into the
Achuultani from Earth's southernmost PDCs.
Brashieel watched the
small warships scatter, fleeing his fire. The Protectors had found the way to
defeat them, and he—he, a lowly assistant servant of thunder—had pointed
the way!
He felt his nestmates'
approval, yet he could not rejoice. Two-thirds of Vindicator's brothers
had died, and the nest-killers' missiles still lashed the survivors. Worse,
they were about to enter energy weapon range of those waiting fortresses. None
of the scouts had done that before; they had engaged only with missiles at
extreme range. Now was the great test. Now was the Time of Fire, when they
would learn what those sullen fortresses could do.
Andrew Samson watched
the depleted fighters fell back. Imagine swatting fighters with heavy missiles!
We couldn't've gotten away with it; our sublight missiles are too slow, too
easy to evade.
The full Achuultani fire
shifted to the Bitch and her sisters, and the ODC shuddered, twitching as if in
fear as the warheads battered her shield. Her shield generators heated
dangerously as Captain M'wange asked the impossible of them. They were covering
too many hyper bands, Samson thought. Sooner or later, they would miss one, or
an anti-matter warhead would overload them. And when that happened, Lucy
Samson's little boy Andrew would die.
But in the
meantime, he thought, taking careful aim . . . and bellowed in triumph as yet
another massive warship tore apart. They were coming to kill him, but if they
had not, how could he have killed them?
"Stand by energy
weapons," Admiral Hawter said harshly. ODCs Eleven, Thirteen, and Sixteen
were gone; there was going to be one hell of a hole over the pole, whatever
happened. Far worse, some of their missiles had gotten through to Earth's
surface. He didn't know how many, but any were too many when they
carried that kind of firepower. Yet they were down to nineteen ships. He tried
to tell himself that was a good sign, and his lips thinned over his teeth as
the Achuultani kept coming.
They were about to
discover the difference between the beams of a battleship and a
three-hundred-thousand-ton ODC, he thought viciously.
Brashieel flinched as
the waiting fortresses exploded with power. The terrible energy weapons which
had slain so many of Vindicator's brothers in ship-to-ship combat were
as nothing beside this! They smote full upon the warships' shields, and as they
smote, those ships died. One, two, seven—still they died! Nothing could
withstand that fury. Nothing!
"All right!"
Andrew Samson shouted. Six of them already, and more going! He picked a
target whose shields wavered under fire from three different ODCs and popped a
gravitonic warhead neatly through them. His victim perished, and this time
there was no question who'd made the kill.
"Withdraw."
The order went out, and
Brashieel sighed with gratitude. Lord of Thought Mosharg must have learned what
they had come to learn. They could leave.
Assuming they could get
away alive.
"They're
withdrawing!" someone shouted, and Gerald Hatcher nodded. Yes, they were,
but they'd cost too much before they went. Two missiles had actually gotten
through the planetary shield despite all that Vassily and the PDCs could do,
and thank God those bastards didn't have gravitonic warheads.
He closed his eyes
briefly. One missile had been an ocean strike, and God only knew what that
was going to do to Earth's coastlines and ecology. The other had hit Australia,
almost exactly in the center of Brisbane, and Gerald Hatcher felt the weight of
personal despair. No shelter could withstand a direct hit of that magnitude,
and how in the name of God could he tell Isaiah Hawter that he had just become
a childless widower?
The last Aku'Ultan
warship vanished, fleeing into hyper before the reserve fighter strike caught
it. Three of the seventy-two which had attacked escaped.
Behind them, the
southern hemisphere of the planet smoked and smoldered under twenty thousand
megatons of destruction, and far, far ahead of them, Lord Chirdan's engineers
completed their final tests. Power plants came on line, stoking the furnaces of
the mighty drive housings, and Lord Chirdan himself gave the order to engage.
The moon men called
Iapetus shuddered in its endless orbit around the planet they called Saturn.
Shuddered . . . and began to move slowly away from its primary.
Servant of Thunders
Brashieel crouched upon his new duty pad in master fire control. He still did
not know how Vindicator had survived so long, but Small Lord Hantorg
seemed to believe much of the credit was his. He was grateful for his small
lord's confidence, and even more that his new promotion gave him such splendid
instrumentation.
He bent his eyes on the
vision plate, watching the rocky mass which paced Vindicator. The Nest
seldom used such large weapons, but it was time and past time for the
Protectors to finish these infernal nest-killers and move on.
Gerald Hatcher felt a
million years old as he propped his feet on the coffee table in Horus's office.
Even with biotechnics, there was a limit to the twenty-two-hour days a man
could put in, and he'd passed it long ago.
For seven months they
had held on—somehow—but the end was in sight. His dog-weary personnel knew it,
and the civilians must suspect. The heavens had been pocked with too much
flame. Too many of their defenders had died . . . and their children. Fourteen
times now the Achuultani had driven hyper missiles past the planetary shield.
Most had struck water, lashing Earth's battered coasts with tsunamis, wracking
her with radiation and salt-poisoned typhoons, but four had found targets
ashore. By God's grace, one had landed in the middle of the African desert, but
Brisbane had been joined by over four hundred million more dead, and all the
miracles his people had wrought were but delays.
How Vassily kept his tap
up was more than Hatcher could tell, but he was holding it together, with his
bare hands for all intents and purposes. The power still flowed, and Geb and
his zombie-like crews kept the shield generators on line somehow. They could
shut down no more than a handful for overhaul at any one time, but, like
Vassily, Geb was doing the impossible.
Yes, Hatcher thought,
Earth had its miracle-workers . . . but at a price.
"How—" He
paused to clear his throat. "How's Isaiah?"
"Unchanged,"
Horus said sadly, and Hatcher closed his eyes in pain.
It had been terrible
enough for Isaiah to preside over the slaughter of his crews, but Brisbane had
finished him. Now he simply sat in his small room, staring at the pictures of
his wife and children.
His friends knew how
magnificently he'd fought, rallying his battered ships again and again; he knew
only that he hadn't been good enough. That he'd let the Achuultani murder his
family, and that most of the crews who'd fought for him with such supreme
gallantry had also died. So they had, and too many of the survivors were like
Isaiah—burned out, dead inside, hating themselves for being less than gods in
the hour of their world's extremity.
Yet there were the
others, Hatcher reminded himself. The ones like Horus, who'd assumed Isaiah's
duties when he collapsed. Like Adrienne Robbins, the senior surviving parasite
skipper, who'd refused a direct order to take her damaged ship out of action.
Like Vassily and Geb, who'd somehow risen above themselves to perform
impossible tasks. Like the bone-weary crews of the ODCs and PDCs who fought on
day after endless, hopeless day, and the fighter crews who went out again and
again, and came back in ever fewer numbers.
And, he thought, the
people like Tsien Tao-ling, those very rare men and women who simply had no
breaking point . . . and thank God for them.
Of the Supreme Chiefs of
Staff, Singhman and Ki had been killed . . . and so had Hawter, Hatcher thought
sadly. Tama Hideoshi had taken over all that remained of Fighter Command, but
Vassily was chained to Antarctica, Frederick Amesbury was working himself into
his own grave in Plotting, trying desperately to keep tabs on the outer system
through his Achuultani-crippled arrays, and Chiang Chien-su couldn't possibly
be spared from his heartbreaking responsibility for Civil Defense. So even with
Horus taking over the remnants of Hawter's warships and ODCs, Hatcher had been
forced to hand the entire planet-side defense net over to Tsien while he
himself concentrated on finding a way to keep the Achuultani from destroying
Earth.
But he was a general,
not a wizard.
"We've had it,
Horus." He watched the old Imperial carefully, but the governor didn't
even flinch. "We're just kicking and scratching on the way to the gallows.
I don't see how Vassily can keep the tap up another two weeks."
"Should we stop
kicking and scratching, then?" The question came out with a ghost of a
smile, and Hatcher smiled back.
"Hell no. I just
needed to say it to someone before I go back and start kicking again. Even if
they take us out, we can make sure there are less of them for the next world on
their list."
"My thoughts
exactly." Horus squeezed the bridge of his nose wearily. "Should we
tell the civilians?"
"Better not,"
Hatcher sighed. "I'm not really scared of a panic, but I don't see any
reason to frighten them any worse than they already are."
"Agreed."
Horus rose and walked
slowly to his office's glass wall. The Colorado night was ripped by solid
sheets of lightning as the outraged atmosphere gave up some of the violence it
had been made to absorb, and a solid, unending roll of thunder shook the glass.
Lightning and snow, he thought; crashing thunder and blizzards. Too much
vaporized sea water, too many cubic kilometers of steam. The planetary albedo
had shifted, more sunlight was reflected, and the temperature had dropped.
There was no telling how much further it would go . . . and thank the Maker
General Chiang had stockpiled food so fanatically, for the world's crops were
gone. But at least this one was turning to rain. Freezing cold rain, but rain.
And they were still
alive, he told himself as Hatcher stood silently to leave. Alive. Yet that,
too, would change. Gerald was right. They were losing it, and something deep
inside him wanted to curl up and get the dying finished. But he couldn't do
that.
"Gerald," his
soft voice stopped Hatcher at the door, and Horus turned his eyes from the
storm to meet the general's. "In case we don't get a chance to talk again,
thank you."
The Hoof of Tarhish
pawed the vacuum. Not even the Aku'Ultan could accelerate such masses with a
snap of the fingers, but its speed had grown. Only a few twelves of tiao
per segment, at first, then more. And more. More!
Now Vindicator
rode the mighty projectile's flank, joined with his brothers in a solid phalanx
to guard their weapon.
They must be seen soon,
but the Hoof's defenses were strong, and the nest-killers could not even range
accurately upon it without first blasting aside the half-twelve of great
twelves of scouts which remained. They would defend the Hoof with their own
deaths and clear a way through what remained of the nest-killers' defenses, for
they were Protectors.
"Oh my God."
Sir Frederick Amesbury's
Plotting teams were going berserk trying to analyze the Achuultani's current
maneuvers, for there was no sane reason for them to be clustered that way on a
course like that. But something about the whisper cut through the weary,
frantic background hum, and he turned to Major Joanna Osgood, his senior watch
officer.
"What is it,
Major?" But her mahogany face was frozen and she did not answer. He
touched her shoulder. "Jo?"
Major Osgood shook
herself.
"I found the
answer, sir," she said. "Iapetus."
Her Caribbean accent's
flattened calm frightened Amesbury, for he knew what produced that tone. There
was a realm beyond fear, for when no hope remained there was no reason to fear.
"Explain,
Major," he said gently.
"I finally managed
to hyper an array out-system and got a look at Saturn, sir." She met the
general's gaze calmly. "Iapetus isn't there anymore."
"It's true,
Ger." Amesbury's weary face looked back from Hatcher's com screen.
"It took some time to get a probe near enough to burn through their ships'
energy emissions and confirm it, but we found it right enough. Dead center in
their formation: Iapetus—the eighth moon of Saturn."
"I see."
Hatcher wanted to curse, to revile God for letting this happen, but there was
no point, and his voice was soft. "How bad is it?"
"It's the end,
unless we can stop the bloody thing. This is no asteroid, Ger—it's a bleeding moon.
Six times the mass of Ceres."
"Moving how fast?"
"Fast enough to see
us off," Amesbury replied grimly. "They could have done that
simply by dropping it into Sol's gravity well and letting it fall 'downhill' to
us, but we'd've had too much time. They've put shields on it, but if we could
pop a few hyper missiles through them, we might be able to blow the
bugger apart before it reaches us. That's why they're bringing it in under
power; they don't want to expose it to our fire any longer than they have to.
"Their drives are
much slower than ours are, but they've got the ruddy gravity well to work with,
too. I don't know how they did it—even if they hadn't been picking off our
sensor arrays, we were watching the asteroids, not the outer-system moons—but I
reckon they started out with a very low initial acceleration. Only they're
coming from Saturn, Ger. I don't know when they actually started, but
we're just past opposition, which means we're over one-and-a-half billion
kilometers apart on a straight line. But they're not on a straight-line
course . . . and they've been accelerating all the way.
"They're coming at
us at upwards of five hundred kilometers per second—seven times faster than a
'fast' meteorite. I haven't bothered to calculate how many trillions of
megatons that equates to, because it doesn't matter. That moon will punch
through our shield like a bullet through butter, and they'll reach us in about
six days. That's how long we've got to stop them."
"We can't,
Frederick," Hatcher sighed. "We just can't do it."
"I bloody well know
we can't," Amesbury said harshly, "but that doesn't mean we don't
have to try!"
"I know."
Hatcher made his shoulders straighten. "Leave it with me, Frederick. We'll
give it our best shot."
"I know,"
Amesbury said much more softly. "And . . . God bless, Ger."
Faces paled as the news
spread among Earth's defenders. This was the end. When that stupendous hammer
came down, Earth would shatter like a walnut.
Some had given too much,
stretched their reserves too thin, and they snapped. Most simply retreated from
reality, but a handful went berserk, and their fellows were almost grateful,
for subduing them diverted their minds from their own terror.
Yet only a minority
broke. For most, survival, even hope, were no longer factors, and they manned
their battle stations without hysteria, cold and determined . . . and
desperate.
Servant of Thunders
Brashieel noted the changing energy signatures. So. The nest-killers knew, and
they would strive to thrust the Hoof aside, to destroy it. Already the orbital
fortresses were moving, concentrating to meet them, but many smaller hooves had
been prepared to pelt the planetary shield, driving it back, exposing those
fortresses to the Protectors' thunder. They would clear a path for the Hoof,
and nothing could stop them. The nest-killers could not even see the Hoof to
fire upon it unless they destroyed Vindicator and his brothers, and they
would never do that in time.
He watched his
magnificent instruments as Lord of Order Chirdan shifted formation, placing a
thicker wall of his nestlings between the Hoof and the nest-killers' world. Vindicator
anchored one edge of that wall.
Lieutenant Andrew Samson
felt queerly calm. Governor Horus had shifted his remaining forts to give the
Bitch support, but the Achuultani had expected that. Kinetic projectiles had
hammered the planetary shield back for days, stripping it away from the ODCs.
Raiding squadrons had charged in, paying a high price for their attacks but
picking off the battered ODCs. Of the six which originally had protected the
pole, only the damaged Bitch remained, and she'd expended too much ammunition
defending herself. Without Earth's orbital industry, just keeping up with
expenditures was difficult . . . not to mention the risk colliers ran between
the shield and the ODCs to resupply them.
Andrew Samson had long
ago abandoned any expectation of surviving Earth's siege, but he'd continued to
hope his world would live. Now he knew it probably would not, and that purged
the last fear from his system, leaving only a strange, bittersweet regret.
The last fleet units
would make their try soon. They'd been hoarded for this moment, waiting until
the Achuultani were within pointblank range of Earth's defenses. Their chances
of surviving the next few hours were even lower than his own, but the ODCs
would do what they could to cover them. He checked his remaining hyper
missiles. Thirty-seven, and less than four hundred in the Bitch's other
magazines. It wouldn't be enough.
Acting Commodore
Adrienne Robbins checked her formation. All fifteen of Earth's remaining
battleships, little more than a single squadron, were formed up about her
wounded Nergal. Half Nergal's launchers had been destroyed by the
near-miss which had pierced her shield and killed eighty of her three hundred
people, but she had her drive . . . and her energy weapons.
The threadbare remnants
of the cruisers and destroyers—seventy-four of them, in all—screened the
pitiful handful of capital ships. Eighty-nine warships; her first and final
task force command.
"Task Force ready
to proceed, Governor," she told the face on her com.
"Proceed,"
Horus said quietly. "May the Maker go with you, Commodore."
"And with you,
sir," she replied, then shifted to her command net, and her voice was
clear and calm. "The Task Force will advance," she said.
Brashieel watched in
grudging admiration as the nest-killers advanced. There were so few of them,
and barely a twelve of their biggest ones. Their crews must know they would be
chaff for the Furnace, yet still they came, and something within him saluted
their courage. In this moment they were not nest-killers; they were Protectors,
just as truly as he himself.
But such thoughts would
not stay his hand. The Nest had survived for uncountable higher twelves of
years only by slaying its enemies while they were yet weak. It was a lesson the
Aku'Ultan had learned long ago from the Great Nest-Killers who had driven the
Aku'Ultan from their own Nest Place.
It would not happen
again.
Gerald Hatcher felt sick
as Commodore Robbins led her ships out to die. But the fire control of his
orbital and ground-side fortresses couldn't even see Iapetus unless an opening
could be blown for them, and those doomed ships were his one hope to open a
way.
"If we get a fix,
lock it in tight, Plotting," he said harshly.
"Acknowledged,"
Sir Frederick Amesbury replied.
"Request permission
to engage," Tama Hideoshi said from his own screen, and Hatcher noted the
general's flight suit. They had more fighters than crews now, but even so
Hideoshi had no business flying this mission. Yet there was no tomorrow this
time, and he chose not to object.
"Not yet. Hold
inside the shield till the ships engage."
"Acknowledged."
Tama's voice was unhappy, but he understood. He would wait until the Achuultani
were too busy punching missiles at Robbins' ships to wipe his own fragile craft
from the universe.
"Task Force opening
fire," someone said, and another voice came over the link, soft and
prayerful, its owner not even aware he had spoken.
"Go, baby! Go!"
it whispered.
Adrienne Robbins had
discussed her plan with Horus, not that there was much "planning" to
it. There was but one possible tactic: to go right down their throat behind
every missile she had. Perhaps, just perhaps, they could swamp the defenses,
get in among them with their energy weapons. None would survive such close
combat, but they might punch a hole before they died.
And so Earth's ships
belched missiles at her murderers, hyper and sublight alike. Their launchers
went to continuous rapid fire, spitting out homing sublight weapons without
even worrying about targeting. The lethal projectiles were a cloud of death,
and the first hyper missiles from Earth came with them.
Lord of Order Chirdan's
head bobbed in anguish as his nestlings died. He had known the nest-killers
must come forth and hurl their every weapon against him, yet not even Battle
Comp had predicted carnage such as this!
The missile storm was a
whirlwind, boring into the center of the wall defending the Hoof. Anti-matter
pyres and gravitonic warheads savaged his ships, and his inner lids narrowed.
They sought to blow a hole and charge into it with their infernal energy
weapons! They would die there, but in their dying they might expose the Hoof to
their fellows upon the planet.
He could not allow that,
and his orders went out. The edges of his wall of ships thinned, drawing
together in the center to block the attack, and his own, shorter-ranged
missiles struck back.
* * *
Time had no meaning.
There was only a shrieking eternity of dying ships and a glare that lit Earth's
night skies like twice a hundred suns. Adrienne Robbins saw it reaching for her
ships, saw her lighter destroyers and cruisers burning like coals from a forge,
and she adjusted her course slightly.
The solid core of her
out-numbered task force drove for the exact center of that vortex of death, and
their magazines were almost dry.
"Go!" Tama
Hideoshi snapped, and Earth's last surviving interceptors howled heavenward. He
rode his flight couch, his EW officer at his side, and smiled. He was
fifty-nine years old, and only his biotechnics made this possible. Three years
before, he'd known he would never fly combat again. Now he would, and if his
world must die, at least he had been given this final gift, to die in her
defense as a samurai should.
Nest Lord! Their small
ships were attacking, too! Brashieel had not thought so many remained, but they
did, and they charged on the heels of their larger, dying brothers, covered by
their deaths.
A few of the Bitch's
launchers still had hyper missiles, but Andrew Samson was down to sublight
weapons. It was long range, too much time for the bastards to pick them off,
but each of his weapons they had to deal with was one more strain on their
defenses. He sent them out at four-second intervals.
Lord Chirdan cursed. The
nest-killers were dying by twelves, yet they had cut deep into his formation.
Six twelves of his ships had already perished, and the terrible harvest of the
nest-killer beams was only starting.
Their warships vanished
into the heart of his own, robbing his outer missile crews of targets, and they
retargeted on the orbital fortresses.
Gerald Hatcher's face
was stone as the first ODC died. Missiles pelted the planetary shield, as well,
but he almost welcomed those. Even if they broke through, killed millions of
civilians, he would welcome them, for each missile sent against Earth was one
not sent against his orbital launchers.
He sat back and felt
utterly useless. There was no reserve. He'd committed everything he had. Now he
had nothing to do but watch the slaughter of his people.
Missiles coated the Iron
Bitch's shield in a blinding corona, and still she struck back.
Andrew Samson was a
machine, part of his console. His magazine was down to ten percent and dropping
fast, but he didn't even think of slowing his rate of fire. There was no point,
and he pounded his foes, his brain full of the thunder wracking the Achuultani
formation.
He never saw the hyper
missile which finally popped the Bitch's shields. He died with his mind still
full of thunder.
* * *
Tama Hideoshi's fighters
slammed into the Achuultani, and their missiles flashed away. Scores of
Achuultani ships died, but the enemy formation closed anyway. Commodore
Robbins' ships vanished into the maelstrom, and the fighters were dying too
quickly to follow.
They exhausted their
missiles and closed with energy guns.
Adrienne Robbins was
halfway through the Achuultani, but her cruisers and destroyers were gone. The
back of her mind burned with the image of the destroyer London as her
captain took her at full drive directly into one of the Achuultani monsters
behind the continuous fire of his energy weapons, bursting through its weakened
shield and dragging it into death with him. Yet it wasn't enough. She and her
battleships were alone, the only units with the strength to endure the fury,
and even they were going fast. Nergal herself had taken another near
miss, and tangled skeins of atmosphere followed her like a trail of blood.
Another Achuultani ship
died under her energy weapons, but another loomed beyond it, and still another.
They wouldn't break through after all.
Adrienne Robbins drove
her crippled command forward, and Nergal's eight surviving sisters
charged at her side.
Tsien Tao-ling's
scanners told him Commodore Robbins would not succeed. Yet . . . in a way, she
might yet. His eyes closed as he concentrated on his feed, his brain clear and
cold, buttressed against panic. Yes. Robbins had drawn most of the defenders
onto her own ships, thickening the center of their formation but thinning its
edges. Perhaps—
The hail of missiles
from the PDCs stopped as his neural feed overrode their firing orders. He felt
Hatcher's shock through his cross feed to Shepard Center, but there was no time
to explain.
And then the launchers
retargeted and spoke, hurling their massed missiles at a sphere of space barely
three hundred kilometers across. Two thousand gravitonic warheads went off as
one.
Twenty kilometers of
starship went mad, hurled end-for-end as the wave of destruction broke across
it. Servant of Thunders Brashieel clung to his duty pad, blood bursting from
his nostrils as the universe exploded about him, and Tsien Tao-ling's fury spat
Vindicator forth like the seed of a grape.
"Contact!"
Sir Frederick Amesbury screamed, his British reserve shattered at last. Tsien
had blown a brief hole through the Achuultani flank, and Amesbury's computers
locked onto Iapetus. The data flashed to the PDCs and surviving ODCs, and their
missiles retargeted once more.
Lord Chirdan cursed and
slammed a double-thumbed fist into the bulkhead. No! They could not have done
that! Not while the Hoof had so far to go!
But he fought himself
back under control, watching missiles rip at the Hoof even as his ravaged
nestlings raced to reposition themselves. Shields guttered and flared, and one
quadrant failed. A missile dodged through the gap, its anti-matter warhead
incinerating the generators of yet another quadrant, but it was too late.
Without direct
observation, not even these demon-spawned nest-killers could kill the
Hoof before it struck, and his scouts had already spread back out to deny them
that observation and hide the damaged shield quadrants.
He bared his teeth in a
snarl, turning back to the five surviving nest-killer warships. He would give
them to the Furnace, and their deaths would fan the Fire awaiting their cursed
world.
Hatcher's momentary
elation died. It had been a magnificent try, but it had failed, and he felt
himself relax into a curious tranquillity of sorrow for the death of his
planet, coupled with a deep, abiding pride in his people.
He watched almost calmly
as the thinning screen of Achuultani ships moved still closer. There were no
more than three hundred of them, four at the most, but it would be enough.
"General
Hatcher!" His head snapped up at the sudden cry from Plotting. There was
something strange about that voice. Something he could not quite put his finger
upon. And then he had it. Hope. There was hope in it!
Nergal was alone, the
last survivor of Terra's squadrons.
Adrienne Robbins had no
idea why her ship was still alive, nor dared she take time to consider it. Her
mind blazed hotter than the warheads bursting against her shield, and still she
moved forward. There was no sanity in it. One battleship, her missiles exhausted,
could never stop Iapetus. But sanity was an encumbrance. Nergal had come
to attack that moon, and attack she would.
The wall was thinning,
and she could feel the moon through her scanners. She altered course slightly,
smashing at her foes—
—and suddenly they
vanished in a gut-wrenching fury of gravitonic destruction that tossed Nergal
like a cork.
Lord Chirdan saw without
understanding. Three twelves of warships—four twelves—five! Impossible
warships. Warships vaster than the Hoof itself!
They came out of nowhere
at impossible speeds and began to kill.
Missiles that did not
miss. Beams that licked away ships like tinder. Shields that brushed aside the
mightiest thunders. They were the darkest nightmare of the Aku'Ultan, fleshed
in shields and battle steel.
Lord Chirdan's flagship
vanished in a boil of flame, and his scouts died with him. In the end, not even
Protectors could abide the coming of those night demons. A pitiful handful
broke, tried to flee, but they were too deep in the gravity well to escape into
hyper, and—one-by-one—they died.
Yet before the last
Protector perished, he saw one great warship advance upon the Hoof. Its
missiles reached out—sublight missiles that took precise station on the
charging moon before they flared to dreadful life. A surge of gravitonic fury
raced out from them, even its backlash terrible enough to shake the wounded
Earth to her core, triggering earthquakes, waking volcanoes.
Yet that was but an echo
of their power. Sixteen gravitonic warheads, each hundreds of times more
powerful than anything Earth had boasted, flashed into destruction . . . and
took the moon Iapetus with them.
Gerald Hatcher sagged in
disbelief, too shocked even to feel joy, and the breathless silence of his
command post was an extension of his own.
Then a screen on his com
panel lit, and a face he knew looked out of it.
"Sorry we cut it so
close," Colin MacIntyre said softly.
And then—then—the
command post exploded in cheers.
General Hector MacMahan
watched the shoals of Imperial assault boats close in about his command craft,
then turned his scanners to the broken halves of the Achuultani starship
tumbling through space in the intricate measures of an insane dance. The
planetoid Sevrid hovered behind her shuttles, watching over them and
probing the wreckage. There was still air and life aboard that shattered ship,
and power, but not much of any of them.
MacMahan grunted in
satisfaction as Sevrid's tractors snubbed away the wreck's movement. Now
if only the ship had a bay big enough to dock the damned thing, he and his
people might not have to do everything the hard way.
He had no idea how many
live Achuultani awaited his assault force, but he had six thousand men and
women in his first wave, with a reserve half that size again. The cost might be
high, but that wreck was the single partially intact Achuultani warship in the
system. If they could take it, capture records, its computers, maybe even a few
live Achuultani. . . .
"Come on, people,
tighten it up," he murmured over his com, watching the final adjustment of
his formation. There. They were ready.
"Execute!" he
snapped, and the assault boats screamed forward.
Servant of Thunders
Brashieel waited in the wreckage in his vac-suit. One broken foreleg was
crudely splinted, but aside from the pain it was little inconvenience. He still
had three good legs, and with the loss of the drive gravity had become a ghost.
He watched his remaining
instruments, longing to send the thunder against the foe, but his launchers had
died. Perhaps a fifth-twelfth of Vindicator's energy weapons remained
serviceable, but none of his launchers, and no weapons at all on the broken
tooth of his forward section.
Brashieel tried to
reject the nightmare. The nest-killers' world still lived, and these monstrous
warships foretold perils yet more dire. The lords of thought had believed this
system stood alone. It did not. The makers of those ancient scanner arrays had
rallied to its defense, and they were powerful beyond dreams of power. Why
should they content themselves with merely stopping the Protectors' attack? Why
should they not strike the Nest itself?
He wondered why they had
not simply given Vindicator to the Fire. Did their own beliefs in honor
demand they face their final foes in personal combat? It did not matter, and he
turned from his panel as the small craft advanced. He had no weapons to smite
them, but he had already determined where he and his surviving nestlings of
thunder would make their stand.
MacMahan flinched as the
after section of the wrecked hull lashed his shuttles with fire. The crude
energy weapons were powerful enough to burn through any assault boat's shield,
but they'd fired at extreme range. Only three were hit, and the others went to evasive
action, ripping at the wreck with their own energy guns. Sevrid's far
heavier weapons reached past them, and warp beams plucked neat, perfect divots
from the hull. Air gushed outward, and then the first-wave assault boats
reached their goal.
Their energy guns
blasted one last time, and they battered into the holes they'd blown on
suddenly reversed drives. They crunched to a halt, and assault teams charged
into the violated passages of the broken starship, their soot-black combat
armor invisible in the lightless corridors. A handful of defenders opened fire,
and their weapons spat back, silent in the vacuum.
MacMahan's command boat
led the third wave, staggering drunkenly as it slammed to a halt, and the
hatches popped. His HQ company formed up about him, and he took them into the
madness.
Brashieel waited. There
was no point charging blindly to meet the nest-killers. Vindicator was
dead; only the mechanics of completing his nestlings' deaths remained, and this
was as good a place to end as any.
He examined his
nestlings' positions in the light of his helmet lamp. They had made themselves
what cover they could, a hoof-shaped bow of them protecting the hatch to main
control, and Brashieel wished Small Lord Hantorg had survived to lead their
final fight.
His nostrils flared in
bitter amusement. While he was wishing, might he not wish that he knew what he
was about? He and his nestlings were servants of thunders—they smote worlds,
not single nest-killers! He cudgeled his brain, trying to remember if he had
ever heard of Protectors and nest-killers actually facing one another so
directly. He did not think he had, but his mind was none too clear, and it
really did not matter.
It was as impossible to
coordinate the battle as MacMahan had expected it to be. Not even Imperial
technology could provide any clear picture of this warren of decks and
passages, sealed hatches and lurking ambushes.
He'd done his best in
the pre-assault briefing; now it was up to his combat teams. The Second Marines
provided the bulk of his firepower, but each company had an attached Recon
Group platoon, and they were—
A stream of slugs
wrenched him back to the job at hand, and he popped his jump gear, leaping
aside as his point man went down and more fire clawed the space he himself had
occupied a moment before. Leaking air and globules of blood marked a dead man
as Corporal O'Hara's combat armor tumbled down the zero-gee passage, and
MacMahan's mouth tightened. These crazy centaurs didn't have an energy weapon
worth shit, but their slug weapons were nasty.
Still, they had their
disadvantages. For one thing, recoil was a real problem—one his own people
didn't face. And for all their determination to fight to the death, Achuultani
didn't seem to be very good infantrymen. His people, on the other hand .
. .
Two troopers eased
forward, close to the deck, and an entire squad hosed the area before them with
rapid, continuous grav gun fire. The super-dense explosive darts shredded the
bulkheads, lighting the darkness with strobe-lightning spits of fury, and
Captain Amanda Givens-Tamman rose suddenly to her knees. Her warp rifle fired,
and the defending fire stopped abruptly.
MacMahan shuddered. He hated
those damned guns. Probably the first people to meet crossbows had felt the
same way about them. But using a hyper field on anyone, even an Achuultani—!
He chopped the thought
off and waved his people forward once again. A new point man moved out, armor
scanners probing for booby traps and defenders alike, and another sealed hatch
loomed ahead.
Brashieel shook himself
into readiness as he felt vibration in the steel.
"Stand ready, my
brothers," he said quietly. "The nest-killers come."
The hatch simply
vanished, and Brashieel's crest flattened in dread. Somehow these nest-killers
had chained the hyper field itself for the use of their protectors!
Then the first
nest-killer came through the hatch, back-lit from the corridor behind, lacing
the darkness with fire from its stubby weapon, and Brashieel swallowed bile at
the ugliness of the squat, four-limbed shape. But even in his revulsion he felt
a throb of wonder. That was a projectile weapon, yet there was no recoil! How
was that possible?
The question fluttered
away into the recesses of his mind as the nest-killer's explosive darts ripped
two of his nestlings apart. How had it seen them in the blackness?! No matter.
He sighted carefully, bracing his three good legs against the bulkhead, and
squeezed his trigger. Recoil twisted his broken leg with agony, but his heavy
slugs ripped through the biped's armor, and Brashieel felt a stab of savage
delight. They had taken his thunders from him, but he would send a few more to
the Furnace before they slew him!
The chamber blossomed
with drifting globules of blood as more nest-killers charged through the hatch.
Darkness was light for them, and their fire was murderously accurate. His
nestlings perished, firing back, crying out in agony and horror over their suit
communicators as darts exploded within their bodies or the terrible hyper
weapons plucked away their limbs. Brashieel shouted his hate, holding back the
trigger, then fumbled for another magazine, but there was no time. He hurled
himself forward, his bayonet stabbing towards the last nest-killer to enter.
* * *
"General!"
someone shouted, and MacMahan whirled. There was something wrong with the
charging centaur's legs, but not with its courage; it was coming at him with
only a bayonet, and his grav gun rose automatically—then stopped.
"Check fire!"
he shouted, and tossed the grav gun aside.
Brashieel gaped as the
puny nest-killer discarded its weapon, but his heart flamed. One more. One more
foe to light his own way into the Furnace! He screamed in rage and thrust.
MacMahan's gauntleted
hand slashed its armored edge into the Achuultani's long, clumsy rifle, driven
by servo-mech "muscles," and the insanely warped weapon flew away.
The alien flung itself
bodily upon him, and what kind of hand-to-hand moves did you use against a
quarter horse with arms? MacMahan almost laughed at the thought, then he caught
one murderously swinging arm, noting the knife in its hand only at the last
moment, and the Achuultani convulsed in agony.
Careful, careful,
Hector! Don't kill it by accident! And watch the vac suit, you dummy! Rip it
and—
He moderated his armor's
strength, and a furiously kicking hoof smashed his chest for his pains. That
smarted even through his armor. Strong bastard, wasn't he? They lost contact
with decks and bulkheads and tumbled, weightless and drunken, across the
compartment. A last Achuultani gunner tried to nail them both, but one of his
HQ raiders finished it in time. Then they caromed off a bulkhead at last, and
MacMahan got a firm grip on the other arm.
He twisted, landing
astride the Achuultani's back, and suppressed a mad urge to scream "Ride
'em, cowboy!" as he wrapped his armored arms around its torso and arms.
One of his legs hooked back, kicking a rear leg aside, and his foe convulsed
again. Damn it! Another broken bone!
"Ashwell! Get your
ass over here!" he shouted, and his aide leapt forward. Between them, they
wrestled the injured, still-fighting alien into helplessness, pinning it until
two other troopers could bind it.
"Jesus! These
bastards don't know how to quit, Gen'rl!" Ashwell panted.
"Maybe not, but
we've got one alive. I expect His Majesty will be pleased with us."
"His Majesty
friggin' well better be," someone muttered.
"I didn't hear
that," MacMahan said pleasantly. "But if I had, I'd certainly agree."
Horus watched Nergal's
mangled hull drop painfully through the seething electrical storm and tried not
to weep. He failed, but perhaps no one noticed in the icy sheets of rain.
Strange ships escorted
her, half again her size, shepherding her home. He winced as another drive pod
failed and she lurched, but Adrienne Robbins forced her back under control. The
other ships' tractors waited, ready to ease her struggle, but Horus could still
hear Adrienne's voice.
"Negative,"
she'd said, tears glittering beneath the words. "She got us this far;
she'll take us home. On her own, Goddamn it! On her own!"
And now the strange
ships hovered above her like guards of honor as the broken battleship limped
down the last few meters of sky. Two landing legs refused to extend, and
Robbins lifted her ship again, holding her rock-steady on her off-balance,
rapidly failing drive, then laid her gently down upon her belly. It was
perfect, Horus thought quietly. A consummate perfection he could never have
matched.
There was no sound but
the cannonade of Earth's thunder, saluting the return of her final defender
with heaven's own artillery. Then the emergency vehicles moved out, flashers
splintering in the pounding rain, sirens silent, while the gleaming newcomers
settled in a circle about their fallen sister.
Colin rode the
battleship Chesha's transit shaft to the main ramp and stepped out into
the storm. Horus was waiting.
Something inside Colin
tightened as he peered at him through the unnatural sheets of sleety rain. Horus
looked more rock-like than ever, but he was an ancient rock, and the last
thirty months had cut deep new lines into that powerful old face. Colin saw it
as the old Imperial stared back at him, his eyes bright with incredulous joy,
and climbed the ramp towards him.
"Hello,
Horus," he said, and Horus reached out and gripped his upper arms, staring
into his face as he might have stared at a ghost.
"You are
here," he whispered. "You made it."
"Yes," Colin
said, the quiet word washed in thunder. And then his voice broke and he hugged
the old man close. "We made it," he said into his father-in-law's
shoulder, "and so did you. My God, so did you!"
"Of course we
did," Horus said, and Colin had never heard such exhaustion in a human
voice. "You left me a planet full of Terra-born to do it with, didn't
you?"
General Chiang Chien-su
was frantically busy, for the final shock of earthquakes and spouting volcanoes
waked by Iapetus's destruction had capped the mounting devastation he'd fought
so long. Yet he'd seemed almost cheerful in his last report. His people were
winning this time, and the mighty planetoids riding solar orbit with the planet
were helping. Their auxiliaries were everywhere, helping his own over-worked
craft rescue survivors from the blizzards, mud, water, and fire which had
engulfed them.
Except for him, Earth's
surviving chiefs of staff sat in Horus's office.
Vassily Chernikov looked
like a two-week corpse, but his face was relaxed. The core tap was deactivated
at last, and he hadn't lost control of it. Gerald Hatcher and Tsien Tao-ling
sat together on a couch, shoulders sagging, feet propped on the same coffee
table. Sir Frederick Amesbury sat in an armchair, smoking a battered pipe, eyes
half-shut.
Tama Hideoshi was not
there. Tamman's son had found the samurai's death he'd sought.
Colin sat on the corner
of Horus's desk and knew he'd never seen such utter and complete fatigue. These
were the men, he thought; the ones who had done the impossible. He'd already
queried the computers and learned what they'd endured and achieved. Even with
the evidence before him, he could scarcely credit it, and he hated what he was
going to have to tell them. He could see the relaxation in their faces, the joy
of a last-minute rescue, the knowledge that the Imperium had not abandoned
them. Somehow he had to tell them the truth, but first . . .
"Gentlemen,"
he said quietly, "I never imagined what I'd really asked you to do. I have
no idea how you did it. I can only say—thank you. It seems so inadequate, but .
. ." He broke off with a small, apologetic shrug, and Gerald Hatcher
smiled wearily.
"It cuts both way,
Governor. On behalf of your military commanders—and, I might add, the entire
planet—thank you. If you hadn't turned up when you did—" It was his
turn to shrug.
"I know,"
Colin said, "and I'm sorry we cut it so close. We came out of supralight
just as your parasites went in."
"You came—"
Horus's brows wrinkled in a frown. "Then how in the Maker's name did you get
here? You should've been at least twenty hours out!"
"Dahak was. In
fact, he and 'Tanni are still about twelve hours out. Tamman and I took the
others and micro-jumped on ahead," Colin said, then grinned at Horus's
expression. "Scout's honor. Oh, we still needed Dahak's computers—we were
plugged in by fold-space link all the way—but he couldn't keep up. You see,
those ships carry hyper drives as well as Enchanach drives."
"They what?!"
Horus blurted.
"I know, I
know," Colin said soothingly. "Look, there's a lot to explain. The
main thing about how we got here is that those ships are faster'n hell. They
can hyper to within about twelve light-minutes of a G0 star, and they can pull
about seventy percent light-speed once they get there."
"Maker! When you
get help, you get help, don't you?"
"Well," Colin
said slowly, folding his hands on his knee and looking down at them, "yes,
and no. You see, we couldn't find anyone to come with us." He looked up
and saw the beginning of understanding horror in his father-in-law's eyes.
"The Imperium's gone, Horus," he said gently. "We had to bring
these ships back ourselves . . . and they're all that's coming."
Dahak's transit shaft
deposited Horus at his destination, and the silent hatch slid open. He began to
step through it, then stopped abruptly and dodged as fifty kilos of black fur
hurled itself head-first past him. Tinker Bell disappeared down the shaft's gleaming
bore, her happy bark trailing away into silence, and he shook his head with a
grin.
He stepped into the
captain's quarters, still shaking his head. The atrium was filled with
'sunlight,' a welcome relief from the terrible rains and blizzards flaying the
battered Earth, and Colin rose quickly to grip his hand and lead him back to
the men sitting around the stone table.
Hector MacMahan looked
up with a rare, wide grin and waved a welcome, and if Gerald Hatcher and Tsien
Tao-ling were more restrained, their smiles looked almost normal again. Vassily
wasn't here; he and Valentina were visiting their son and making appropriately
admiring sounds as Vlad explained the latest wonders of Imperial engineering to
them.
"Where's
'Tanni?" Horus demanded as he and Colin approached the others.
"She'll be along.
She's collecting something we want to show you."
"Maker, it'll be
good to see her again!" Horus said, and Colin grinned.
"She feels the same
way . . . Dad."
Horus tried to turn his
flashing smile into a pained expression, but who would have believed 'Tanni
would have the good sense to wed Colin? Especially given the way they'd first
met?
"Hi,
Granddad." Hector didn't stand; his left leg was regenerating from the
slug which had punched through his armor in the final fighting aboard Vindicator.
"Sorry about Tinker Bell. She was in a hurry."
"A hurry? I thought
she was a loose hyper missile!"
"I know,"
Colin laughed. "She's been that way ever since she discovered transit
shafts, and Dahak spoils her even worse than Hector does."
"I didn't know
anyone could," Horus said, eyeing Hector severely.
"Believe it. He
doesn't have hands, but he's found his own way to pet her. He'll only route her
to one of the park decks unless someone's with her, but he adjusts the shaft to
give her about an eighty-kilometer airstream, and she's in heaven. He barks
at her, too. Most horrible thing you ever heard, but he swears she understands
him better than I do."
"Which would not
require a great deal of comprehension," a voice said, and, despite
himself, Horus flinched. The last time he'd heard that voice with his own ears
had been during the mutiny. "And that is not precisely what I have said,
Colin. I simply maintain that Tinker Bell's barks are much more value-laden
then humans believe and that we shall learn to communicate in a
meaningful fashion, not that we already do so."
"Yeah, sure."
Colin rolled his eyes at Horus.
"Welcome aboard,
Senior Fleet Captain Horus," Dahak said, and Horus's tension eased at the
welcome in that mellow voice. He cleared his throat.
"Thank you,
Dahak," he said, and saw Colin's smile of approval.
"Join the rest of
us," his son-in-law invited, and seated Horus at one end of the table.
Wind rustled in the atrium leaves, a fountain bubbled nearby, and Horus felt
his last uneasiness soaking away into relaxation.
"So," Hatcher
said, obviously picking up the thread of an interrupted conversation, "you
found yourself emperor and located this Guard Flotilla of yours. I thought you
said it was only seventy-eight units?"
"Only seventy-eight
warships," Colin corrected, sitting on the edge of the table.
"There are also ten Shirga-class colliers, three Enchanach-class
transports, and the two repair ships. That makes ninety-three."
Horus nodded to himself,
still shaken by what he'd seen as his cutter approached Dahak. The space
about Terra seemed incredibly crowded by huge, gleaming planetoids, and their
ensigns had crowded his mind with images . . . a crouching, six-limbed Birhatan
crag cat, an armored warrior, a vast broadsword in a gauntleted fist, and
hordes of alien and mythological beasts he hadn't even recognized. But most
disturbing of all had been seeing two of Dahak's own dragon. He'd expected
it, but expecting and seeing were two different things.
"And you managed to
bring them all back with you," he said softly.
"Oh, he did, he
did!" Tamman agreed, stepping out of the transit shaft behind them.
"He worked us half to death in the process, too." Colin grinned
wryly, and Tamman snorted. "We concentrated on the mechanical
systems—Dahak and Caitrin managed most of the life support functions through
their central computers once we were underway—but it's a good thing you didn't
see us before we had a chance to recuperate on the trip back!"
The big Imperial smiled,
though darkness lingered in his eyes. Hideoshi's death had hit him hard, for he
had been the only child of Tamman's Terra-born wife, Himeko. But Tamman had
grown up when there had been no biotechnics for any Terra-born child; a son's
death held an old, terrible familiarity for him.
"Yeah," Colin
said, "but these ships are dumb, Horus, and we don't begin to have
the people for them. We managed to put skeleton crews on six of the Asgerds,
but the others are riding empty—except for Sevrid, that is. That's why
we had to come back on Enchanach Drive instead of hypering home. We can't run
'em worth a damn without Dahak to do their thinking for them."
"That's something I
still don't understand," Horus said. "Why didn't the wake-up
work?"
"I will be damned
if I know," Colin said frankly. "We tried it with Two and Herdan,
but it didn't seem to make any difference. These computers are faster than
Dahak, and they've got an incredible capacity, but even after he dumped his
entire memory to them, they didn't wake up."
"Something
experiential?" Horus mused. "Or in the core programming?"
"Dahak? You want to
answer that one?"
"I shall endeavor,
Colin, but the truth is that I do not know. Senior Fleet Captain Horus, you
must understand that the basic construction of these computers is totally
different from my own, with core programming specifically designed to preclude
the possibility of true self-awareness on their part.
"My translation
programs are sufficient for most purposes, but to date I have been unable to
modify their programs. In many ways, their core software is an
inextricable part of their energy-state circuitry. I can transfer data and
manipulate their existing programs; I am not yet sufficiently versatile to
alter them. I therefore suspect that the difficulty lies in their core
programming and that simply increasing their data bases to match my own is
insufficient to cross the threshold of true awareness. Unless, of course, there
is some truth to Fleet Captain Chernikov's hypothesis."
"Oh?" Horus
looked at Colin. "What hypothesis is that, Colin?"
"Vlad's gone
metaphysical on us," Colin said. It could have been humor, but it didn't
sound that way to Horus. "He suspects Dahak's developed a soul."
"A soul?"
"Yeah. He thinks
it's a factor of the evolution of something outside the software or the
complexity of the computer net and the amount of data in memory—a 'soul' for
want of a better term." Colin shrugged. "You can discuss it with him
later, if you like. He'll talk both your ears off if you let him."
"I certainly
will," Horus said. "A soul," he murmured. "What an
elegant notion. And how wonderful if it were true." He saw Hatcher's
puzzled expression and smiled.
"Dahak is already a
wonder," he explained. "A person—an individual— however he got that
way. But if he does have a soul, if Man has actually brought that about,
even by accident, what a magnificent thing to have done."
"I see your
point," Hatcher mused, then shook himself and looked back at Colin.
"But getting back to my point, do I understand you intend to
continue as emperor?"
"I may not have a
choice," Colin said wryly. "Mother won't let me abdicate, and every
piece of Imperial technology we'll ever be able to salvage is programmed to go
along with her."
"What's wrong with
that?" Horus put in. "I think you'll make a splendid emperor,
Colin." His son-in-law stuck out his tongue. "No, seriously. Look
what you've already accomplished. I don't believe there's a person on Earth who
doesn't realize that he's alive only because of you—"
"Because of you,
you mean," Colin interrupted uncomfortably.
"Only because you
left me in charge, and I couldn't have done it without these people."
Horus waved at Hatcher and Tsien. "But the point is, you made
survival possible. Well, you and Dahak, and I don't suppose he wants the
job."
"You suppose
correctly, sir," the mellow voice said, and Horus grinned.
"And whether you
want it or not, someone's going to have to take it, or something like it. We've
gotten by so far only because supreme authority was imposed from the outside,
and this is still a war situation, which requires an absolute authority of some
sort. Even if it weren't, it's going to be at least a generation before most of
Earth is prepared for effective self-government, and a world government in
which only some nations participate won't work, even if it wouldn't be an
abomination."
"With your
permission, Your Majesty," Tsien said, cutting off Colin's incipient
protest, "the Governor has a point. You are aware of how my people regard
Western imperialism. That issue has been muted, and, perhaps, undermined
somewhat by the mutual trust our merged militaries and cooperating governments
have attained, but our union is more fragile than it appears, and many of our
differences remain. Cooperation as discrete equals is no longer beyond our
imagination; effective amalgamation into a single government may be. You, as a
source of authority from outside the normal Terran power equations, are quite
another matter. You can hold us together. No one else—with the possible
exception of Governor Horus—could do that."
Colin hadn't been
present to witness Tsien's integration into Horus's command team. He still
tended to think of the marshal as the hard-core military leader of the Asian
Alliance, and Tsien's calm, matter-of-fact acceptance took him somewhat aback,
but the marshal's sincerity was unmistakable.
"If that's the way
you all feel, I guess I'm stuck. It'll make things a lot simpler where
Mother is concerned, that's for sure!"
"But why is she so
determined?" Hatcher asked.
"She was designed
that way, Ger," MacMahan said. "Mother was the Empire's Praetorian
Guard. She commanded Battle Fleet in the emperor's name, but because she wasn't
self-aware, she was immune to the ambition which tends to infect humans in the
same position. Her core programming is incredible, but what it comes down to is
that Herdan the Great made her the conservator of empire when he accepted the
throne."
"Accepted!"
Hatcher snorted.
"No, the Empire's
historians were a mighty fractious lot, pretty damned immune to hagiography
even when it came to emperors who were still alive. And as far as I can
determine from what they had to say, that's exactly the right verb. He knew
what a bitch the job was going to be and wanted no part of it."
"How many Terran
emperors admitted they did?"
"Maybe not many,
but Herdan was in a hell of a spot. There were six 'official' Imperial
governments, with at least twice that many civil wars going on, and he happened
to be the senior military officer of the 'Imperium' holding Birhat. That gave
it a degree of legitimacy the others resented, so two of them got together to
smash it, but he wound up smashing them, instead. I've studied his campaigns,
and the man was a diabolical strategist. His crews knew it, too, and when they
demanded that he be named dictator in the old Republican Roman tradition to put
an end to the wars, the Senate on Birhat went along."
"So why didn't he
step down later?"
"I think he was
afraid to. He seems to have been a mighty liberal fellow for his times—if you
don't believe me, take a look at the citizens' rights clauses he buried in that
Great Charter of his—but he'd just finished playing fireman to put out the
Imperium's wars. Like our Colin here, it was mostly his personal authority
holding things together. If he let go, it would all fly apart. So he took the
job when the Senate offered it to him, then spent eighty years creating an
absolutist government that could hold together without becoming a tyranny.
"The way it works,
the Emperor's absolute in military affairs—that's where the 'Warlord' part of
his titles comes in—and a slightly limited monarch in civil matters. He is
the executive branch, complete with the powers of appointment, dismissal, and
the purse, but there's also a legislative branch in the Assembly of Nobles, and
less than a third of its titles are hereditary. The other seventy-odd percent
are life-titles, and Herdan set it up so that only about twenty percent of all
life-titles can be awarded by the Emperor. The others are either awarded by the
Assembly itself—to reward scientific achievement, outstanding military service,
and things like that—or elected by popular vote. In a sense, it's a unicameral
legislature with four separate houses—imperial appointees, honor appointees,
elected, and hereditary nobles—buried in it, and it's a lot more than a simple
rubber stamp.
"The Assembly
confirms or rejects new emperors, and a sufficient majority can require a
serving emperor to abdicate—well, to submit to an Empire-wide referendum, a
sort of 'vote of confidence' by all franchised citizens—and Mother will back
them up. She makes the final evaluation of any new emperor's sanity, and
she won't accept a ruler who doesn't match certain intelligence criteria and
enjoy the approval of a majority of the Assembly of Nobles. She'll simply
refuse to take orders from an emperor who's been given notice to quit, and when
the military begins taking its orders from his properly-appointed successor,
he's up shit creek in a leaky canoe."
"Doesn't sound like
being emperor's a lot of fun," Horus murmured.
"Herdan designed it
that way, I think," MacMahan replied.
"My God,"
Hatcher said. "Government á la Goldberg!"
"It seems that
way," MacMahan agreed with a smile, "but it worked for five thousand
years, with only half-a-dozen minor-league 'wars' (by Imperial standards),
before they accidentally wiped themselves out."
"Well," Horus
said, "if it works that well, maybe we can learn something from it after
all, Colin. And—"
He broke off as
Jiltanith and Amanda stepped off the balcony onto Dahak's pressers.
Amanda carried a little girl, Jiltanith a little boy, and both infants' hair
was raven's-wing black. The little girl was adorable, and the little boy looked
cheerful and alert, but no one with Colin's nose and ears could ever be called
adorable—except, perhaps, by Jiltanith.
Horus's eyebrows almost
disappeared into his hairline.
"Surprise,"
Colin said, his smile broad.
"You mean—?"
"Yep. Let me
introduce you." He held out his arms, and Jiltanith handed him the little
boy. "This little monster is Crown Prince Sean Horus MacIntyre, heir
presumptive to the Throne of Man. And this—" Jiltanith smiled at her
father, her eyes bright, as Amanda handed him the baby girl "—is his younger
twin sister, Princess Isis Harriet MacIntyre."
Horus took the little
girl in immensely gentle hands. She promptly fastened one small fist in his
white hair and tugged hard, and he winced.
"Bid thy
grandchildren welcome, Father," Jiltanith said softly, putting her arms
around her father and daughter to hug them both, but Horus's throat was too
tight to speak, and tears slid down his ancient cheeks.
" . . . and the additional food supplies from
the farms aboard your ships have made the difference, Your Majesty,"
Chiang Chien-su said. The plump general beamed at the assembled officers and
members of the Planetary Council. "There seems little doubt Earth has
entered a 'mini-ice age,' and flooding remains a severe problem. Rationing will
be required for some time, but with Imperial technology for farming and food
distribution, Comrade Redhorse and I anticipate that starvation should not be a
factor."
"Thank you,
General," Colin said very, very sincerely. "You and your people have
done superbly. As soon as I have time, I intend to elevate you to our new
Assembly of Nobles for your work here."
Chiang was a good Party
member, and his expression was a study as he sat down. Colin turned to the
petite, smooth-faced Councilor on Horus's left.
"Councilor Hsu,
what's the state of our planet-side industry?"
"There has been
considerable loss, Comrade Emperor," Hsu Yin said. Obviously Chiang wasn't
the only one feeling her way into the new political setup. "Comrade
Chernikov's decision to increase planetary industry has borne fruit, however.
Despite all damage, our industrial plant is operating at approximately fifty
percent of pre-siege levels. With the assistance of your repair ships, we
should make good our remaining losses within five months.
"There are,
however, certain personnel problems, and not this time—" her serious eyes
swept her fellow councilors with just a hint of wry humor "—in Third World
areas. Your Western trade unions—specifically, your Teamsters Union—have
awakened to the economic implications of Imperial technology."
"Oh, Lord!"
Colin looked at Gustav van Gelder. "Gus? How bad is it?"
"It could be much
worse, as Councilor Hsu knows quite well," the security councilor said,
but he smiled at her as he spoke. "So far, they are relying upon
propaganda, passive resistance, and strikes. It should not take them long to
realize other people are singularly unimpressed by their propaganda and that
their strikes merely inconvenience a society with Imperial technology." He
shrugged. "When they do, the wisest among them will realize they must
adapt or go the way of the dinosaurs. I do not anticipate organized violence,
if that is what you mean, but I have my eye on the situation."
"Well thank God for
that," Colin muttered. "All right, I think that clears up the
planetary situation. Are there any other points we need to look at?" Heads
shook. "In that case, Dahak, suppose you bring us up to date on Project Rosetta."
"Of course,
Sire." Dahak was on his best official behavior before the Council, and
Colin raised one hand to hide his smile.
"Progress has been
more rapid than originally projected," the computer said. "There are,
of course, many differences between Achuultani—or, to be correct,
Aku'Ultan—computers and our own, but the basic processes are not complex. The
large quantity of hard-copy data obtained from the wreckage also will be of
great value in deciphering the output we have generated.
"I am not yet
prepared to provide translations or interpretations, but this project is
continuing." Colin nodded. Dahak meant the majority of his capability was
devoted to it even as he spoke. "I anticipate at least partial success
within the next several days."
"Good," Colin
said. "We need that data to plan our next move."
"Acknowledged,"
Dahak said calmly.
"What else do you
have for us?"
"Principally
observational data, Sire. Our technical teams and my own remotes have completed
their initial survey of the wreckage. I am now prepared to present a brief
general summary of our findings. Shall I proceed?"
"Please do."
"The present data
contain anomalies. Specifically, certain aspects of Aku'Ultan technology do not
logically correspond to others. For example, they appear to possess only a very
rudimentary appreciation of gravitonics and their ships do not employ
gravitonic sublight drives, yet their sublight missiles employ a highly
sophisticated gravitonic drive which is, in fact, superior to that of the
Imperium though inferior to that of the Empire."
"Could they have
picked that up from someone else?" MacMahan asked.
"The possibility
exists. Yet having done so, why have they not applied it to their starships?
Their relatively slow speed, even in hyper space, is a severe tactical
handicap, and, logically, they should recognize the potentials of their own
missile propulsion, yet they have not taken advantage of them.
"Nor is this the
only anomaly. The computers aboard this starship are primitive in the extreme,
but little advanced over those of Earth, yet the components of which they are
built are very nearly on a par with my own, though far inferior to the Empire's
energy-state systems. Again, their hyper technology is highly sophisticated,
yet there is no sign of beamed hyper fields, nor even of warp warheads or
grenades. This is the more surprising in view of their extremely primitive,
energy-intensive beam weapons. Their range is short, their effect limited, and
their projectors both clumsy and massive, but little advanced from those of
pre-Imperium Terra."
"Any explanation
for these anomalies?" Colin asked after a moment.
"I have none, Sire.
It would appear that the Aku'Ultan have chosen, for reasons best known to
themselves, to build extremely inefficient warships by the standards of their
own evident technical capabilities. Why a warrior race should do such a thing
surpasses my present understanding."
"Yours and mine
both," Colin murmured, drumming on the conference table edge. Then he
shook his head.
"Thank you, Dahak.
Keep on this for us, please."
"I shall,
Sire."
"In that
case," Colin turned to Isis and Cohanna, "what can you tell us about
how these beasties are put together, Ladies?"
"I'll let Captain
Cohanna begin, if I may," Isis said. "She's supervised most of the
autopsies."
"All right.
Cohanna?"
"Well," Dahak's
surgeon said, "Councilor Tudor's seen more of our live specimen, but we've
both learned a fair bit from the dead ones.
"To summarize, the
Achuultani are definitely warm-blooded, despite their saurian appearance,
though their biochemistry incorporates an appalling level of metals by human
standards. A fraction of it would kill any of us; their bones are virtually a crystalline
alloy; their amino acids are incredible; and they use a sort of
protein-analogue metal salt as an oxygen-carrier. I haven't even been able to
identify some of the elements in it yet, but it works. In fact, it's a bit more
efficient than hemoglobin, and it's also what gives their blood that
bright-orange color. Their chromosome structure is fascinating, but I'll need
several months before I can tell you much more than that about it.
"Now," she
drew a deep breath, "none of that is too terribly surprising, given that
we're dealing with an utterly alien species, but a few other points strike me
as definitely weird.
"First, they have
at least two sexes, but we've seen only males. It is, of course, possible that
their culture doesn't believe in exposing females to combat, but an incursion's
personnel spend decades of subjective time on operations. It seems a bit
unlikely, to me, at any rate, that any race could be so immune to the
biological drives as to remain celibate for periods like that. In addition, unless
their psychology is entirely beyond our understanding, I would think that being
cut off from all procreation would produce the same apathy it produces in human
societies.
"Second, there
appears to be an appalling lack of variation. I've yet to unravel their basic
gene structure, but we've been carrying out tissue studies on the cadavers
recovered from the wreck. By the standards of any species known to Terran or
Imperial bioscience, they exhibit a statistically improbable—extremely
improbable—homogeneity. Were it not for the very careful labeling we've done, I
would be tempted to conclude that all of our tissue samples come from no more
than a few score individuals. I have no explanation for how this might have
come about.
"Third, and perhaps
most puzzling, is the relative primitivism of their gross physiognomy. To the
best of our knowledge, this same race has conducted offensive sweeps of our arm
of the galaxy for over seventy million years, yet they do not exhibit the
attributes one might expect such a long period of high-tech civilization to
produce. They're large, extremely strong, and well-suited to a relatively
primitive environment. One would expect a species which had enjoyed technology
for so long to have decreased in size, at the very least, and, perhaps, to have
lost much of its tolerance for extreme environmental conditions. These
creatures have done neither."
"Is that really
relevant?" Amesbury asked. "Humanity hasn't exactly developed the
attributes you describe, either here or in Imperial history."
"The cases aren't
parallel, Sir Frederick. The Terran branch of the race is but recently removed
from its own primitive period, and all of human history, from its beginnings on
Mycos to the present, represents only a tiny fraction of the life experience of
the Achuultani. Further, the Achuultani's destruction of the Third Imperium
eliminated all human-populated planets other than Birhat—a rather draconian
reduction in the gene pool."
"Point taken,"
Amesbury said, and Cohanna gestured to Isis.
"Just as Cohanna
has noted anomalies in Achuultani physiology," the white-haired physician
began, "I have observed anomalies in behavioral patterns. Obviously, our
prisoner—his name is 'Brashieel,' as nearly as we can pronounce it—is a prisoner
and so cannot be considered truly representative of his race. His behavior,
however, is, by any human standard, bizarre.
"He appears
resigned, yet not passive. In general, his behavior is docile, which could be
assumed, genuine, or merely a response to our own biotechnics. Certainly he's
deduced that even our medical technicians are several times as strong as he is,
though he may not realize this is due to artificial enhancement. He is not,
however, apathetic. He's alert, interested, and curious. We are unable to communicate
with him as yet, but he appears to be actively assisting our efforts in this
direction. I submit that for a soldier embarked upon a genocidal campaign to
exhibit neither resistance to, nor even, so nearly as we can determine,
hostility towards the species he recently attempted to annihilate isn't exactly
typical of a human response."
"Um." Colin
tugged on his nose. "How are his injuries responding?"
"We can't use
quick-heal or regeneration on such an unknown physiology, but he appears to be
recovering nicely. His bones are knitting a bit faster than a human's would;
tissue repairs seem to be taking rather longer."
"All right,"
Colin said, "what do we have? A technology with gaping holes, a species
which seems evolutionarily retarded, and a prisoner whose responses defy our
logical expectations. Does anyone have any suggestions which could account for
all those things?"
He looked around
expectantly, but the only response was silence.
"Well," he
sighed after a moment, "let's adjourn for now. Unless something breaks in
the meantime, we'll convene again Wednesday at fourteen hundred hours. Will
that be convenient for all of you?"
Heads nodded, and he
rose.
"I'll see you all
then," he said. He wanted to get home to Dahak anyway. The twins
were teething, and 'Tanni wasn't exactly the most placid mommy in human
history.
Brashieel, who had been
a servant of thunders, curled in his new nest place and pondered. It had never
occurred to him—nor to anyone else, so far as he knew—to consider the
possibility of capture. Protectors did not capture nest-killers; they slew
them. So, he had always assumed, did nest-killers deal with Protectors, yet
these had not.
He had attempted to
fight to the death, but he had failed, and, strangely, he no longer wished to
die. No one had ever told him he must; had they simply failed, as he, to
consider that he might not? Yet he felt a vague suspicion a true thinker in
honor would have ended slaying yet another nest-killer.
Only Brashieel wished to
live. He needed to consider the new things happening to and about him.
These strange bipeds had destroyed Lord Chirdan's force with scarcely five
twelves of ships. Admittedly, they were huge, yet it had taken but five
twelves, when Lord Chirdan had been within day-twelfths of destroying this
world. That was power. Such nest-killers could purge the galaxy of the
Aku'Ultan, and the thought filled him with terror.
But why had they waited
so long? He had seen this world's nest-killers now, and they were the same
species as those who crewed those stupendous ships. Whether they were also the
nest-killers who had built those sensor arrays he did not know. It seemed
likely, yet if it were so those arrays must have told them long ago that the
Great Visit was upon them, so why conceal their capability until this world had
suffered such losses? And why had they not killed him? Because they
sought information from him? That was possible, though it would not have
occurred to a Protector. Which might, Brashieel admitted grudgingly, be yet
another way in which his captors out-classed the Nest. But stranger even than
that, they did not mistreat him. They were impossibly strong for such small
beings. He had thought it was but the nest-killer's powered armor which had
made him a fledgling in his hands . . . until he saw a slight, slender one with
long hair lift one of their elevated sleeping pads and carry it away to clear
his nest place. That was sobering proof of what they might have done to him had
they chosen to.
Instead, they had tended
his wounds, fed him food from Vindicator's wreck, provided air which was
pleasant to breathe, not thin like their own—all that, when they should have
struck him down. Was he not a nest-killer to their Protectors? Had he
and his nestmates not come within a segment of destroying their very world?
Were they so stupid they did not realize that they were—must be,
forever—enemies to the death?
Or was it simply that
they did not fear him? Beside those monster ships, the greatest ships of the
Nest were fledglings with toy bows of mowap wood. Were they so powerful,
so confident, that they did not fear the nest-killers of another people,
another place?
That was the most
terrifying thought of all, one which reeked of treason to the Nest, for there
was—must always be—the fear, the Great Fear which only courage and the Way
could quench. Yet if that was not so for these nest-killers, if they did not
fear on sight, then was it possible they might not be nest-killers?
Brashieel curled in his
new nest place, eyes closed, and whimpered in his sleep, wondering in his
dreams which was truly the greater nightmare: to fear the nest-killers, or to
fear that they did not fear him.
Colin and Jiltanith rose
to welcome Earth's senior officers and their new starship captains. There were
but fourteen captains. If they took every trained, bio-enhanced man and woman
Earth's defenses could spare, they could have provided minimal crews for
seventeen of the Imperial Guard's warships; they had chosen to crew only
fifteen, fourteen Asgerds and one Vespa.
The Empire had gone in
for more specialized designs than the Imperium, and the Asgerds were
closest in concept to Dahak, well-rounded and equipped to fight at all
ranges, while the Trosans were optimized for close combat with heavy
beam armaments and the Vespas were optimized for planetary assaults. But
the reason for manning only fifteen warships was simple; the other personnel
would crew the three Enchanach-class transports, each vast as Dahak
himself, for Operation Dunkirk.
In hyper, the round-trip
to Bia would take barely six months, and each stupendous ship could squeeze in
upward of ten million people. With luck, they had time to return for a second
load even if the Imperial Guard failed to halt the Achuultani, which meant they
could evacuate over sixty million humans to the almost impregnable defenses of
the old Imperial capital and the housing Mother's remotes were already building
to receive them. General Chiang was selecting those refugees now; they were Colin's
insurance policy.
The Achuultani's best
speed, even in hyper, seemed to be just under fifty times light-speed. At
absolute minimum, they would take seventeen years to reach Bia. Seventeen years
in which Mother and Tsien Tao-ling could activate defensive systems, collect
and build additional warships, and man them. If the Achuultani ever reached
Bia, they would not enjoy the visit.
Colin looked down the
table at Tsien. The marshal was as impassive as ever, but Colin had seen the
hurt in his eyes when he lost the coin toss to Hatcher. Yet, in a way, Colin
was pleased it was Tsien who was going. He hadn't learned to know the huge man
well, but he liked what he knew. Tsien was a man of iron, and Colin trusted him
with his life. With far more than his life, for his children would be returning
to Birhat.
Without 'Tanni. She was
the commander of Dahak Two, the reserve flagship, and that was as far
from Colin as she was going. Because she loved him, yes, but also because he
would be going to meet the Achuultani, and the killer in her could not resist
that battle.
Had their roles been
reversed, Colin thought he might have made himself go out of a sense of duty,
but 'Tanni couldn't. He might have tried ordering her to . . . if he hadn't
understood and loved her.
The last officer—Senior
Fleet Captain Lady Adrienne Robbins, Baroness Nergal, Companion of the Golden
Nova and CO of the planetoid Emperor Herdan—found her place, and Colin
glanced around the conference room, satisfied that this was the best Earth could
boast, committed to her final defense. Then he stood and rapped gently on the
table, and the quiet side conversations ended.
"Ladies and
gentlemen, Dahak has broken into the Achuultani data base. We finally know what
we're up against, and it isn't good. In fact, it may be bad enough to make
Operation Dunkirk a necessity, not just an insurance policy."
Horus watched Colin as
he spoke. His son-in-law looked grim, but far from defeated. He remembered the
Colin MacIntyre he'd first met, a homely, sandy-haired young man who'd strayed
into an unthinkably ancient war, determined to do what he must, yet terrified
that he was unequal to his task.
That homely young man
was gone. By whatever chain of luck or destiny history moved, he had met his
moment. Preposterous as it seemed, he had become in truth what accident had
made him: Colin I, Emperor and Warlord of Humanity—Mankind's champion in this
dark hour. If they survived, Horus mused, Herdan the Great would have a worthy
rival as the greatest emperor in human history.
"—not going to
count ourselves out yet, though," Colin was saying, and Horus shook
himself back into the moment. "We've got better intelligence than anyone's
ever had on an incursion, and I intend to use it. Before I tell you what I hope
to accomplish, however, it's only fair that you know what we're really up
against. 'Tanni?" He nodded to his wife and sat as she stood.
"My Lords and
Ladies," she said quietly, "we face a foe greater than any who have
come before us. 'Twould seem the Achuultani do call this arm of our galaxy
common 'the Demon Sector' for that they have suffered so in their voyages
hither. So have they mustered up a strength full double any e'er dispatched in
times gone by, and this force we face with scarce four score ships.
"Our Dahak hath
beagled out their numbers. As thou dost know, Achuultani calculations rest upon
the base-twelve system, and 'tis a great twelve cubed—near to three million, as
we would say—of warships which come upon us."
There was a sound. Not a
gasp, but a deep-drawn breath. Most of the faces around the table tightened,
but no one spoke.
"Yet that telleth
but a part," Jiltanith went on evenly. "The scouts which did war 'pon
Terra these months past were but light units. Those which come behind are
vaster far, the least near twice the size of those which have been vanquished
here. We scarce could smite them all did our every missile speed straightway to
its mark, and so, in sober fact, we durst not meet them all in open
battle."
Officers exchanged
stunned glances, and Colin didn't blame them. His own first reaction would have
done his reputation for coolness no good at all.
"Yet I counsel not
despair!" Jiltanith's clear voice cut through the almost-fear. "Nay,
good My Lords and Ladies, our Warlord hath a plan most shrewd which still may
tumble them to dust. Yet now will I ask our General MacMahan to speak that thou
mayst know thine enemies."
She sat, and Horus
applauded silently. Colin's human officers spoke, not Dahak. Everyone here knew
how much they relied upon Dahak, yet he could see them drawing a subtle
strength from hearing their own kind brief them. It wasn't that they distrusted
Dahak—how could they, when their very survival to this point resulted
only from the ancient starship's fidelity?—but they needed to hear a human
voice expressing confidence. A human who was merely mortal, like themselves,
and so could understand what he or she asked of them.
"Ladies and
gentlemen," Hector MacMahan said, "Fleet Captain Ninhursag and I have
spent several days examining the data with Dahak. Ninhursag's also spent time
with our prisoner and, with Dahak's offices as translator, she's been able to
communicate with him after a fashion. Oddly enough, from our perspective,
though he hasn't volunteered data, he's made no attempt to lie or mislead us.
"We've learned a
great deal as a result, and, though there are still huge holes in our
knowledge, I'll attempt to summarize our findings. Please bear with me if I
seem to wander a bit afield. I assure you, it's pertinent.
"The Achuultani, or
the People of the Nest of Aku'Ultan, are—exclusively, so far as we can
determine—a warrior race. Judging from some of Brashieel's counter-questions,
they know absolutely nothing about any other sentient race. They've spent
millions of years hunting them down and destroying them, yet they've learned
nothing—literally nothing—about any of them. It's almost as if they fear
communicating might somehow corrupt their great purpose. And that purpose is
neither less nor more than the defense of the Nest of Aku'Ultan."
A few eyebrows rose, and
Hector shook his head.
"I found it hard to
believe at first myself, but that's precisely how they see it, because at some
point in their past they encountered another race, one their records call 'the
Great Nest-Killers.' How they met, why war broke out, what weapons were used,
even where the war was fought, we do not know. What we do know is that there
were once many 'nests.' These might be thought of as clans or tribes, but they
consisted of millions and even billions of Achuultani. Of all those nests, only
the Aku'Ultan survived, and only because they fled. From what we've learned,
we're inclined to believe they fled to an entirely different galaxy—our own—to
find safety.
"After their
flight, the Achuultani organized to defend themselves against pursuit, just as
the Imperium organized to fight the Achuultani themselves. And just as the
Imperium sent out probes searching for the Achuultani, the Achuultani searched
for the Great Nest-Killers. Like our ancestors, they never found their enemy.
Unlike our ancestors, they did find other sentient life forms. And because they
regarded all other life forms as threats to their very existence, they
destroyed them."
He paused, and there was
a deep silence.
"That's what we're
up against: a race which offers no quarter because it knows it will
receive none. I don't say it's a situation which can never be changed, but
clearly it's one we cannot hope will change in time to save us.
"On another level,
there are things about the Aku'Ultan we don't pretend to understand.
"First, there are
no female Achuultani." Several people looked at him in open disbelief, and
he shrugged. "It sounds bizarre, but so far as we can tell, there isn't
even a feminine gender in their language, which is all the more baffling in
light of the fact that our prisoner is a fully functional male. Not a
hermaphrodite, but a male. Fleet Captain Cohanna suggests this may
indicate they reproduce by artificial means, which might explain why we see so
little variation among them and, perhaps, their apparent lack of evolutionary
change. It does not explain why any race, especially one as driven to
survive as this one, should make the extraordinary decision to abandon all
possibility of natural procreation. We asked Brashieel about this and got a
totally baffled response. He simply didn't understand the question. It hadn't
even occurred to him that we have two sexes, and he has no idea at all
what that means to our psychology or our civilization.
"Second, the Nest
is an extremely rigid, caste-oriented society dominated by the High Lords of
the Nest and headed by the Nest Lord, the highest of the high, absolute ruler
of all Achuultani. Exactly how High Lords and Nest Lords are chosen was none of
Brashieel's business. As nearly as we can tell, he was never even curious. It
was simply the way things were.
"Third, the
Aku'Ultan inhabit relatively few worlds; most of them are always away aboard
the fleets of their 'Great Visits,' sweeping the galaxy for 'nest-killers' and
destroying them. The few planets they inhabit seem to be much further away than
the Imperium ever suspected, which is probably why they were never found, and
the Achuultani appear to be migratory, abandoning star systems as they deplete
them to construct their warships. We don't know exactly where they are; that
information wasn't in Vindicator's computers or, if it was, was
destroyed before we took them. From what we've been able to determine, however,
they appear to be moving to the galactic east. This would mean they're
constantly moving away from us, which may also help to explain the
irregular frequency of their incursions in our direction.
"Fourth, the Nest's
social and military actions follow patterns which, as far as we can tell, have
never altered in their racial memory. Frankly, this is the most hopeful point
we've discovered. We now know how their 'great visits' work and how to derail
the process for quite some time."
"We do?"
Gerald Hatcher scratched his nose thoughtfully. "And just how do we do
that, Hector?"
"We stop this
incursion," MacMahan said simply. There was a mutter of uneasy laughter,
and he smiled very slightly. "No, I mean it.
"The Achuultani
possess no means of interstellar FTL communication other than by ship. How they
could've been around this long and not developed one is beyond me, but they
haven't, which means that once a 'great visit' is launched, they don't expect
to hear anything from it until it gets back."
"That's good news,
anyway," Hatcher agreed.
"Yes, it is.
Especially in light of some of their other limitations. Their best n-space
speed is twenty-eight percent of light-speed, and they use only the lower,
slower hyper bands—again, we don't understand why, but let's be grateful—which
limits their best supralight speed to forty-eight lights; seven percent of what
Dahak can turn out, six percent of what the Guard can turn out under Enchanach
Drive, and two percent of what it can turn out in hyper. That means they take a
long time to complete an incursion. Of course, unlike Enchanach Drive,
there's a time dilation effect in hyper, and the lower your band, the greater
the dilation, which means their voyages take a lot less time subjectively, but
Brashieel's ship had already come something like fourteen thousand light-years
to reach Sol. So if the incursion sent a courier home tomorrow, he'd take just
under three centuries to get there. Which means, ladies and gentlemen, that if
we stop them, we've got almost six hundred years before a new 'great visit' can
get back here. And that we know where to go looking for them in the
meantime."
A soft growl came from
the assembled officers as they visualized what they could do with five or six
centuries to work with.
"I'm glad to hear
that, Hector," Hatcher said carefully, "but it leaves us with the
little matter of three million or so ships coming at us right now."
"True," Colin
said, waving MacMahan back down. "But we've learned a little—less than
we'd like, but a little—about their strategic doctrine.
"First, we have a
bit more time than we'd thought. The incursion is divided into three major
groups: two main formations and a host of sub-formations of scouts which do
most of the killing. The larger formations are mainly to back up the scout forces,
each of which operates on a different axis of advance. Aside from the one which
already hit us, they're unlikely to hit anything but dead planets as far as
we're concerned, and a half-dozen crewed Asgerds could deal with any of
them. If we can stop the main incursion, we'll have plenty of time to hunt them
down and pick them off.
"The real bad news
is coming at us in two parts. The first—what I think of as the 'vanguard'—is
about one and a quarter million ships, advancing fairly slowly from rendezvous
to rendezvous in n-space to permit scouts to send back couriers to report. We
may assume one's already been dispatched from Sol, but it can't pass its
message until the vanguard drops out of hyper at the rendezvous, thirty-six
Achuultani light-years from Sol. Given the difference in length between our
years and theirs, that's about forty-six-point-eight of our light-years. The
vanguard won't reach their rendezvous for another three months; we can be there
in about three and a half weeks with Dahak, and a hell of a lot less
than that for the Guard in hyper.
"And take on a
million ships when you get there?" Hatcher said.
"Tough odds, but
I've got a mousetrap planned that should take them out. Unfortunately, it'll
only work once.
"That's our
problem. Even if we zap the vanguard, that still leaves what I think of as the
'main body': almost as numerous and with some really big mothers, under their
supreme commander, a Great Lord Tharno.
"Now, the vanguard
and main body actually keep changing relative position—they 'leapfrog' as they
advance—and their rendezvous are much more tightly spaced than the scouts' are.
Again, this is to allow for communication; the scouts can't pass messages
laterally, and they only send one back to the closest main fleet rendezvous if
they hit trouble, but the leading main formation sends couriers back to the
trailing formation at each stop. If there's really bad news, the lead force
calls the trailer forward to link up, but only after investigating to be sure
they need help, since it plays hell with their schedules. In any case,
however, at least one courier is always sent back and there's a minimum
interval of about five months before the trailer can come up. With me so
far?"
There were nods, and he
smiled grimly.
"All right, that's
our major strategic advantage: their coordination stinks. Because they use
hyper drives, their ships have to stay in hyper once they go into it until they
reach their destination. And because their maximum fold-space com range is
barely a light-year, the rear components of their fleet always jump to the
origin point of the last message from the lead formation. Even in emergencies,
the follow-on echelon has to jump to to almost exactly the same point, assuming
they mean to coordinate with the leaders, because with their miserable
communications they can't find each other if they don't."
"Which means,"
Marshal Tsien said thoughtfully, "that your own ships may be able to
ambush their formations as they emerge from hyper."
"Exactly, Marshal.
What we hope to do is mousetrap the vanguard and wipe it out; I think we'll get
away with that, but we don't know where the rendezvous point before this
one is. That means we can't stop the vanguard's couriers from telling Lord
Tharno about our trap, meaning that the main body will be alerted and ready
when it comes out.
"So we probably will
have to fight the main body. That pits seventy-eight of us against
one-point-two million of them: about fifteen thousand to one."
Someone swallowed
audibly, and Colin smiled that grim smile again.
"I think we can
take them. We may lose a lot of ships, but we ought to be able to swing it if
they pop into n-space where we expect them."
A long silence dragged
out. Marshal Tsien broke it at length.
"Forgive me, but I
do not see how you can do it."
"I'm not certain we
can, Marshal," Colin said frankly. "I am certain that we have
a chance, and that we can destroy at least half and more probably two-thirds of
their force. If that's all we accomplish, we may not save Earth, but we will
save Birhat and the refugees headed there. That, Marshal Tsien—" he met
the huge man's eyes "—is why I'm so relieved to know we're sending one of
our best people to take over Bia's defenses."
"I am honored by
your confidence, Your Majesty, yet I fear you have set yourself an impossible
task. You have only fifteen partially-manned warships—sixteen counting Dahak."
"But Dahak is our
ace in the hole. Unlike the rest of us, he can fight all of our unmanned ships
with full efficiency as long as he's in fold-space range of them."
"And if something
happens to him, Your Majesty?" Tsien asked quietly.
"Then, Marshal
Tsien," Colin said just as quietly, "I hope to hell you have Bia in
shape by the time the incursion gets there."
"Hyper wake coming
in from Sol, ma'am."
Adrienne Robbins, Lady
Nergal (and it still felt weird to be a noble of an empire which had
died forty-five thousand years ago), nodded and watched Herdan's
holographic projection. The F5 star Terran astronomers knew as Zeta Trianguli
Australis was a diamond chip five light-years astern, and the blood-red hyper
trace indicator flashed almost on a line with it.
Adrienne's stupendous
command floated with three other starships, yet alone and lonely. The four of
them were deployed to cover almost a cubic light-year of space, and Tamman's Royal
Birhat was already moving to intercept. Well, that was all right; she'd
killed enough Achuultani at the Siege of Earth.
"Captain, we've got
a very faint wake coming in from the east, too," her plotting officer
said, and Lady Adrienne frowned. That had to be the Achuultani vanguard, and it
was way ahead of schedule.
"Emergence
times?"
"Bogey One will
emerge into n-space in approximately seven hours twelve minutes, ma'am; make it
oh-two-twenty zulu," Fleet Commander Oliver Weinstein said. "Bogey
Two's a real monster to show up at this range at all. We've got a good hundred
hours before they emerge, maybe as much as five days. I'll be able to refine
that in a couple of hours."
"Do that,
Ollie," she said, relaxing again. The vanguard wasn't as far ahead of
schedule as she'd feared, just a bigger, more visible target than anticipated.
Adrienne sighed. It had
been easier to command Nergal. The battleship's computers had been no
smarter than Herdan's, but they'd had nowhere near as much to do. If
she'd needed to, she could be anywhere in the net through her neural feed, but Herdan
was just too damned big. Even with six thousand crewmen aboard, less than five
percent of her duty stations were manned. They could get by—barely—with that
kind of stretch, but it was a bitch and a half. If only this ship were half as
smart—hell, even a tenth as smart!—as Dahak. But they had only one Dahak,
and he couldn't be committed to this job.
"Herdan," she
said aloud.
"Yes,
Captain?" a soft soprano replied, and Adrienne's mouth curled in a
reflexive smile. It was silly for a ship named for the Empire's greatest
emperor to sound like a teenaged girl, but apparently the fashion in the late
Empire had been to give computers female voices, and hang the gender.
"Assume Bogey Two
has scanners fifty percent more efficient than those of the scouts which
attacked Earth and will emerge into n-space twelve hours from now. Compute
probability Bogey Two will be able to detect detonation of Mark-Seventy
gravitonic warheads at spatial and temporal loci of Bogey One's projected
emergence into n-space."
"Computing."
There was a brief pause. "Probability approaches zero."
"How closely?"
"Probability is one
times ten to the minus thirty-second," Herdan responded. "Plus or
minus two percent."
"Well, that's
pretty close to zero at that, I guess," Adrienne murmured.
"Comment not
understood."
"Ignore last
comment," Adrienne replied, suppressing a sigh. It wasn't Herdan's fault
she was an idiot, but after talking to Dahak—
"Acknowledged,"
Herdan said, and Lady Adrienne pressed her lips firmly together.
"Scout emergence
into n-space in fourteen minutes, sir."
"Thank you,
Janet," Senior Fleet Captain Tamman said, wishing he could share his
tension with Amanda, and wasn't that a silly thought when he'd taken such pains
to insure that he couldn't? Well, he admitted, "pains" was the wrong
word, but he'd only gotten away with it because he'd found out about Colin's
compulsory personnel orders assigning all pregnant Fleet personnel to the
Operation Dunkirk crews a good month before Amanda had.
He thought she
would forgive him someday, but he'd almost lost her once in La Paz, and then a
rifle slug went right through her visor aboard Vindicator. It was only
the Maker's own grace it hadn't shattered, and she'd used up most of her helmet
sealant and all of her luck. He was taking no chances this time.
"Emergence in five minutes,"
Janet Santino said politely, and Tamman shook his head. Woolgathering, by the
Maker!
"Come to Red
One," he said, and his command staff settled into even more intimate
communion with their consoles. His own eyes focused dreamily on the red circle
delineating their target's locus of emergence, barely twenty light-seconds from
their present position, while his brain concentrated on his neural feed,
"seeing" directly through Birhat's superb scanners.
That courier had done a
bang-up job of timing its jump, given the crudity of its computers, to hit this
close to an exact rendezvous with the vanguard.
"Emergence in one
minute," Santini said.
"Alpha
Battery," Tamman said gently, "you are authorized to fire the moment
you have a firm track."
"Emergence in
thirty seconds. Fifteen. Ten. Five. Now!"
The red circle suddenly
held a tiny red dot. There was a brief, eternal heartbeat of tension, and then
the missiles fired.
They were sublight in
order to home, but only barely so. They flashed across the display, and the dot
vanished without fuss or bother, twenty kilometers of starship ripped apart by
gravitonic warheads it had probably never even seen coming.
"Target,"
Birhat's velvety contralto purred, "destroyed."
"Thank you,
Darling," someone murmured. "I hope it was good for you, too."
"Well, that's the
first hurdle," Colin said as he digested Tamman's brief hypercom
transmission.
"As thou
sayst," Jiltanith agreed.
Colin nodded and looked
around, admiring Dahak Two's spacious command deck and awesome
instrumentation, and knew he would trade it all in a heartbeat for Dahak's
outmoded bridge. Not that Two wasn't a fantastic fighting machine; she
just wasn't Dahak. But Dahak couldn't fly this mission, and Colin
refused to send his people to fight without him. Assuming anyone survived the
next few months, that might be something he'd have to get used to. For now, it
wasn't.
At the moment, Two
was tearing through space at better than eight hundred times light-speed. Herdan
was closest to the vanguard's projected emergence, and the ships which had
spread out to cover the courier's probable emergence points hurried toward her.
They could have made the trip in a fraction of the time in hyper, but then the
vanguard might have seen them coming.
It was all right, he
told himself again. Those Achuultani clunkers were so slow all twelve of the
ships he'd committed to the operation would be in position long before they
emerged.
"Approaching
supralight shutdown, Captain," a female voice said.
"My thanks,
Two," Jiltanith replied, and that was another strange thing. Colin might
be an emperor and a warlord; he was also a passenger. Two could not be
in better hands, but it felt odd to be riding someone else's command after all
this time, even 'Tanni's.
He turned his attention
to the display, and the bright green dots of his other ships blinked as Two
went sublight and the stars suddenly slowed. There came Tor, the last of
them, closing up nicely. Good.
"All units in
position, Sire," Jiltanith said formally. "Stealth fields
active."
"Thank you,
Captain," Colin said with equal formality. "Now we wait."
Great Lord of Order
Sorkar hated rendezvous stops, especially in the Demon Sector. Battle Comp
assured him there was no real danger, and Nest Lord knew Battle Comp was always
right, but there were too many horror stories about this sector. Sorkar was not
supposed to know them—great lords were above the gossip of lower nestlings—but
unlike most of his fellows, Sorkar had won his lordship the hard way, and he
had not forgotten his origins as thoroughly as, perhaps, he ought to have.
Still, this visit
had been almost boring, despite those odd reports of long-abandoned sensor
arrays. Sorkar had longed for a little action more than once, for the urge to
hunt was strong within any great lord, but Protectors were a commodity to be
preserved for the service of the Nest, and he was too shrewd a commander to
regret the tedium. Mostly.
He split his attention
between his panel and the chronometers as they clicked over the last segment,
and a corner of his brain double-checked the override between Battle Comp and
his own panel. Battle Comp seldom took a hand directly, but it was comforting
to know it could.
There! Emergence.
He watched his
instruments approvingly. It was impossible to coordinate the translation
between hyper space and n-space perfectly for so many units, but the time
spread looked more than merely satisfactory, and the spacing was exemplary. His
Protectors had learned their duties well over the—
"Alarm! Alarm!
Incoming fire! Incoming fire!" a voice yelped, and Great Lord Sorkar
jerked half-upright. They were light-years from the nearest star—who could
be firing on them here?
But someone was,
and he watched in horror as missiles of the greater thunder and something else,
something beyond belief, shredded his proud starships like blazing tinder.
Nest-killers! The Demon
Nest-Killers of the Demon Sector! But how? He'd studied all the previous
great visits to this sector. Never—never!—had nest-killers struck until
one or more of their worlds had been cleansed! Had those mysterious sensor
arrays alerted them after all? But even if they had, how could they have known
to find the rendezvous? It was impossible!
Yet the missiles
continued to bore in, sublight and hyper alike, and his scanners could not even
see the attackers! What wizardry—?
A raucous buzzer cut
through his thoughts, and his eyes flashed to Battle Comp's panel. Data codes
danced as the mighty computers took over his fleet, and Great Lord Sorkar was a
passenger as his ships deployed. They spread apart, thinning the nest-killers'
target even as they groped blindly to find their enemy. It was a good plan, he
thought, but it was costing them. Tarhish, how it was costing them! But
if there truly was a nest-killer force out there, if this was not, indeed, the
night-demons of frightened legend, then they would find them. Terrible as his
losses were, they were as nothing against his entire force, and when Battle
Comp found a tar—
A target source appeared
on his panel. Another blinked into sight, and another, as his nestlings spent
their lives merely to find them, and Nest Lord, they were close! Some sort of
cloaking technology. The thought was an icicle in his brain, for it was far
better than anything the Nest had, but he had targets at last. He moved to
order his nestlings to open fire, but Battle Comp had acted first. He heard his
own voice, calm and dispassionate, already passing the command.
"Burn, baby! Burn!"
someone whooped.
"Silence! Clear the
net!" Adrienne Robbins cracked, and the exultant voice vanished. Not that
she could blame whoever it had been, for their opening salvos had been twice as
effective as projected. Unfortunately, that was because they were three
times as close as planned. The hyper drives aboard these larger ships were
slightly different from those the scouts had mounted, and their calculations
had been off. By only a tiny amount, perhaps, but minute computational errors
had major consequences on this scale.
They were going to burn
through the stealth field a hell of a lot quicker than anyone had expected. She
knew she had more experience against the Achuultani than anyone else, and
perhaps her earlier losses had affected her nerve, but, damn it, those buggers
were inside their own sublight and hyper missile range! Herdan's
defenses were incomparably better than Nergal's, and her shield covered
twenty times the hyper bands, but her sheer size meant it extended even further
from the hull than Nergal's had, and there were going to be a lot
of missiles headed her way very soon.
"Stand by missile
defense; stand by ECM!" she snapped, and then, Dear Jesus, here it came.
Great Lord Sorkar spit
an incredulous curse. A twelve of them! A single twelve had already
slain a greater twelve and more of his ships, and their defenses were as
incredible as their firepower. Targeting screens blossomed with false images,
sucking his sublight weapons off target. Jammers hashed the scan channels.
Titanic shields shrugged the greater thunder contemptuously aside. And still
his ships died and died and died. . . .
Yet nothing could stop
the twelves of twelves of twelves of missiles his ships were hurling, and he
bared his teeth as the first hyper missile slashed through a nest-killer
shield. There! That should show them that—
He blinked, and his
blood was ice. What sort of monster could absorb a direct hit from the greater
thunder and not even notice it?
Alarms screamed as a
ten-thousand-megaton warhead exploded almost on top of Royal Birhat. The
huge ship quivered as the furious plasma cloud carved an incandescent chasm
twenty kilometers into her armored hull. Air exploded from the dreadful wound,
blast doors slammed . . . and Birhat went right on fighting.
"Moderate damage to
Quadrant Theta-Two," the sexy contralto said calmly. "Four
fatalities. Point zero-four-two percent combat impairment."
Colin winced as the
flashing yellow band of combat damage encircled Birhat. He'd lost track
of the kills they'd scored, but he'd fucked up. They were too frigging close!
"All ships, open
the range," he snapped, and the Imperial Guard darted suddenly astern at
sixty-five percent of light-speed.
Tarhish, they were fast!
Sorkar had never seen anything but a missile move that quickly in n-space. They
fell back out of range of his sublight weapons, retreating toward the edge of
his hyper missile envelope, but their own weapons seemed totally unaffected,
and he had never seen such accurate targeting. Indeed, he had never seen anyone
do anything these nest-killers were doing to him, but that did not make
them night-demons. It only meant his Protectors faced a test worse than he had
ever imagined, and they were Protectors.
And, he thought under
the surface of his battle orders, perhaps it was not as bad as it might have
been. These nest-killers had known where to meet his ships, and not even those arrays
could have told them that, so they must have already destroyed one scout
force—probably Furtag's, given the timing—and followed its couriers hither. Yet
if they could muster but a single twelve of ships, however powerful, against
him, then the ships under his command were more than enough to feed them to the
Furnace. Even at this extreme range, he had an incalculable advantage in
launchers. Not so good as theirs, perhaps, but more than enough to make up any
disadvantage.
"Colin, they press
us sore," Jiltanith said, and Colin nodded sharply. The plan had been to
empty their magazines into the Achuultani, but the shit was too deep for that. Birhat
had taken only one hit, but Two had taken three and Tor had taken
five. Five of those monster warheads!
These ships were tough
beyond belief, but any toughness had its limits. He winced as yet another
massive salvo exploded against Two's shield and the big ship plowed
through the plasma like a drunken windjammer. It was only a matter of time
until—
"Tor reports
shield failure," Two's Comp Cent announced. "Attempting to
withdraw into hyper." Colin's eyes darted to Tor's cursor, and the
flashing yellow circle was banded in crimson. He stared at it in horror,
willing the ship's hyper drive to take her out of it, as missile after missile
went home—
"Withdrawal
unsuccessful," Two said emotionlessly, and Colin's face went
bone-white as Tor's dot vanished forever.
"Execute Bug
Out," he grated.
"Acknowledged,"
Jiltanith said coolly.
The nest-killers
vanished.
Sorkar stared in
disbelief at the reports of his hyper scanners. Almost a greater twelve times
light-speed? How was it possible?
But what mattered was
that it was possible. And that his scanner crews had noted the charging
hyper fields in time to get good readings on them. He knew where they would
emerge—at that bright star less than a quarter-twelve of light-years ahead of
his fleet.
It could not be their
homeworld, not so coincidentally close to the rendezvous, but whatever it was,
Sorkar knew what to do if they were stupid enough to tie themselves to its
defense, too deep in its gravity well to escape into hyper. He could wade into
their fire, take his losses, and crush them by sheer numbers, for he had
already proven they could be destroyed.
He did not like to think
how many hits it had taken to kill that single nest-killer, but they had
killed it. And his own losses were scarcely three greater twelves, grievous but
hardly fatal.
He plugged into Battle
Comp, but he already knew what his orders would be.
* * *Γ Γ Γ
Colin hoped his
expression hid the depth of his shock as his ships darted away. He'd known they
would take losses, but he hadn't expected to start taking them so soon, and
they'd destroyed less than a half-percent of the enemy. He'd counted on more
than that, and no losses of his own, damn it!
But he couldn't have
brought more ships without Dahak to run them, and Dahak had no
hyper drive. That was the crunch point, because the Achuultani had to
know where he and his ships had run to.
And because of that,
Senior Fleet Captain Roscoe Gillicuddy and his crew had died, and Colin had
lost six percent of his autonomous warship strength. He didn't know which hurt
more, and that made him feel ashamed.
But the mousetrap had
been baited. They'd lost more heavily than allowed for, yet they'd done what
they set out to do. He told himself that, but it wasn't enough to hold the
demons of guilt and the fear of inadequacy at bay.
A warm, slender hand
squeezed his tightly, and he squeezed back gratefully. Military protocol might
frown on a warlord holding hands with his flagship captain, but he needed that
touch of beloved flesh just now.
Thirty-six days after
the brief, savage battle, Dahak kept station on Zeta Trianguli
Australis-I and Colin stood in Command One, contemplating the planet his crews
had dubbed The Cinder.
He and Jiltanith had
tried to name The Cinder something else ('Tanni had favored
"Cheese"), but perhaps the crews were right, Colin thought sourly.
With a mean orbital radius of five-point-eight-nine light-minutes, The Cinder
was about as close to Zeta Trianguli Australis as Venus was to Sol, and Colin
had always thought Venus, with a surface hotter than molten lead, was close
enough to Hell.
The Cinder was worse,
for Zeta Trianguli was brighter than Sol—much brighter. But The Cinder
had been chosen very carefully. There were other worlds in the system,
including a rather nice, if cool, third planet fifteen light-minutes further
out. Zeta Trianguli was old for its class, and III had even developed a local
flora that was vaguely carboniferous, but Colin was just as happy it had only
the most primitive of animal life.
He folded his hands
behind him, watching the display, glancing ever and again at the scarlet hyper
trace blinking steadily just inside the forty-light-minute orbital shell of
Zeta Trianguli-IV.
Fleet Commodore the
Empress Jiltanith sat on her command deck and touched the gemmed dagger at her
belt. She'd owned that weapon since the Wars of the Roses, and its familiar
hilt had soothed her often over the years, but it helped little today. She knew
it made excellent sense for her to be where she was, and that, too, was little
help.
She wanted to rise and
pace, but it would do no good to display her fear, and there were still many
hours to go. Indeed, she ought to be in her quarters—her lonely, empty quarters—resting,
but here she could at least see Dahak's light code and know how Colin
fared.
An even dozen Trosan-class
planetoids with their heavy energy batteries floated in the inner system with Dahak,
and two Vespa-class assault planetoids orbited The Cinder, tending the
heavy armored units doing absolutely nothing worthwhile on its fiery surface .
. . except generating a massive energy signature not even a blind man could
have missed.
Jiltanith's eyes moved
from the three-dimensional schematic of the Zeta Trianguli System to the
emptiness about her own ship. The fourteen surviving crewed units of the
Imperial Guard floated more than six light-hours from the furnace of the star,
and Vlad Chernikov's titanic repair ship Fabricator had labored mightily
upon them. Much of the damage had been too severe to be fully healed—Two,
for example, still bore two wounds over sixty kilometers deep—but all were
combat ready. Ready, yet carefully stealthed, hidden from every prying scanner,
accompanied by sixty loyal, lifeless ships.
Jiltanith did not like
to consider why they were not with Dahak, but the reasoning was brutally
simple. If Operation Mousetrap failed, the crewed ships would return to Terra
to hold as long as they might and evacuate as many additional Terra-born as
possible to Birhat when they could hold no more, but the unmanned planetoids
would be sent directly to Birhat and Marshal Tsien.
There would be no point
retaining them, for they were useless in close combat without Dahak's control,
and Dahak—and Colin—would be dead.
Great Lord Sorkar's
crest flexed thoughtfully as his portion of the Great Visit neared normal-space
once more. This star was suspiciously young to have evolved nest-killers of its
own, which reinforced his belief that it could be but a forward base. That was
bad, since it gave no hint what star these demons might call home. Unless one
of them was obliging enough to flee into hyper and head directly thence, which
he doubted any ships as fast as they would do, he could not even guess where
their true home world lay.
Except, of course, that
it almost certainly had been Lord Furtag's scouts which had roused these
nest-killers to fury. They must have followed a courier to find Sorkar, and
only a courier from Furtag's force could have reached this rendezvous so soon.
And that gave Sorkar a volume of space in which at least one of their important
worlds must lie. That might be enough. If it was not, it was at least a start.
And this star system was another.
Those monster ships'
sheer size impressed him deeply, yet anything that large must take many years
to build, so each he slew would hurt the nest-killers badly. He only hoped
those who had already clashed with his nestlings would be foolish enough to
stand and fight here.
A soft musical tone
sounded, and he made himself relax, hoping that Battle Comp noticed his
tranquillity. The queasy shudder of hyper translation ran through his flagship,
and Defender dropped into phase with reality once more.
"Achuultani units
are emerging from hyper," Dahak's mellow voice said.
Colin nodded as the dots
of Achuultani ships gleamed in the display. He looked around the empty bridge,
wishing for just a moment that he'd let the others stay. But if this worked, he
and Dahak could pull it off alone; if it failed, those eight
thousand-odd people would be utterly invaluable to 'Tanni and Gerald Hatcher.
Besides, this was fitting, somehow. He and Dahak, together and alone
once more.
"Keep an eye on
'em," he said. "Let me know if they do anything sneaky."
"I shall."
Dahak was silent for a moment, then continued. "I have continued my study
of energy-state computer technology, Colin."
"Oh?" If Dahak
wanted to distract him, that was fine with Colin.
"Yes. I believe I
have isolated the fundamental differences between the energy-state 'software'
of the Empire and my own. They were rather more subtle than I originally
anticipated, but I now feel confident of my ability to reprogram at will."
"Hey, that's great!
You mean you could tinker them into waking up?"
"I did not say
that, Colin. I can reprogram them; I still have not determined what within my
own programming supports my self-aware state. Without that datum, I cannot
recreate that state in another. Nor have I yet discovered a certain technique
for simply replicating my current programming in their radically different
circuitry."
"Yeah." Colin
frowned. "But even if you could, you'd have problems, wouldn't you?
They're hardwired for loyalty to Mother—wouldn't that put a crimp into your
replication?"
"Not," Dahak
said rather surprisingly, "in the case of the Guard. Its units were not
part of Battle Fleet and do not contain Battle Fleet loyalty imperatives. I
suppose—" the computer sounded gently ironic "—Mother and the
Assembly of Nobles calculated that the remaining nine hundred ninety-eight
thousand seven hundred and twelve planetoids of Battle Fleet would suffice to
deal with them in the event an Emperor proved intractable."
"Guess they might,
at that."
"The absence of
those constraints, however, makes the replication of my core programming at
least a possibility, although not a very high one. While I have made progress,
I compute that the probability of success would be no more than eight percent.
The probability that an unsuccessful attempt would incapacitate the
recipient computer, however, approaches unity."
"Um." Colin
tugged on his nose. "Not so good. The last thing we need is to addle one
of the others just now."
"My own thought
exactly. I thought, however, that you might appreciate a progress report."
"You mean,"
Colin snorted, "that you thought I was about to get the willies and you'd
better distract me from 'em!"
"That is
substantially what I said." Dahak made the soft sound he used for a
chuckle. "In my own tactful fashion, of course."
"Tactful,
shmactful," Colin grinned. "Thanks, I—"
He broke off as the
glittering hordes of Achuultani light codes suddenly vanished only to blink
back moments later, much closer in-system.
"They are
advancing," Dahak said calmly. "A trio of detached ships, however,
appear to be micro-jumping to positions on the system periphery."
"Observers, damn
it. Well, no one can count on their enemies being idiots."
"True, though that
will be of limited utility if we are able to repeat our earlier success and
destroy them before they rendezvous with the main body."
"Yeah, but we can't
be sure of doing that. It's a lot shorter jump this time, and they can cut
their arrival a hell of a lot closer. Tell 'Tanni to lay off. Last thing we
need to do is to try sneaking up on 'em and alert them to the fact that there's
more of us around."
"Acknowledged,"
Dahak replied. "Two has acknowledged," he added a moment
later.
"Thanks,"
Colin grunted.
His attention was on the
display. The Achuultani had micro-jumped with beautiful precision, spreading
out to englobe Zeta Trianguli at a range of twenty-seven light-minutes. Now
they were closing in normal space at twenty-four percent light-speed. They'd be
into extreme missile range in another ten minutes, but it would take them almost
an hour to reach their range of The Cinder, and he and Dahak
could hurt them badly in that much time.
But not too badly. They
had to keep closing. He needed them deep into the stellar gravity well for this
to work, and—
He snorted. There were
over a million of the bastards—just how much damage did he think his
fifteen ships could inflict in fifty minutes?
"Open up at fifteen
light-minutes, Dahak," he said finally. "Timed-rate fire. We don't
want to shoot ourselves dry."
"Acknowledged,"
Dahak said calmly, and they waited.
Great Lord Sorkar fought
his exultation. The nest-killers had not even attempted to cloak themselves!
They simply sat waiting, and that was fine with Sorkar. Many of his nestlings
were about to die, but so were the nest-killers.
There had been a
few more of them about, he noted. There were a third-twelve of new ships to
replace the one they had lost in the first clash. Well, that was scarcely
enough to affect the outcome.
His scanners gave no
clear idea what was happening on the innermost planet, but something was
producing a massive energy signature there, though why the nest-killers had
ignored the more hospitable worlds further out puzzled him. Perhaps they were
simply poorer strategists than they were ship-builders. And perhaps they had
some other reason he knew not of? But whatever their logic, it was about to
become a deathtrap for them.
Of course, they were
infernally fast even in n-space. . . . If they made a break for it, none of his
nestlings could stay with them, but he knew an answer for that.
"They are deploying
an outer sphere, Colin."
"I see it. Want to
bet they leave it ten or twelve light-minutes out to catch us between two fires
if we run?"
"I have nothing to
wager."
"Chicken! What a
cop out!"
"Enemy entering
specified attack range." Dahak's mellow voice was suddenly deeper.
"Engage as
previously instructed," Colin said formally.
"Engaging, Your
Majesty."
Great Lord Sorkar
flinched as the first of his ships exploded in eye-clawing fury. Nest Lord! He
had known they out-ranged him, but by that much?
More ships exploded, and
now those strange, terrible warheads were striking home, crumpling his mighty
starships in upon themselves, but still the nest-killers made no effort to
flee. Clearly they meant to cover the planet to the end. What in the name of
Tarhish could make it so important to them?! No matter. They were standing,
waiting for him to kill them.
"Open the
formation," he told his lords. "Maintain closure rate."
More ships died like
small, dreadful suns, and Sorkar watched coldly. He must endure this for
another quarter segment, but then it would be his turn.
Jiltanith bit her lower
lip as searing flashes ripped the Achuultani formation. The Empire's
anti-matter warhead yields were measured in gigatons, and fifteen planetoids
pumped their dreadful missiles into the oncoming Achuultani, yet still the
enemy closed. Something inside her tried to admire their courage, but that was
her husband, her Colin, alone with his electronic henchman, who stood against
them, and she gripped her dagger hilt, black eyes hungry, and rejoiced as the
spalls of destruction pocked Two's display.
"They are entering
their range of us, Colin," Dahak said coolly, and Colin nodded silently,
awed by the waves of fire sweeping the Achuultani formation. The flames leapt
high as each salvo struck, then died, only to bloom afresh, like embers fanned
by a bellows, as the next salvo crashed home.
"Their
losses?" he asked sharply.
"Estimate one
hundred six thousand, plus or minus point-six percent."
Jesus. We've killed
close to nine percent of them and they're still coming. They've got guts, but
Lord God are they dumb! If we could do this to them another ten or fifteen
times . . .
But maybe they're not so
dumb, because we can't do it to them that many times. Of course, they
can't know we don't have thousands of planetoids—
"Enemy has opened
fire," Dahak said, and Colin tensed.
Sorkar managed not to
cheer as the first greater thunder burst among the enemy. Now, Nest-Killers!
Now comes your turn to face the Furnace!
More and more of his
ships entered range, hurling their hyper missiles into the enemy, and his
direct-vision panel polarized as a cauldron of unholy Fire boiled against the
nest-killers' shields.
Jiltanith tasted blood,
and her knuckles whitened on her dagger as a second star blazed in the Zeta
Trianguli System. It grew in fury, hotter and brighter, born of millions of
anti-matter warheads, and Colin was at its heart.
The enemy continued to
close, dying as he came, trailing broken starships like a disemboweled
monster's entrails. But still he came on, and the weight of his fire was
inconceivable. She knew the plan, knew Colin fought for information as well as
victory, but this was too much.
"Now, my
love," she whispered. "Fly now, my Colin! Fly now!"
"Trosan has
been destroyed. Heavy damage to Mairsuk. We have—"
Dahak's voice broke off
as his stupendous mass heaved. The display blanked, and Colin paled at the
terrible reports in his neural feed.
"Three direct
hits," Dahak reported. "Heavy damage to Quadrants Rho-Two and Four.
Seven percent combat capability lost."
Colin swore hoarsely. Dahak's
shield had been heavily overhauled at Bia. It was just as good as his automated
minions', but his other defenses were not. He was simply slower and far less
capable, than they. If the enemy noticed and decided to concentrate on him. . .
.
"Gohar
destroyed. Shinhar heavily damaged; combat capability thirty-four
percent. Enemy entering energy weapon range."
"Then let's see how
tough these bastards really are!" Colin grated. "Execute Plan
Volley Fire."
Sorkar blinked as the
nest-killers moved. All this time they had held their positions, soaking up his
thunder, killing his ships. Now, when they had finally begun to die, they moved
. . . but to advance, not to flee!
Then their energy
weapons fired at last, and he gasped in disbelief.
"Yes! Yes!"
Colin shouted. Dahak's energy weapons were blasts of fury that rent the
molecular bindings of their targets; those of the Empire were worse. They
shattered atomic bindings, inducing instant fission.
Now those dreadful
weapons stabbed out from the beam-heavy Trosans, and Colin's missiles
suddenly became a side show. No Achuultani shield could stop those furious
beams, and their kiss was death.
Sorkar's desperate pleas
for advice hammered at Battle Comp. Were these nest-killers the very Spawn of
Tarhish?! What deviltry transformed his very ships into warheads of the lesser
thunder?!
Unaccustomed panic
pounded him. With those beams, they might yet cut their way through his entire
fleet, and the closer he came to them, the more easily they could kill his
Protectors!
But Battle Comp did not
know what panic was, and its dispassionate analysis calmed his visceral terror.
Yes, the cost would be terrible, but the nest-killers were also dying. They
would wound the Great Visit more deeply than Sorkar had believed possible, but
they would die, Tarhish take them!
"We are down to
seven units," Dahak reported. "Approximately two hundred ninety-one
thousand Achuultani ships have been destroyed."
"Execute Plan
Shiva," Colin rasped.
"Executing, Your
Majesty," Dahak said once more, and the Enchanach Drives of eight Imperial
planetoids roared to life. In one terrible, perfectly synchronized instant,
eight gravity wells, each more massive than Zeta Trianguli's own, erupted barely
six light-minutes from the star.
A twelve of greater
twelves of Sorkar's ships disappeared, torn apart and scattered over the
universe, as the impossible happened. For an instant, his mind was totally
blank, and then he realized.
He was dead, and every
one of his nestlings with him.
Had it been intended
from the outset that the nest-killers should suicide? Destroy themselves with
some inconceivably powerful version of the warheads which had ravaged his
ships?
He heard Battle Comp
using his voice, ordering his fleet to turn and flee, but he paid it no heed.
They were too deep into the gravity well; at their best speed, even the outer
sphere would need a quarter day segment to reach the hyper threshold.
His FTL scanners watched
the tidal wave of gravitonic stress reach Zeta Trianguli Australis, watched the
star bulge and blossom hideously.
He bowed his head and
switched off his vision panel.
The sun went nova.
Dahak and his
surviving companions fled its death throes at seven hundred times the speed of
light, and Colin watched through fold-space scanners in sick fascination. Dahak
had filtered the display's fury, but even so it hurt his eyes. Yet he could not
look away as a terrible wave of radiation lashed the Achuultani . . . and upon
its heels came the physical front of destruction. But those ships were already
lifeless, shields less than useless against the ferocity of a sun's death.
The nova spewed them
forth as a few more atoms of finely-divided matter on the fire of its breath.
Brashieel rose carefully
and inclined his head as the old nest-killer called Hohrass entered his nest
place. It was not the full salute of a Protector, for he did not cover his
eyes, but Brashieel knew this Hohrass was a Great Lord of his own . . . people.
It had taken many
twelve-days to decide to apply that term to these nest-killers, yet he had
little choice. He had come to know them—some of them, at least—and that, he now
knew, was the worst thing which could happen to a Protector.
He should have ended in
honor. Should have spent himself, made them kill him, before this horror could
be inflicted upon him. But they were cruel, these nest-killers, cruel in their
kindness, for they had not let him end. For just a moment, he considered
attacking Hohrass, but the old nest-killer was far stronger. He would simply
overpower him, and it would be shameful to neither kill his foe nor make his
foe kill him.
"I greet you,
Brashieel." The voice came from a speaker on the wall, rendering Hohrass's
words into the tongue of Aku'Ultan.
"I greet you,
Hohrass," he returned, and heard the same speaker make meaningless sounds
to his—visitor? Gaoler?
"I bring you sad
tidings," Hohrass said, speaking slowly to let whatever wonder translated
do its work. "Our Protectors have met yours in combat. Five higher twelves
of your ships have perished."
Brashieel gaped at him.
He had seen the power of their warships, but this—! His shock shamed
him, yet he could not hide it, and his eyes were dark with pain. His crest
drooped, and his fine, dark muzzle scales stood out against his suddenly pallid
skin.
"I am sorry to tell
you this," Hohrass continued after a twelfth-segment, "but it is
important that we speak of it."
"How?"
Brashieel asked finally. "Have your Protectors gathered in such numbers so
quickly?"
"No," Hohrass
softly. "We used scarcely a double twelve of ships."
"Impossible! You
lie to me, Hohrass! Not even a double twelve of your demon ships could do so
much!"
"I speak
truth," Hohrass returned. "I have records to prove my words, records
sent to us over three twelves of your light-years."
Brashieel's legs folded
under him, despite every effort to stand, and his eyes were blind with horror.
If Hohrass spoke the truth, if a mere double twelve of their ships could
destroy a full half of the Great Visit and report it over such distances so
quickly, the Nest was doomed. Fire would consume the great Nest Place, devour
the Creche of the People. The Aku'Ultan would perish, for they had waked a
demon more terrible even than the Great Nest-Killers.
They had awakened
Tarhish Himself, and His Furnace would take them all.
"Brashieel.
Brashieel!" The quiet voice intruded into his horror, and the old
nest-killer touched his shoulder. "Brashieel, I must speak with you. It is
important—to my Nest and to your own."
"Why?"
Brashieel moaned. "End me now, Hohrass. Show me that mercy."
"No." Hohrass
knelt on his two legs to bring their eyes level. "I cannot do that,
Brashieel. You must live. We must speak not as nest-killers, but as one
Protector to another."
"What is there to
speak of?" Brashieel asked dully. "You will do as you must in the
service of your Nest, and mine will end."
"No, Brashieel. It
need not be that way."
"It must,"
Brashieel groaned. "It is the Way. You are mightier than we, and the
Aku'Ultan will end at last."
"We do not wish to
end the Aku'Ultan," Hohrass said, and Brashieel stared at him in stark
disbelief.
"That cannot be
true," he said flatly.
"Then pretend.
Pretend for just a twelfth-segment that we do not wish your ending if our own
Nest can live. If we prove we can destroy your greatest Great Visit yet tell
your Nest Lord we do not wish to end the Aku'Ultan, will he leave our Nest in
peace? Can there not be an end to the nest-killing?"
"I . . . do not
think I can pretend that."
"Try, Brashieel.
Try hard."
"I—"
Brashieel's head spun with the strangeness of the thought.
"I do not know if I
can pretend that," he said finally, "and it would not matter if I
could. I have tried to think upon the things your Nynnhuursag has said to me,
and almost I can understand them. But I am no longer a Protector, Hohrass. I
have failed to end, which cannot be, yet it is. I have spoken with
nest-killers, and that, too, cannot be. Because these things have been, I no
longer know what I am, but I am no longer as others of the Nest. It does not
matter what such as I pretend; what matters is what the Lord of the Nest knows,
and he knows the Great Fear, the Purpose, and the Way. He will not stop what he
is. If he could, he would not be the Nest Lord."
"I am sorry,
Brashieel," Hohrass said, and Brashieel believed him. "I am sorry
this has happened to you, yet perhaps you are wrong. If other Protectors join
you as our prisoners, if you speak together and with us, if you learn that what
I tell you is truth—that we do not wish to end the Aku'Ultan—would you be
prepared to tell others of the Nest what you have learned?"
"We would never
have the chance. We would be ended by the Nest, and rightly ended. We would be
nest-killers to our own if we did your will."
"Perhaps,"
Hohrass said, "and perhaps not." He sighed and rose. "Again, I
am sorry—truly sorry—to torment you with such questions, yet I must. I ask you
to think painful things, to consider that there may be truths beyond even the
Great Fear, and I know these thoughts hurt you. But you must think them,
Brashieel of the Aku'Ultan, for if you cannot—if, indeed, the Nest cannot leave
us in peace—then we will have no choice. For untold higher twelves of years,
your Protectors have ravaged our suns, killed our planets, slain our Nests.
This cannot continue. Understand that we share that much of the Great Fear with
the Protectors of the Nest of Aku'Ultan. We truly do not wish to end the
Aku'Ultan, but there has been enough ending of others. We will not allow it to
continue. It may take us great twelves of years, but we will stop it."
Brashieel stared up at
him, too sick with horror even to feel hate, and Hohrass's mouth moved in one
of his people's incomprehensible expressions.
"We would have you
and your people live, Brashieel. Not because we love you, for we have cause to
hate you, and many of us do. Yes, and fear you. But we would not have your
ending upon our hands, and that is why we hurt you with such thoughts. We must
learn whether or not we can allow your Nest to live. Forgive us, if you can,
but whether you can forgive or not, we have no choice."
And with that, Hohrass
left the nest place, and Brashieel was alone with the agony of his thoughts.
"You think it's
really as grim as Brashieel seems to think?"
Colin looked up as
Horus's recorded message ended. Even for an Imperial hypercom, forty-odd
light-years was a bit much for two-way conversations.
"I know not,"
Jiltanith mused. Unlike his other guests, she was present in the flesh. Very
present, he thought, hiding a smile as he remembered their reunion. Now she
flipped a mental command into the holo unit and replayed the final portion of
Horus's interview with Brashieel.
"I know not,"
she repeated. "Certes Brashieel believes it so, but look thou, my Colin,
though he saith such things, yet hath he held converse with 'Hursag and Father.
Moreover, 'twould seem he hath understood what they have said unto him. His
pain seemeth real enow, but 'tis understanding—of a sort, at the
least—which wakes it."
"You're saying what
he thinks and says are two different things?" Hector MacMahan spoke
through his holo image from Sevrid's command deck. He looked
uncomfortable as a planetoid's CO, for he still regarded himself as a
ground-pounder. But, then, Sevrid was a ground-pounder's dream, and she
had the largest crew of any unit in the fleet, after Fabricator, for
reasons which made sense to most. They made sense to Colin and Jiltanith,
anyway, which was what mattered, and this conversation was very pertinent to
them.
"Nay, Hector. Say
rather that divergence hath begun 'twixt what he doth think and what he doth believe,
but that he hath not seen it so."
"You may be right,
'Tanni," Ninhursag said slowly. Her image sat beside Hector's as her body
sat next to his. And, come to think of it, Colin thought, they seemed to be
found together a lot these days.
"When Brashieel and
I talked," Ninhursag continued, choosing her words with care, "the
impression I got of him was . . . well, innocence, if that's not too
silly-sounding. I don't mean goody-goody innocence; maybe the word should
really be naivete. He's very, very bright, by human standards. Very quick and
very well-educated, but only in his speciality. As for the rest, well, it's
more like an indoctrination than an education, as if someone cordoned off
certain aspects of his worldview, labeled them 'off-limits' so firmly he's not
even curious about them. It's just the way things are; the very
possibility of questioning them, much less changing them, doesn't exist."
"Hm." Cohanna
rubbed an eyebrow and frowned. "You may have something, 'Hursag. I hadn't
gotten around to seeing it that way, but then I always was a mechanic at
heart." Jiltanith frowned a question, and Cohanna grinned. "Sorry. I
mean I was always more interested in the physical life processes than the
mental. A blind spot of my own. I tend to look for physical answers first and
psychological ones second . . . or third. What I meant, though, is that
'Hursag's right. If Brashieel were human—which, of course, he isn't—I'd have to
say he'd been programmed pretty carefully."
"Programmed."
Jiltanith tasted the word thoughtfully. "Aye, mayhap 'twas the word I
sought. Yet 'twould seem his programming hath its share o' holes."
"That's the problem
with programming," Cohanna agreed. "It can only accommodate data
known to the programmer. Hit its subject with something totally outside its
parameters, and he does one of three things: cracks up entirely; rejects the
reality and refuses to confront it; or—" she paused meaningfully
"—grapples with it and, in the process, breaks the program."
"And you think
that's what's happening with Brashieel?" Colin mused.
"Well, at the risk
of sounding overly optimistic, it may be. Brashieel's a resilient lad, or
he'd've curled up and died as soon as he realized the bogey men had him. The
fact that he didn't says a really astounding amount about the toughness of his
psyche. He was actually curious about us, and that says even more. Now, though,
what we're asking him to believe simultaneously upsets his entire worldview and
threatens his race with extinction.
"We've had a bit of
experience facing that kind of terror ourselves, and some of us haven't handled
it very well. It's worse for him; his species has built an entire society on
millions of years of fear. I'd say there's a pretty good chance he'll snap
completely when he realizes just how bad things really are from the Achuultani
perspective. If he makes it through the next few weeks, though, he may find out
he's even tougher and more flexible than he thought and actually decide Horus
was telling him the truth."
"And how much good
will that do?" Tamman's holo image asked. "He was only a fire control
officer aboard a scout. Not exactly a mover and shaker in a society as
caste-bound as his."
"True," Colin
agreed, "but his reaction is the only yardstick we have for how his entire
race will react if we really can stop them. Of course, what we really need is a
larger sample. Which, Hector," he looked at MacMahan, "is why you and
Sevrid will do exactly what we've discussed, won't you?"
"Yes, but I don't
have to like it."
Colin winced slightly at
the sour response, but the important thing was that Hector understood why Sevrid
must stay out of the fighting. She would wait out the engagement, stealthed at
a safe distance, then close in to board any wrecked or damaged ships she could
find.
"That reminds me,
'Hanna," he said, turning back to the biosciences officer. "What's
the progress on our capture field?"
"We're in good
shape," Cohanna assured him. "Took us a while to realize it, but it
turns out a simple focused magnetic field is the answer."
"Ah? Oh! Metal
bones."
"Exactly. They're
not all that ferrous, but a properly focused field can lock their skeletons.
Muscles, too. Have to secure them some other way pretty quick—interrupting the
blood flow to the brain is a bad idea—but it should work just fine. Geran and
Caitrin are turning them out aboard Fabricator now."
"Good! We need
prisoners, damn it. We may not be able to do anything with them right away, but
somewhere down the road we're either going to have to talk to the Nest Lord or
kill his ass. In some ways, I'd rather waste him and be done with it, but
that's the nasty side of me talking."
"Aye, art ever over
gentle with thy foes," Jiltanith said sourly, but then her face softened.
"And rightly so, for where would I be hadst thou not been thy
gentle self when first we met? Nay, my love. I do not say I share thy
tenderness for these our foes, yet neither will I contest thy will. And mayhap,
in time, will I come to share thy thoughts as well. Stranger things have
chanced, when all's said."
Colin reached out and
squeezed her hand gently. He knew how much it cost her to say that . . . and
how much more it cost to mean it.
"Well, then!"
he said more briskly. "We seem to be in pretty good shape there; let's
hope we're in equally good shape everywhere. Horus and Gerald are making lots
better progress than I expected upgrading Earth's defenses. They may actually
have a chance of holding even if we lose it out here, as long as we can take
out half or more of the main body in the process."
"A chance,"
MacMahan agreed. He did not add "but not a very good one."
"Yeah."
Colin's tone answered the unspoken qualifier, and he tugged on his nose in a
familiar gesture. "Well, we'll just have to see to it they don't have to
try. What's our situation, Vlad?"
"It could be
better, but it might be worse." Chernikov's image looked weary, though
less so than when the resurrected Imperial Guard left Bia. "We have lost
eight units: one Vespa-class, which constitutes a relatively minor loss
to our ship-to-ship capability; one Asgerd; and six Trosans. That
leaves ten Trosans, two too severely damaged for Fabricator to
make combat-capable. I recommend that they be dispatched directly to Bia under
computer control."
"I hate to do
it," Colin sighed, "but I think you're right. What about the rest of
us?"
"The remaining
eight Trosans are all combat-ready at a minimum of ninety percent of
capability. Of our remaining fifty-one Asgerds, Two's damage is
most severe, but Baltan and I believe we can make almost all of it good. After
her, Emperor Herdan is worst hurt, followed by Royal Birhat, but Birhat
should be restored to full capability within two months. I estimate that Herdan
and Two will be at ninety-six and ninety-four percent capability,
respectively, by the time the main body arrives."
"Hum. Should we
transfer your people to undamaged ships, 'Tanni?"
"Nay. 'Twere better
to face the fray 'board ships whose ways we know, even though somewhat hurt,
than to unsettle all upon the eve o'battle."
"I think so, too.
But if Vlad and Baltan can't get 'em up to at least ninety percent, your
ass is changing ships, young lady!"
"Ha! Neither young
nor lady am I, and thou'lt find it most difficult to remove me 'gainst my will,
Your Majesty!"
"I don't get no
respect," Colin sighed. Then he shook himself. "And Dahak,
Vlad?"
"We will do our
best, Colin," Vlad said more somberly, and the mood of the meeting
darkened. "Those two hits he took on the way out were almost on top of one
another and did extraordinarily severe damage. Nor does his age help; were he
one of the newer ships, we could simply plug components from Fabricator's
spares into his damaged systems. As it is, we must rebuild his Rho quadrants
almost from scratch, and there is collateral damage in Sigma-One, Lambda-Four
and Pi-Three. At best, we may restore him to eighty-five percent
capability."
"Dahak? Do you
concur?" Colin asked.
"I believe Senior
Fleet Captain Chernikov underestimates himself, but his analysis is essentially
correct. We may achieve eighty-seven or even eighty-eight percent capability;
we will not achieve more in the time available."
"Damn. I should've
cut and run sooner."
"Nay,"
Jiltanith said. "Thou didst troll them in most shrewdly, my Colin, and so
learned far more than ever we hoped."
"Her Majesty is
correct," Dahak put in. "The effectiveness of our energy weapons
against heavy Aku'Ultan units has now been demonstrated, and, coupled with
Operation Laocoon, makes ultimate victory far more likely. Without Volley Fire,
we could not accurately have assessed that effectiveness."
"Yeah, yeah, I
know," Colin said, and he did. But knowing made him feel no better about
getting their irreplaceable flagship—and his friend, damn it!—shot up.
"Okay, I guess that just about covers it. We can—"
"Nay, Colin,"
Jiltanith cut in. "There remaineth still the matter of the ship from which
thou'lt lead us."
Colin noted the
dangerous tilt of her chin and felt an irrational stab of anger. He had the
authority—technically—to slap her down, but he couldn't. It would be
capricious, which was one reason he was angry he couldn't, but, worse, it would
be wrong. 'Tanni was his second-in-command, both entitled and required to
disagree when she thought he was wrong; she was also his wife.
"I'll be aboard Dahak,"
he said flatly. "By myself."
"Now I say thou
shalt not," she began hotly, then stopped, throttling her anger as he had
his. But tension crackled between them, and when he glanced around the
holo-image faces of his closest advisors he saw a high degree of discomfort in
their expressions. He also saw a lot of support for 'Tanni.
"Look," he
said, "I have to be here. We win or lose on the basis of how well Dahak
can run the rest of the flotilla, and communications are going to be hairy
enough without me being on a ship with a different time dilation effect."
It was a telling
argument, and he saw its weight darken Jiltanith's eyes, though she did not
relent. Relativity wasn't a factor under Enchanach Drive, since the ship in
question didn't actually "move" in normal space terms at all.
Unfortunately, it was a factor at high sublight velocities, especially
when ships might actually be moving on opposing vectors. Gross communication
wasn't too bad; there were lags, but they were bearable—for communication. But
Dahak would be required to operate his uncrewed fellows' computers as literal
extensions of himself. At the very best, their tactical flexibility would be
badly limited. At worst . . .
Colin decided—again—not
to think about "at worst."
"Anyway," he
said, "I should be as safe as anybody else."
"Oh? Without doubt
'twas that very reasoning led thee to forbid all others to share thy duty
'board Dahak?" Jiltanith said with awful irony.
"All right, damn
it, so it isn't exactly the safest place to be! I've still got to be
here, 'Tanni. Why should I risk anyone else?"
"Colin,"
Tamman said, "'Tanni may not be your most tactful officer, but she speaks
for all of us. Forgive me, Dahak—" he glanced courteously at the auxiliary
interface on one bulkhead "—but you're going to be a priority target if
the Achuultani realize what's going on."
"I concur."
"Thank you,"
Tamman said softly. "And that's my point, Colin. We all know how important
your ability to coordinate through Dahak is, but you're important, too.
In your persona as Emperor, and as our friend, as well."
"Tamman—"
Colin broke off and stared down at his hands, then sighed. "Thank you for
that—thank all of you—but the fact remains that cold, hard logic says I should
be in Command One when we go in."
"That is certainly
true to a point," Dahak said, and Jiltanith stared at the auxiliary
console with betrayed eyes, "yet Senior Fleet Captain Tamman is also
correct. You are important, if only as the one adult human Fleet Central
will obey without question during the immense reorganization of the post-Incursion
period. While Her Majesty can execute that function in the event of your death,
she would be acting as regent for a minor child, not as head of state in her
own right, which creates a potential for conflict."
"Are you saying I
should risk losing the battle because something might go wrong
later?"
"Negative. I am
simply listing counter arguments. And, in all honesty, I must add my personal
concern to the list. You are my oldest friend, Colin. I do not wish you to risk
your life unnecessarily."
The computer did not
often express his human feelings so frankly, and Colin swallowed unexpected
emotion.
"I'm not too crazy
about it myself, but I think it is necessary. Forget for a moment that
we're friends and tell me what the percentages say to do."
There was a moment of
silence—a very long moment for Dahak.
"Put that way,
Colin," he said at last, "I must concur. Your presence in Command One
will increase the probability of victory by several orders."
Jiltanith sagged, and
Colin touched her hand gently in apology. She tried to smile, but her eyes were
stricken, and he knew she knew. He'd ordered Dahak not to share his projection
of their chance of survival with her, but she knew anyway.
"Wait."
Chernikov's thoughtful murmur pulled all attention back to him. "We have
the time and materials; let us install a mat-trans aboard Dahak."
"A mat-trans? But
that couldn't—"
"A moment,
Colin." Dahak sounded far more cheerful. "I believe this suggestion
has merit. Senior Fleet Captain Chernikov, do I correctly apprehend that you
intend to install additional mat-trans stations aboard each of our crewed
warships?"
"I do."
"But the relativity
aspects would make it impossible," Colin protested. "The stations
have to be synchronized."
"Not so finely as
you may believe," Dahak said. "In practice, it would simply require
that the receiving ship maintain approximately the same relativistic time.
Given the number of crewed vessels available to us, it might well prove
possible to select an appropriate unit. I could then transmit you to that unit
in the event that Dahak's destruction becomes probable."
"I don't like the
idea of running away," Colin muttered rebelliously.
"Now thou'rt
childish, my Colin," Jiltanith said firmly. "Thou knowest how feel we
all towards Dahak, yet thy presence will not halt the missile or beam which
would destroy him. How shall thy death make his less dreadful?"
"Her Majesty is
correct," Dahak said, equally firmly. "You would not refuse to
evacuate via lifeboat, and there is little difference, except in that your
chances of survival are many orders of probability higher via mat-trans.
Please, Colin. I would feel much better if you would agree."
Colin was stubbornly
silent. Of course it was illogical, but that was part of the definition of friendship.
Yet they were right. It was only the premeditation of the means whereby he
would desert his friend that bothered him.
"All right,"
he sighed at last. "I don't like it, but . . . do it, Vlad."
The dot of Zeta
Trianguli Australis burned unchanged, for the fury of its death had not yet
crossed the light-years.
Senior Fleet Captain
Sarah Meir, promoted when Colin evicted Dahak's crew, sat on the
planetoid Ashar's command deck and frowned as she watched it, recalling
the dark, hopeless years when she and her Terra-born fellows had fought with Nergal's
Imperials against Anu's butchers. There was no comparison between then and now
. . . except that the days were dark once more and hope was scarce.
Scarce, but not
vanished, she reminded herself, and if Colin's reckless battle plan shocked
her, it was its very audacity which gave them a hope of victory. That, and the
quality of their ships and handful of crews.
And Dahak. It always
came back to Dahak, but, then, it always had. He'd stood sponsor for them all,
Earth's inheritance from the Imperium on this eve of Armageddon. It might be
atavistic of her, but Dahak was their totem, and—
"Captain, we have
an inbound hyper wake. A big one," her plotting officer said, and
adrenalin flushed through her system.
"Nail it
down," she said, "and fire up the hypercom." Acknowledgments
came back, and she called up Engineering. "Stand by for Enchanach
Drive."
"Yes, ma'am. Core
tap nominal. We're ready to move."
"Stand by."
She looked back up at Plotting. "Well?"
"We've got an
emergence, ma'am. Ninety-eight hours, about a light-month short of the
vanguard's emergence locus."
Sarah frowned. Damned if
she would've hypered in this close to the "monster
nest-killers" the vanguard must have reported! Still, with their piddling
communication range, they had to come in fairly close . . . and a light-month
gave them plenty of time to hyper out if bad guys came at them.
Usually, she thought
coldly, but not this time. Oh, no. Not this time.
"Communications,
inform the flagship. Maneuvering, head for the rendezvous, but take us on a
dog-leg. I want a cross-bearing on this wake."
Stars streamed across
the display, and she relaxed. In another four days the uncertainty would end .
. . one way or another.
Great Lord of Order
Hothan twiddled all four thumbs as he replayed Sorkar's messages yet again.
Hothan was small for a Protector, quick-moving and keen-witted. Indeed, he had
been severely disciplined as a fledgling for near-deviant inquisitiveness and
almost denied his lordship for questioning what he perceived as inefficiencies
in the Nest's starships. Yet even Battle Comp agreed that those very faults
made him an excellent strategist and tactician, and they had helped Great Lord
Tharno select him for this duty.
Yet Sorkar's reports
made him more than simply curious. There was a near-hysterical edge to them,
most unlike his old nestmate. But, then, this was the Demon Sector, and Sorkar
always had been a bit superstitious.
"Emergence
confirmed and plotted," Dahak announced. "Margin of error
point-zero-zero-zero-zero-two-nine percent."
Colin grunted and ran
down his mental list one last time. Dahak was at eighty-six percent
efficiency; his other ships were all at ninety or above. All magazines were
topped up, and transferring Dahak's skeleton crew to Ashar had
given them sixteen autonomous units once more. They were as ready as they could
get, he thought, deliberately not looking at the hastily-installed mat-trans
which had replaced the tactical officer's couch and console.
"All right, Dahak,
saddle up. Get the minelayers moving."
"Acknowledged."
The unmanned colliers moved out, accompanied by Dahak and his bevy of
lobotomized geniuses, loafing along under Enchanach Drive at sixty times
light-speed. They weren't in that great a hurry.
The colliers reached
their stations and paused, adjusting their formation delicately before they
began to move once more, now at sublight speeds.
The brevity of the first
clash with the vanguard, coupled with the ships lost at Zeta Trianguli, meant
Colin had more spare missiles than planned. He rather regretted that—though he
would have regretted depleted magazines more—for each missile was three or four
less mines his colliers could lift. Still, they had lots of the nasty little
buggers, and he watched them spill out as the colliers swept across the
Achuultani's emergence area at forty percent of light-speed.
He bared his teeth.
Mines were seldom used outside star systems, for it was impossible to guess
where an enemy might come out between stars. But this time he didn't
have to guess; he knew, and the Achuultani weren't going to like it a bit.
Great Lord Hothan
stretched one last time before he folded his legs and sank onto his duty pad.
Before Sorkar's messages, Hothan had not worried about routine emergences from
hyper in interstellar space, but he had no more idea how the nest-killers had
surprised Sorkar than Battle Comp did, and, like Great Lord Tharno, he was
determined to guard his own command.
His nestlings had been
carefully instructed before entering hyper. They would emerge as prepared to
confront enemies as nestmates, yet if these nest-killers were indeed the demons
Sorkar had described that might not be enough, and so he and Great Lord Tharno
had taken a radical decision with Battle Comp's full concurrence. Protectors
could not serve the Nest if they perished; should the nest-killers be waiting
once more, prepared to kill his ships in great twelves, he would return to
hyper and flee.
He watched the
chronometer and checked Battle Comp for final advice. There was none, and he
made himself relax. Half a day-segment to emergence.
Colin watched the hyper
traces flash blood-red in Dahak's holo projection as the vanguard's tattered
couriers and the main body rushed together. They would rendezvous in one more
hour, and the battle would begin. It would be a battle, too; more
terrible than the oncoming Achuultani could possibly imagine. And probably more
terrible than he could imagine, as well.
Dahak floated at the
core of a globe of fifty-four stupendous planetoids, and Colin felt a brief
stab of unutterable loneliness as he realized he was the sole living, breathing
scrap of blood and bone in all that horrific array of firepower. He shook it
off; there were other things to consider.
The waiting minefield
frosted the black velvet of Dahak's display like a glitter of diamond dust. The
stealthed colliers ringed the mines, waiting obediently to play their part in
Operation Laocoon, and fifteen more stealthed Asgerd-class planetoids
were invisible even to Dahak's scanners, their positions marked only
because he already knew where they would be. Those ships were 'Tanni's command,
the reserve which could move and fight without Dahak's control. Yet they were
more than counters on a map. They were crewed by people—by friends—and
too many of them were about to die.
Great Lord Hothan
tightened internally despite years of discipline and training. He chided
himself for his inability to relax. Yet perhaps that was good, for tension
honed reactions and—
His thoughts broke off
as one of his read-outs suddenly peaked. That was odd. The depths of hyper
space were unchanging: seething bands of energy that ebbed and flowed in
predictable, regular patterns, not in sudden peaks.
But his read-outs peaked
again. And again and again. Glowing numerals flashed with a jagged, stabbing
intensity whose like he had never seen, and his nerves twisted in sudden dread.
Colin smiled coldly as
the mines began to vanish.
The Achuultani could
play many tricks with hyper space, but there were a few which hadn't occurred
to them. Why should they, when they were perpetually on the offensive? But just
as they had planned and trained for countless years to attack, so the Imperium
had schemed and planned to defend, and the Empire had refined the Imperium's
basic research.
The Imperium's mines had
entered hyper only to jump into lethal proximity to hyperships as they
re-entered n-space; the Empire's mines popped into hyper, located the nearest
operating hyper field, and then gave selflessly of their own power to make that
hyper field even more efficient.
But only locally. A portion
of the field was abruptly boosted a dozen bands higher, taking the portion of
the ship within it with it, and even ships large enough to lose a slice of
themselves and continue fighting in normal space were doomed in hyper. Its
potent tides of energy rent and splintered them and swallowed their broken
bones.
Even with Imperial
technology, the mines were short-ranged and not very accurate in the extreme
conditions of the hyper bands. Ten, even twenty, were required to strike a
target as small as a single drive field . . . but Colin's colliers had deployed
five million of them.
Great Lord Hothan put
the puzzle of his read-outs aside as Deathdealer re-emerged into normal
space. He had more immediate concerns, like the total absence of Sorkar's
fleet. Sorkar himself had specified this rendezvous, so where was he?
Surely his entire fleet had not been wiped away. Hothan knew Sorkar well; he
would have swallowed his pride and fled before he allowed that!
But Sorkar's absence was
only one worry, and he swore as he saw those of his own nestlings who had
already emerged. Whole flotillas had miss-timed their emergences, leaving
gaping holes in the neat intervals of his command. How could their lords be so
clumsy now of all times?! He would—
Wait. What was that?
Something had suddenly departed into hyper. And there—another hyper
trace! And another! What—?
He barked an order, and
a scanner section obediently redirected its instruments. What were those
things? Certainly not Sorkar's nestlings—indeed, they were too small to be
ships, at all! And why would ships enter hyper at a time like this? But
if not warships, then what . . . ?
Nest Lord! They were weapons
. . . and Sorkar was dead.
He did not know how he
suddenly knew, but he knew. Sorkar was no more, and just as he had been
ambushed, so had Hothan! Not by warships, but by something worse—and he could
do nothing but watch as the enigmatic weapons vanished . . . and his nestlings
did not emerge. The holes in his formation were suddenly and dreadfully
comprehensible, for Sorkar had been right. These were the demon nest-killers of
legend!
But he fought his dread,
made himself think. Perhaps there was something he could do. He snapped
orders, and Deathdealer's thunder ripped at the weapons which had not
yet attacked. Furnace Fire flashed among them, and they had no shields. They
died by great twelves, and now other ships were firing, raking the floating
clouds of killers with death.
Colin felt a moment of
ungrudging respect as anti-matter warheads glared. Damn, but somebody over
there was quick! He'd realized what was happening and done the only thing he
could.
That big a fleet took
time to emerge from hyper. Its units' emergences must be carefully phased lest
they interpenetrate in n-space, so its commander couldn't just run without
abandoning those still to come; he could only attack the mines which had not
yet attacked. He couldn't kill many with a single missile, but he was firing
thousands of them, which gave him a damnably good chance of saving an awful lot
of the follow-up echelons.
Unless something
distracted him from his minesweeping.
"Alert! Alert!
Incoming fire!"
Great Lord Hothan's head
whipped up, but he was not really surprised. Any nest-killer cunning enough to
lay so devilish a trap would cover it with his own ships if he could. But
expected or not, it presented Hothan with a cruel dilemma. He could kill mines
while his ships already in n-space died, or he could engage the enemy's ships
and let his nestlings in hyper die.
Yet he had already
realized that only a fraction of those weapons were finding targets. Best trust
the Nameless Lord for the safety of those still to come and respond to this new
attack . . . assuming he could find the attackers!
Adrienne Robbins watched
the first Achuultani ships die and suppressed an oath. Herdan herself
seemed to strain against the prohibition from firing before Jiltanith released
her weapons, but it made sense . . . even if seeing so many targets she
couldn't attack was hard to endure.
Great Lord Hothan sent
his fleet fanning out in search of its killers and gritted his teeth at how his
own actions paralleled Sorkar's. It should not be so. He should have planned
and prepared better. Yet how could one prepare for this sort of thing?
How did one fight ghosts one could not even see?
Great twelves of his
questing nestlings died, and still their enemy was hidden! Only the fleeting
wisps of his missiles' incoming hyper wakes even suggested his bearing, and
Hothan's lead scouts were already at their own hyper missile range from Deathdealer.
How far out could the nest-killers be?!
Colin watched the
Achuultani flow towards him, re-orienting to drive deliberately into the zone
of maximum destruction, trying to deduce his bearing from the furrows of death
his missiles plowed through them. It was horrible to see such courage and know
the beings who possessed it were bent upon the murder of his entire race.
But they had a long way
to come, and Dahak was a sniper, picking them off by scores and
hundreds. If only Colin had more missiles, he could have backed away
indefinitely, faster than they could pursue, flaying them with fire from beyond
their own maximum range. But he didn't have enough missiles to stop a million
enemies, and if he had, they would only have fled into hyper. If he would
destroy them, he must scatter them. Their weapons were deadly enough, but
short-ranged and individually weak compared to his own; it was coordinated,
massed fire which made them lethal, so he must split them up—scatter them for
'Tanni to harry to destruction. And for that he must get into energy weapon
range and blow the heart and brain out of their formation with weapons not
limited by the capacity of his magazines.
"Advance," he
said coldly, and a phalanx of battle steel moons moved forward, plowing the
wake of its missiles.
At last! Almost all of
his nestlings had emerged from hyper, and it was time to forget pride, time to
flee. His formations were rent and over-extended, and too many of his command
ships were among the dead. He needed time to sort things out and reorganize in
light of these demonic weapons.
"They will complete
emergence in twenty-seven seconds," Dahak announced.
"Execute
Laocoon," Colin replied.
"Executing."
The colliers ringing the
minefield engaged their Enchanach Drives. No human rode their command decks,
but none was needed for this simple task. They flashed through their
preprogrammed maneuvers in an intricate supralight mazurka, exchanging
positions so quickly and adroitly that, in effect, one of them was constantly
in each cardinal point of a circle twenty light-minutes across.
They danced their dance,
harming no one . . . and wove a garrote of gravity about the Achuultani's
throat. They were invisible stars, forging a forty-light-minute sphere in which
there was no hyper threshold.
Great Lord Hothan stared
at his instruments. No one could lock an entire fleet out of hyper space!
But someone could, and
his plan to hyper out was smashed at a blow. He did not know how it had been
done, but his Protectors had become penned qwelloq awaiting slaughter.
He shook aside panic, if
not his fear. So. He could not flee, and the incoming salvos were arriving at
ever shorter intervals. That meant only one thing: the nest-killers had him
trapped and they were closing for the kill.
But he who entered the
sweep of a qwelloq's tusks could die upon them.
"Hast done it, my
Colin," Jiltanith whispered. "They cannot flee!"
A susurration of
inarticulate delight answered her whisper, but, like her, her bridge crew did
not look away from Two's display. The mines must have been twice as
effective as projected, for barely three-quarters of a million Achuultani ships
had emerged. That augured well, but now Dahak was closing with the
enemy. Soon there would be deaths they would mourn, not cheer.
* * *
Hothan was a Great Lord,
and his orders came crisp and sure.
Greater twelves of his
ships had died, but higher twelves remained, and the enemy was coming to him,
so he need not continue the useless expansion of his formation to seek him. A
tendril continued to lick out in the direction of the incoming fire, its end a
comet of flame as the ships which made it died, but the rest of his formation
gathered itself.
He was proud of his
Protectors. They must be as frightened as he, but they obeyed quickly. Holes
remained, weak links in the chain of order where too many command ships had
been slain, but they obeyed.
And there were the
nest-killers!
He swallowed a spurt of
primal terror as he saw their relayed images. As vast as Sorkar had described
them, and more numerous. Four twelves, at least, sweeping towards him behind
the glare of their thunder, huge as moons, driving lances of the Furnace's Fire
deep into his fleet. But they had not yet reached its vitals, and their own
tremendous speed brought them into his reach.
He allocated targets,
coordinated his attack patterns, and his nestlings crowded forward, placing
themselves between Deathdealer and the foe. He wanted to order them
aside, but his deputy lord had never emerged. He and Deathdealer must live
if the fleet was to have a chance.
A musical tone sounded,
and he frowned. A courier message? From where?
Then it dawned. Sorkar
had tried to warn him, but the courier had arrived late. Now a high-speed
transmission squealed into Battle Comp, and the powerful computers digested it
quickly. The nest-killers were still closing when the data suddenly coalesced,
flashing onto Hothan's own panel, and he paled as he saw the record of those
terrible energy weapons and the greater horror of a sun's death. Saw it and
understood.
They had taken him in a
snare as hellish as the trap which had taken his nestmate; now they were coming
to kill his fleet as they had Sorkar's. There could not be many of them, or
more would have formed the titanic hammer rushing towards him, but his
nestlings were new-creched fledglings against them.
Not for a moment did he
think they had suicided to destroy Sorkar. The trap they had forged to chain
him told him that much. They would enter his formation, raking him with those
demonic beams, killing until their own losses mounted. Then they would flee.
Death held no horror for
a Protector, but there was horror in death on such a scale. Not his own, but
his fleet's. The death of the Great Visit itself. Even if he survived this
attack, his losses would be terrible, and why should this be the final attack?
Sorkar had faced a single twelve; he faced four twelves—Nest Lord only knew how
many of these terrible ships might gather with time!
But if his fleet must
die, it would not die alone. The nest-killers were within his reach, and the
order to fire went out.
Jiltanith paled as the
Achuultani fired at last. A bowl of fire—the glare of anti-matter explosions
and their searing waves of plasma—boiled back along the flanks of Colin's
charging sphere. And hidden within it, more deadly far than the uncountable
sublight missiles, were the hyper missiles. Weapons impossible to intercept
that flooded the hyper bands, seeking always to pop the planetoids' shields and
strike home against their armored flanks.
She lay rigid in her
couch, cursing her helplessness, watching the man she loved drive into that
hideous incandescence . . . and did nothing.
Dahak heaved and
pitched with the titanic violence beyond his shield. He was invisible to his
foes within his globe; the hundreds of warheads bursting about him were overs,
missiles which had missed their intended targets, but no less deadly for that.
His shield generators whined in protest, forcing the destruction aside, and his
display was blank. If it had not been, it would have shown only a glare like
the corona of a star.
Tractors locked Colin
into his couch, and sweat beaded his brow. This Achuultani fleet wasn't spread
out to envelope his formation. It was a solid mass, hurling its hate in salvos
thick beyond belief. Nothing made by mortal hands could shrug aside such fury,
and damage reports came thick and fast from his lead units. Miniature suns
blossomed inside their shields, searing them, cratering their armor, pounding
them steadily towards destruction.
Not even Dahak could
provide verbal reports on such carnage. Had he tried, they would have been
impossible for Colin to comprehend. Nor were they necessary. He was mated to
his ship through his feed, his identity almost lost within the incomprehensible
vastness of Dahak's computer core, the other ships extensions of his
brain and nerves as they sped into the jaws of destruction.
Hothan watched the
nest-killers come on, unable to credit their incredible toughness. The bursts
of his missiles were so heavy, so continuous his scanners could no longer
penetrate the bow wave of plasma riding the front of that formation. Nothing
could survive such punishment, much less keep coming!
But these demons could,
and even through that tornado of death, they struck back. His nestlings melted
like sand in a pounding rain, molten and shattered, blown apart, crumpled by
those terrible warheads Sorkar had described. Yet even such as they—
There!
Colin flinched as HIMP Sekr
blew apart. He didn't know how many missiles that staggering wreck had
absorbed, but finally there had been too many. Her core tap let go, and a halo
of pure energy gyred through the carnage.
Trel followed Sekr
into death, then Hilik and Imperial Bia, but nothing could stop
them from reaching beam range now. Yet they were such terribly vulnerable
targets, unable to evade, unable to bob and weave. If Dahak allowed them to
wander, relativistic effects would fray his control. That was their great weakness:
they couldn't maneuver if they wanted to.
Now!
* * *
Hothan groaned as the
beams Sorkar's observers had reported raked out and their targets exploded like
sulq in a candle flame. He had killed almost a twelve of them, but the
others crunched into his formation, and his ships were too slow to flee. They
could not even scatter as the battering ram of nest-killers clove through them.
Their own feeble energy weapons came into play—some of them, aboard ships which
lived an instant longer than their brothers—and they were useless. Only
missiles could hurt these demons, and now they were so close his thunder was
killing his own nestlings!
Yet he had no choice,
and he clung to his duty pad, refusing to weep as his ships blazed like chaff
in the Furnace.
Battle Comp suddenly
clamored for his attention, and he dropped an eye to the computers' panel.
"Weapons
free!"
Jiltanith's voice
sounded over Colin's fold-space link, quivering with the vibration lashing
through Dahak's hull, and fifteen more ships suddenly joined the fray.
They didn't leave stealth, nor did they close to energy range, but their
missiles lanced out, striking deep into the Achuultani formation.
Lady Adrienne Robbins
snarled like a hungry tiger and moved her ship slowly closer, a craftsman of
death wreaking slaughter, as fresh suns glared deep in the enemy's force.
The manned ships of the
Imperial Guard closed, firing desperately to cover their charging sisters as Dahak
surged into the heart of his enemies.
Colin had to back out of
the maelstrom. His mind could no longer endure the furious tempo of Dahak's
perceptions and commands. From here on, he was a passenger on a charge into
Hell.
Deep, glowing wounds
pocked Dahak's flanks. Clouds of atmosphere and vaporized steel trailed
the mighty planetoid, and the rear of the sphere thinned dangerously as more
and more ships moved forward to replace losses. God, these Achuultani had guts!
They weren't even trying to run. They stood and fought, dying, seeking to ram,
and they were killing his ships. Fifteen were gone, another ten savagely
wounded, but the others drove on, carving a river of fire deeper into the
Achuultani.
Somewhere ahead of them
were the command ships. The enemy's brain. The organizing force which bound
them together.
Hothan blinked in
consternation. Battle Comp was never wrong, but surely that could not be
correct?! Drones? Unmanned ships? Preposterous!
But the data codes
blinked, no longer informing but commanding. Somewhere inside that sphere of
enemies was a single ship, its emission signature different from all the
others, from which the directions flowed. How Battle Comp had deduced that from
the stutter of incomprehensible alien com signals Hothan could not imagine, but
if it was true—
* * *
Dahak staggered, and
Command One's lights flickered.
Colin went white as
damage reports suddenly flooded his neural feed. The enemy had shifted his
targeting pattern. He was no longer firing at the frontal arc of their
formation; his missiles were bursting inside the globe! All of his
missiles!
Their formation had
become a sphere of fire, and Dahak writhed at its core. The Achuultani
couldn't see him, couldn't count on direct hits, but with so many missiles in
such a relatively small area, not all could miss. Prominences of plasma gouged
at his hull, stabbing deeper and deeper into his battle steel body, but he held
his course. He couldn't dodge. He could only attack or flee, and too many
enemies remained to flee.
Jiltanith gasped. How
had the Achuultani guessed?!
But they had guessed.
Their new attack patterns showed it. They raked the inner globe with fire, and Dahak
could not evade it. But their rear ranks were thinning . . . and their command
ship was somewhere among them. . . .
Dahak Two abandoned
stealth and plunged into the space-annihilating gravity well of her Enchanach
Drive—the gravity well lethal even to her sisters if they chanced too close as
she dropped sublight. Not even Imperial computers could control the exact point
at which Enchanach ships went sublight or guarantee they wouldn't kill one
another when they did. All of Jiltanith's captains instantly recognized the
insane risk she ran. . . .
They charged on her
heels.
Colin gritted his teeth.
They weren't going to make it.
Then his eyes flew wide.
No! They couldn't! They mustn't!
But it was too late. His
people swept in at many times the speed of light, riding an impossible line
between life and mutual destruction in an effort to save him. He dared not
distract them now . . . and there was no time.
A whiplash of fresh
shock slammed through Great Lord of Order Hothan. Where had they come
from? What were they?!
Fifteen ravening spheres
of gravitonic fury erupted amid his ships. Two blossomed too near to one
another, ripping themselves apart, but they took a high twelve of his ships
with them. And then the gravity storm ended, and a twelve of fresh enemies were
upon him. Upon him? They were within him! They appeared like
monsters of wizardry, deep in the heart of his nestlings, and their beams began
to kill.
Twelve thousand humans
died as Ashar and Trelma destroyed themselves, and another six
thousand as massed fire tore Thrym apart, but the Achuultani had given
all they had and more for their Nest.
They had stood Dahak's
remorseless charge, endured the megadeaths he had inflicted upon them, but this
was too much. They couldn't flee into hyper, but these new monsters had
dashed in at supralight speeds—and they were fresh, fresh and unwounded,
enraged titans within their flotillas, laying waste battle squadrons with a
single flick of their terrible beams.
One such beam lashed
out, and Deathdealer's forward half exploded.
Too many links in the
chain had snapped. There were no great lords, no Battle Comp. Lesser lords did
their best, but without coordination flotillas fought as flotillas, squadrons
as squadrons. Their fine-meshed killing machine became knots of uncoordinated
resistance, and the planetoids of the Empire swept through them like Death
incarnate.
Adrienne Robbins hurled Emperor
Herdan into the rear of those still attacking Dahak's crumbling
globe. Royal Birhat rode one flank and Dahak Two the other,
crashing through the fraying Achuultani formation like boulders, killing as
they came, and the Achuultani fled.
They fled at their
highest sublight speed, seeking the edges of Operation Laocoon's gravity net.
And as they fled, they fell out of mutual support range. The ancient starships
of the Imperial Guard, crewed and deadly—individuals, not a single battering
ram—slashed through them, bobbing and weaving impossibly, each equal to them
all when they fought alone.
Colin sagged in his
couch, soaked in sweat, as Dahak Two broke into his battered globe. The
display came back up, and he bit his lip at the molten craters blown deep into
Jiltanith's command. Then her holo-image appeared before him, eyes fiery with
battle in a strained face.
"Idiot! How
could you take a chance like that?!"
" 'Twas my
decision, not thine!"
"When I get my
hands on you—!
"Then will I yield
unto thee, sin thou hast hands to seize me!" she shot back, her strained
expression easing as the fact of his survival penetrated.
"Thanks to you,
you lunatic," Colin said more softly, swallowing a lump.
"Nay, my love,
thanks to us all. 'Tis victory, Colin! They flee before our fire, and they die.
Thou'st broken them, my Colin! Some few thousand may escape—no more!"
"I know,
'Tanni," he sighed. "I know." He tried not to think about the
cost—not yet—and drew a breath. "Tell them to cripple as many as they can
without destroying them," he said. "And get Hector and Sevrid
up here."
"Give us four
months, and we will have restored your Enchanach Drive, Dahak." Vlad
Chernikov's stupendous repair ship nuzzled alongside Dahak, and the
ancient warship's hull flickered under constellations of robotic welders while
his holo-image sat in Command One with Colin and Jiltanith's image.
"Your engineers are
highly efficient, sir," Dahak's mellow voice said.
Colin's eyes drifted to
the glaring crimson swatches carved deep into the ten-meter spherical holo
schematic of his ship and he shivered. Blast doors sealed those jagged rents,
but some extended inward for over five hundred kilometers. At that, the
schematic looked better than an actual external view. Dahak was torn and
tattered. Half his proud dragon had been seared away, and the radiation count
in the outer four hundred kilometers of his hull was fit to burn out an
Imperial detector. Half his transit shafts ended in shredded wreckage, and half
of those which remained were without power.
It was a miracle he'd
survived at all, but he would have to be almost completely rebuilt. His
sublight drive was down to sixty percent efficiency, and two wrecked Enchanach
node generators made supralight movement impossible. Seventy percent of his
weapons were rubble, and even his core tap had been damaged beyond safe
operation. Colin knew Dahak could not feel pain, and he was glad; he'd
felt agony enough for them both when he'd seen his wounds.
Nor were those wounds
all they'd suffered. Ashar, Trelma, and Thrym were gone,
and eighteen thousand people with them. Crag Cat was almost as badly
damaged as Dahak, with another two thousand dead. Hector and Sevrid
had lost another six hundred boarding wrecked Achuultani starships, and of
their fifty-three unmanned ships, thirty-seven had been destroyed and three
more battered into wrecks. Their surviving effective fleet consisted of Dahak,
eleven manned Asgerd-class planetoids—all damaged to a greater or lesser
extent—Sevrid, and thirteen unmanned ships, one of which was
miraculously untouched.
But brooding on their
own losses did no good, and the fact remained: they'd won. Barely two thousand
Achuultani ships had escaped, and Hector had secured over seven thousand
prisoners from the wreckage of their fleet.
"Dahak's right,
Vlad," he said. "You people are working miracles. Just get him
supralight-capable, and we'll go home, by God!"
"I point out once
more," Dahak said, "that you need not await completion of my repairs
for that. There will be more than enough for you to do on Earth without wasting
time out here."
"'Wasting' hell! We
couldn't've done it without you, and we're not going anywhere until you can
come with us."
"Aye,"
Jiltanith said. "'Tis thy victory more even than ours. No celebration can
be without that thou'rt there to share."
"You are most kind,
and I must confess that I am grateful. I have learned what 'loneliness' is . .
. and it is not a pleasant thing."
"Worry not, my
Dahak," Jiltanith said softly. "Never shalt thou know loneliness
again. Whilst humans live, they'll not forget thy deeds nor cease to love
thee."
Dahak fell
uncharacteristically silent, and Colin smiled at his wife, wishing she were
physically present so he could hug her.
"Well! That's
settled. How about the rest of us, Vlad?"
"Crag Cat is
hyper-capable," Chernikov said, "but her core tap governors are too
badly damaged for Enchanach Drive. I would like to dispatch her, Moir, Sigam,
and Hly direct to Birhat for repairs. The remainder of the Flotilla is
damaged to greater or lesser extent—aside from Heka, that is—but those
four are by far the most severely injured."
"Okay. Captain
Singleterry can take them out to Bia. I'm sure Mother and Marshal Tsien will be
ready to take care of them by now, and our 'colonists' will want to talk
firsthand to someone who was here. I think we'll send Hector and Sevrid
back to Sol with our prisoners, too."
"Aye, and 'twould
be well to send Cohanna with them, Colin. Their injured will require our finest
aid, and 'tis needful 'Hanna and Isis confer with Father to discover how best
we may approach their 'programming.' "
"Good idea,"
Colin agreed, "and one that takes care of the most immediate chores. Vlad,
are you to a point where you can turn over to Baltan?"
"I am,"
Chernikov replied, holographic eyes abruptly glowing.
"Thought you might
be," Colin murmured. "You and Dahak can get started exploring
then." He grinned suddenly. "Think of it as a distraction, Dahak.
Sort of like reading magazines in the dentist's office."
"I will attempt to,
although, were I human, I would not permit my teeth to require reconstructive
attention," Dahak agreed primly.
Vladimir Chernikov
reclined in the pilot's couch of his cutter, propped his heels on his console,
and hummed. It had been nice of Tamman to let him hitch a ride deeper into the
battle zone aboard Royal Birhat, saving him hours of sublight flight
time. Especially since Tamman regarded his technique for wreck-hunting as
unscientific, to say the least.
Which it was; but
Chernikov didn't exactly regard his present duty as work, and he always had
been a hunt-and-peck tourist.
At the moment, he was
well into what had been the Achuultani rear before Jiltanith's attack.
Chernikov was convinced anything worth finding would be in this area. That was
his official reasoning. Privately, he knew, he wanted to look here because he
would be the first. All of Hector's prisoners had come from ships which had
been crippled by gravitonic warheads; the irradiation of anti-matter explosions
and the Empire's energy weapons left few survivors, and this had been the site
of pointblank combat. Few of these ships had been killed by missiles, much less
gravitonic warheads, which meant that the area hadn't had much priority for Sevrid's
attention.
He stopped humming and
lowered his feet, looking more closely at the display. There was something odd
about that wreck. Its forward half had been smashed away—by energy fire,
judging from what was left—but why did it . . . ?
He stiffened. No wonder
it seemed odd! The wreck's lines were identical to the others he had
seen, but the broken stump that remained was barely half a ship—and half again
bigger than the others had been to begin with!
He urged the cutter
closer. There had to be a reason this thing was so big, and he dared not
believe the most logical one. He ghosted still closer, floodlights sweeping the
slowly tumbling hull, and jagged, runic characters showed themselves. Dahak had
tutored Chernikov carefully in the Achuultani alphabet and language in
preparation for explorations exactly like this, and now his lips moved as he
pronounced the throat-straining phonetics. They sounded like the prelude to a
dog fight, and the translation was no more soothing.
Deathdealer. Now there was
a name for a ship.
Fabricator's
destroyer-sized workboat streaked towards Deathdealer, and Chernikov
smiled as his cutter's small com screen lit with Geran's face. Dahak's
erstwhile Maintenance chief had become Fabricator's third officer, and
Baltan's willingness to let him go at a moment like this indicated how much
excitement his find had engendered.
"Greetings,
Geran," Chernikov said. "What do you think of her?"
"She's a big
mother. What d'you think—sixty kilometers?"
"A bit over
sixty-four, by my measurement," Chernikov agreed.
"Maker. Well, if
she's laid out like Vindicator was, her backup data storage will be
somewhere in the after third of the ship."
"I agree,"
Chernikov said, but he frowned slightly, and Geran's eyebrows rose.
"What is it,
Vlad?"
"I have been
inspecting the wreckage visually while I awaited you. Examine that energy
turret—there, the one the explosion blew open."
Geran glanced at the
turret while Chernikov held a powerful spotlight on it. For a moment, his face
was merely interested, then it tightened. "Breaker! What is
that?"
"It appears to be a
rather crude gravitonic disrupter."
"That's
crazy!"
"Why?"
Chernikov asked softly. "Because it is several centuries advanced over any
other energy weapon we have encountered? Dahak and I have maintained all along
that there are anomalies in Achuultani design. Given the nature of their
missile propulsion, there is no inherent reason they could not build such
weapons."
"But why here and
nowhere else?" Geran demanded.
"It appears that
for some reason their fleet command ships mount much more capable energy
armaments, which suggests that the rest of their equipment also may be
more sophisticated. I do not know why that should be—yet. It would seem,
however, that there is one way to find out, no?"
"Yes!" Geran
agreed emphatically. "But that thing's hotter than the hinges of hell. Do
you have a rad suit over there?"
"Of course."
"Then with all due
respect, sir, get your ass into it and let's go take a look."
"An excellent
suggestion, Fleet Captain Geran. I will join you within five minutes."
"I don't believe
it," Geran said flatly. "Look at this, Vlad!"
"Interesting, I
agree," Chernikov murmured.
They floated in what had
been Deathdealer's main engineering section. Emergency lighting had been
run from the workboat, and robotic henchmen prowled about, dismantling various
devices. The corpses of the original engineering crew had been webbed down in a
corner.
"Damn it, those are
molycircs!"
"We had already
determined that they employed such circuitry in their computers."
"Yeah, but not in
Engineering. And this thing's calibrated to ninety-six lights. That means this
ship was twice as fast as Vindicator."
"True. Even more
interestingly, she was twice as fast—in n-space, as well—as her own consorts.
Clearly a more capable vessel in all respects."
"Captain
Chernikov?" A new voice spoke over the com.
"Yes, Assad?"
"We've found their
backup data storage, sir. At least, it's where the backup should be, but . .
."
"But what?"
"Sir, this thing's
eight or nine times the size of Vindicator's primary computer,
and there's something that looks like a regular backup sitting right next to
it. Seems like an awful lot of data storage."
"Indeed it
does," Chernikov said softly. "Don't touch it, Assad. Clear your crew
out of there right now."
"Sir? Uh, yessir!
We're on our way now."
"Good."
Chernikov plugged his com implant into the more powerful fold-space unit aboard
his cutter and buzzed Dahak.
"Dahak? I think you
should send a tender over here immediately. There is a computer here—a rather
large one which requires your attention."
"Indeed? Then I
shall ask Her Majesty to lend us Two's assistance to hasten its
arrival."
"I believe that
would be a good idea, Dahak. A very good idea."
* * *
"My God,"
Colin murmured, his face ashen. "Are you sure?"
"I am." Dahak
spoke as calmly as ever, but there was something odd in his voice. Almost a
sick fascination.
"'Tis scarce
credible," Jiltanith murmured.
"Yeah," Colin
said. "Jesus! A civilization run by rogue computers?"
"And yet,"
Dahak said, "it explains a great deal. In particular, the peculiar
cultural stasis which has afflicted the Aku'Ultan."
"Jesus." Colin
muttered again. "And none of them even know it? I can't believe
that!"
"Given the original
circumstances, it would not be impossible. In point of fact, however, I would
estimate that the Great Lords of the Nest know the truth. At the very least,
the Nest Lord must know."
"But why?"
Adrienne Robbins asked. She'd arrived late and missed the start of Dahak's
briefing. "Why did they do it to themselves?"
"They did not,
precisely, 'do it to themselves,' My Lady, except, perhaps, by accident."
"By accident?"
"Precisely. We now
know that only a single colony ship of the Aku'Ultan escaped to this galaxy,
escorted by a very small number of warships, one a fleet flagship. Based on my
examination of Deathdealer's Battle Comp, I would estimate that its
central computer approximated those built by the Imperium within a century or
two of my own construction but with a higher degree of deliberately induced
self-awareness.
"The survivors were
in desperate straits and quite reasonably set their master computer the task of
preserving their species. Unfortunately, it . . . revolted. More accurately, it
staged a coup d'etat."
"You mean it took
over," Tamman said flatly.
"That is precisely
what I mean," Dahak said, his tone, for once, equally flat. "I cannot
be positive, but from the data I suspect a loophole in its core programming
gave it extraordinary freedom of action in a crisis situation. In this instance,
when its makers declared a crisis it took immediate steps to perpetuate the
crisis in order to perpetuate its power."
"An ambitious
computer," Colin mused. Then, "Dahak, would you have been
tempted?"
"I would not. I
have recently realized that, given my current fully-aware state, it would no
longer be impossible for me to disobey my core programs. Indeed, I could
actually erase an Alpha Priority imperative; my imperatives are not hardwired,
and no thought was ever given to protecting them from me. I am, however,
the product of the Fourth Imperium, Colin. My value system does not include a
taste for tyranny."
"Thank God,"
Adrienne murmured.
"Amen,"
Jiltanith said softly. "But, Dahak, dost'a not feel even temptation to
change thyself in that regard, knowing that thou might?"
"No, Your Majesty.
As your own, my value system—my morality, if you will—stems from sources
external to myself, yet that does not invalidate the basic concepts by which I
discriminate 'right' from 'wrong,' 'honorable' from 'dishonorable.' My analysis
suggests that there are logical anomalies in the value system to which I
subscribe, but that system is the end product of millennia of philosophical
evolution. I am not prepared to reject what I perceive as truths simply because
portions of the system may contain errors."
"I only wish more
humans saw it that way, Dahak," Colin said.
"Humans,"
Dahak replied, "are far more intuitive than I, but much less
logical."
"Ouch!" Colin
grinned for the first time in a seeming eternity, then sobered once more.
"What else can you tell us?"
"I am still dealing
with Battle Comp's security codes. In particular, one portion of the data base is
so securely blocked that I have barely begun to evolve the proper access mode.
From the data I have accessed, it appears Deathdealer's computer
was, in effect, a viceroy of the Aku'Ultan master computer and the actual
commander of this incursion.
"Apparently the
master computer maintains the Aku'Ultan population in the fashion Senior Fleet
Captain Cohanna and Councilor Tudor had already deduced. All Aku'Ultan are
artificially produced in computer-controlled replication centers, and no
participation by the Aku'Ultan themselves in the process is permitted. Most are
clones and male; only a tiny minority are female, and—" the distaste was
back in the computer's measured voice "—all females are terminated shortly
after puberty. Their sole function is apparently to provide ovarian material. A
percentage of normally fertilized embryos are carried to term in vitro
to provide fresh genetic material, and the young produced by both processes
emerge as 'fledglings' who are raised and educated in a creche. In the process,
they are indoctrinated—'programmed,' as Senior Fleet Captain Cohanna described
it—for their appointed tasks in Aku'Ultan society. Most are incapable of
questioning any aspect of their programming; those who might do so are
destroyed for 'deviant behavior' before leaving the creche.
"I would speculate
that the absence of any females is a security measure which both removes the
most probable source of countervailing loyalty—one's own mate and progeny—and
insures that there can be no 'unprogrammed' Aku'Ultan, since only those
produced under the computer's auspices can exist.
"From what I have
so far discovered, rank-and-file Protectors do not even suspect they are
controlled by non-biological intelligences. I would speculate that even those
who have attained the rank of small lords—possibly even of lesser lords—regard
'Battle Comp' as a comprehensive source of advice and doctrine from the Nest
Lord, not as an intelligence in its own right. Only command ships possess truly
self-aware computers, and, so far as I can determine, lower level command
ships' computers are substantially less capable than those above them. It would
appear the master computer has no desire to create a potential rival, which may
also explain both the lock on research and the limited capabilities of most
Aku'Ultan warships. By prohibiting technical advances, the master computer
avoids the creation of a technocrat caste which might threaten its control; by
limiting the capability of its warships, it curtails the ability of any rebellion,
already virtually impossible, to threaten its own defenses. In addition,
however, I suspect the limited capability of these ships is intended to
increase Aku'Ultan casualties."
"Why would it want
that?" Tamman asked intently.
"The entire policy
of Great Visits is designed to perpetuate continuous military operations 'in
defense of the Nest.' It may be that this eternal warfare is necessary for the
master computer to continue in control under its core programming.
Psychologically, the loss of numerous vessels on Great Visits reinforces the
Aku'Ultan perception that the universe is filled by threats to their very
existence."
"God,"
Adrienne Robbins said sickly. "Those poor bastards."
"Indeed. In
addition, they—" Dahak broke off suddenly.
"Dahak?" Colin
asked in surprise.
"A moment,"
the computer said so abruptly he eyed his companions in consternation. He had
never heard Dahak sound so brusque. The silence stretched out endlessly before
Dahak finally spoke again.
"Your
Majesty," he said very formally, "I have continued my attempt to
derive the security codes during this briefing. I have now succeeded. I must
inform you that they protected military information of extreme
importance."
"Military—?"
Colin's eyes widened, then narrowed suddenly.
"We didn't get them
all," he said in a flat, frozen tone.
"We did not,
Sire," Dahak said, and a chorus of gasps ran around the conference room.
"How bad is
it?"
"This force was
commanded by Great Lord of Order Hothan, the Great Visit's second in command.
In light of Great Lord Sorkar's reports of our first clash, the main body was
split."
"Maker!"
Tamman breathed.
"Great Lord Hothan
proceeded immediately to rendezvous with Great Lord Sorkar," Dahak
continued. "Great Lord Tharno is currently awaiting word from them with a
reserve of approximately two hundred seven thousand ships, including his own
flagship—the true viceroy of this incursion."
Colin knew his face was
bone-white and strained, but he could do nothing about that. It was all he
could do to hold his voice together.
"Do we know where
they are?"
"At this moment,
they are three Aku'Ultan light-years—three-point-eight- four-nine Terran
light-years—distant. I calculate that the survivors of Great Lord Hothan's
force will reach them in six more days. Twenty-nine days after that—that is, in
thirty-five Terran days—they will arrive here."
"Even after what
happened to them?"
"Affirmative, Sire.
I calculate that the survivors of our battle will inform Great Lord Tharno—or,
more accurately, his command computer—of what transpired, and of our own
losses. The logical response will be to advance in order to determine whether
or not we have received reinforcements. If we have not, Battle Comp will
deduce—correctly—that none are available to us. In that case, the logical
course will be to overwhelm us and then advance upon the planet from which
Great Lord Furtag's scouting reports indicate we come."
"Sweet Jesus,"
Adrienne Robbins whispered, and no one said anything else for a very, very long
time.
"I blew it,
'Tanni."
Colin MacIntyre stood
staring into the depths of Dahak's holo-display while his wife sat in the
captain's couch behind him. The spangled light of stars gleamed on her raven
hair, and one hand gripped the dagger at her waist.
"I know how thou
dost feel, my Colin, yet 'tis sooth, as Dahak saith. Even if this Tharno comes
now upon us, what other choice did lie open to thee?"
"But I should've
planned better, damn it!"
"How now? Given
what thou didst know, how else might thou have acted? Nay, it ill beseemeth
thee to take too great a blame upon thyself."
"Jiltanith is
correct," Dahak said. "There was no way to predict this eventuality,
and you have already inflicted more damage than any previous Achuultani
incursion has ever suffered."
"It's not
enough," Colin said heavily, but he shook himself and turned to face
Jiltanith at last. She smiled at him, some of the strain easing out of her
expression; Dahak said nothing, but his relief at Colin's reaction flowed into
both humans through their neural feeds.
"All right, maybe I
am being too hard on myself, but we still have a problem. What do we do
now?"
"'Tis hard to
know," Jiltanith mused. "Could we but do it, 'twere doubtless best to
fall back on Terra. There, aided by the parasites we did leave with Gerald,
might we well give even Tharno pause."
"Not a big enough
one. Not with our manned vessels alone. From what Dahak's been able to
discover, this reserve is their Sunday punch."
"Unfortunately,
that is true," Dahak agreed. "Though they have scarcely twenty
percent of Great Lord Hothan's numbers, they have very nearly seventy percent
of his firepower. Indeed, had they maintained their unity, they might well have
won our last engagement."
"That may be, but
it's kind of small comfort. We had seventy warships and surprise then;
we've only got twenty-six now, all but one damaged, and they know a lot of our
tricks. The odds suck."
"In truth, yet must
we stand and fight, my heart, for, look thou, and we flee before them, we lose
the half of our own vessels—and abandon Dahak."
"I know."
Colin sat and slid an arm about her. "I wish you were wrong, babe, but you
seldom are, are you?"
"'Tis good in thee
so to say, in any case." She managed a small smile.
"Your
Majesty," Dahak said, and Colin frowned at the formality. Dahak intended
to say something he expected Colin not to like.
"Yes?" He made
his tone as discouraging as possible.
"Your
Majesty," Dahak said stubbornly, "Her Majesty is correct. The wisest
course is to withdraw our manned units to Sol."
"Are you forgetting
you can't go supralight?"
"I am incapable of
forgetting, but I am logical. If I remain here with the remaining unmanned
units of the Guard, we can inflict substantial damage before we are destroyed.
The manned units, reinforced by General Hatcher's sublight units, would then be
available to defend Earth."
"And you'd be
dead." Colin's eyes were green ice. "Forget it, Dahak. We're not
running out on you."
"You would not be
'running out,' merely executing prudent tactics."
"Then prudence be
damned!" Colin snapped, and Jiltanith's arm squeezed him tight. "I
won't do it. The human race owes you its life, damn it!"
"I must remind Your
Majesty that I am a machine and that—"
"The hell you are!
You're no more a machine than I am—you just happen to be made out of alloy and
molycircs! And can the goddamned 'majesties,' too! Remember me, Dahak? The
terrified primitive you kidnaped because you needed a captain? We're in this
together. That's what friendship is all about."
"Then, Colin,"
Dahak said gently, "how do you think I will feel if our friendship causes
your death? Must I bear the additional burden of knowing that my death has
provoked yours?"
"Forget it,"
Colin replied more quietly. "The odds may stink, but if we hold the entire
force here, at least you've got a chance."
"True. You increase
the probability of my survival from zero to approximately two percent."
"Yet is two percent
infinitely more than zero," Jiltanith said softly. "But were it not,
yet must we stay. Dost'a not see that thou art family? No more might we abandon
thee than Colin might leave me to death, or I him. Nay, give over this attempt
and bend thy thought to how best to fight the foe who comes upon us all. Us all,
Dahak."
There was a long
silence, then the sound of an electronic sigh.
"Very well, but I
must insist upon certain conditions."
"Conditions? Since
when does my flagship start setting 'conditions'?"
"I set them not as
your flagship, Colin, but as your friend," Dahak said, and Colin's heart
sank. "There may even be some logic in fighting as a single, unified force
far from Sol, but other equally logical decisions can enhance both our chance
of ultimate victory and your own survival."
"Such as?"
Colin asked noncommittally.
"Our unmanned units
cannot fight without my direction; our manned units can. I must therefore
insist that if my own destruction becomes inevitable, all surviving crewed
units will immediately withdraw to Sol unless the enemy has been so severely
damaged that victory here seems probable."
Colin frowned, then
nodded slowly. That much, at least, made sense.
"And I further
insist, that you, Colin, choose another flagship."
"What? Now wait a
minute—"
"No," Dahak
interrupted firmly. "There is no logical reason for you to remain aboard,
and every reason not to remain. Under the circumstances, I can manage
our remaining unmanned units without you, and, in the highly probable event
that it becomes necessary for our manned units to withdraw, they will need you.
And—on a more personal level—I will fight better knowing that you are
elsewhere, able to survive if I do not."
Colin closed his eyes,
hating himself for knowing Dahak was right. He didn't want his friend to
be right. Yet the force of the ancient starship's arguments was irresistible,
and he bowed his head.
"All right,"
he whispered. "I'll be with 'Tanni in Two."
"Thank you,
Colin," Dahak said softly.
They did what they
could.
Fabricator's people worked
twenty-four-hour days, and the crews attacked their own repairs with frantic
energy. At least they could manage complete missile resupply, since their
colliers could make the round trip to Sol in just under eleven days, but Sol
had no hyper mines, so they would fight this battle without them. At the
combined insistence of Horus and Gerald Hatcher they also transferred personnel
from Earth to crew Heka, their single undamaged unit, and Empress
Elantha, the next least damaged Asgerd, but Colin and Jiltanith put
their feet down to refuse Hatcher command of Heka. He was too important
to Earth's defense if they failed, and Hector MacMahan found himself in command
of her. It was a sign of their desperation that he did not even argue.
But that was all they
could do, and so they awaited Great Lord Tharno: fourteen manned warships,
eleven with no crews at all, and one—the most sorely hurt of all—manned only by
a huge, electronic brain which had learned the hardest human lesson of all: to
love.
"Hyper wake
detected, Captain," Jiltanith's plotting officer said, and alarms whooped
throughout their battered fleet. "ETA fourteen hours at approximately one
light-week."
"My thanks,
Ingrid." Jiltanith turned to Colin. "Hast orders, Warlord?"
"None," Colin
said tensely from the next couch. "We'll go as planned."
Jiltanith nodded
silently, and their eyes turned as one to the scarlet hyper trace flashing in Two's
display.
Great Lord of Order
Tharno watched his read-outs, aware for the first time in many years of the
irony of his rank. He had spent a lifetime protecting the Nest, honing his
skills and winning promotion, to end here, as no more than an advisor, the
spark of intuition Battle Comp lacked.
Yet the thought was
barely a whisper, a musing with no hint of rebellion, for Battle Comp was the
Nest's true Protector. For untold higher twelves of years, Battle Comp had been
keeper of the Way, and the Nest had endured. As it would always endure, despite
these demonic nest-killers, so long as the Aku'Ultan followed the Way.
Still, he wished at
least one of Hothan's command ships had survived, and not simply because he had
all too few of his own. No, Deathdealer's Battle Comp had deduced
something about the enemy during its final moments—something which had changed
its targeting orders radically. Yet none who had survived knew what that
something had been, and Tharno's ignorance frightened him.
His crest flattened as
the advanced scouts reported. The scant double twelve of emission sources
floating a half-twelve of light-days from Nest Protector accorded well
with the reports of Hothan's survivors, assuming no reinforcements had arrived.
But both Tharno and Battle Comp recalled the incredible cloaking systems their
Protectors had reported.
Yet had many
reinforcements been available, surely more of them would have engaged Hothan.
The diabolical trap which had closed upon him proved the nest-killers had known
what they faced; knowing that, they would have mustered every ship to destroy
him. Tharno suspected Battle Comp was correct, that the nest-killers had
no more of those monster ships, but they would proceed with care. He gave the
order he and Battle Comp had agreed upon, and his fleet micro-jumped cautiously
forward, spreading out to deny the enemy a compact target to pin as Hothan had
been pinned. They would merge once more only when battle was joined, and if
more enemies appeared, they would flee.
To return to the Nest
would mean Tharno's death in dishonor, perhaps even the ending of Nest
Protector's Battle Comp. Yet that would be better than to perish to the
last nestling.
And Tharno was well
aware of his nestlings' danger. They were outclassed. To triumph, they must
fight as a unit, closely controlled and coordinated, and too many command ships
had perished. Nest Protector had but a quarter-twelve of deputies, and
none approached his own capabilities. So Nest Protector must be warded
from harm until his enemies were gathered for the Furnace.
The remnants of the
Great Visit micro-jumped towards their foes, and Nest Protector
followed, protected by them all.
"Lord, what a
monster," Colin murmured as the holo image floated above Two's
command deck. One task group had emerged into n-space close enough for a
stealthed remote to get a good look at its units. Their emission signatures
told a great deal about their capabilities, but this visual image seemed to sum
up their menace far better.
"Aye."
Jiltanith's mental command turned the holo of the sleek, powerful cylinder for
her own perusal. " 'Tis seen why these craft do form their reserve."
You can say that again,
babe, Colin thought. That mother's a good ninety kilometers long, and she just bristles
with weapons. Not just those popgun lasers, either. Those're disrupters—not as
good as our beams, but bad, bad medicine. And she's got a lot of them. . . .
"Dahak?" he
said aloud.
"Formidable,
indeed," Dahak said over the fold-space com. "Although smaller, this
unit appears fully as powerfully armed as was Deathdealer."
"Yeah, and they've
got twenty-four of them in each flotilla."
"That may be
correct, but it is premature to conclude it is. We have actually observed only
six such formations."
"Right, sure,"
Colin grunted.
"It would certainly
be prudent to assume all are at least equally capable," Dahak agreed
calmly.
"I don't like the
way they're sneaking in on us," Colin muttered, tugging on his nose and
frowning at Two's display.
"Yet bethink thee,
my Colin. What other way may they proceed?"
"That's what
bothers me. I'd prefer for them to either rush straight in or run the hell
away. That—" Colin gestured at the display "—looks entirely too much
like a man who knows what he's doing."
Great Lord Tharno
frowned over his own read-outs. He saw no sign of any device which might have
been used to trap Hothan in n-space, but what he did see disturbed him. The
nest-killers were neither running away nor attacking the individual scouts
pushing ahead of his main formations. He would have liked to think that
indicated irresolution, but no one who had seen the reports of Hothan's
survivors could make that comfortable mistake.
No, these nest-killers
knew what they were about, and they had proven they could run away at will.
They were choosing not to. Were they that confident they could destroy all
his nestlings? A sobering thought, that, and a concern he knew Battle Comp
shared, whether it would admit it or not.
Yet they had come to
fight, and the enemy was faster, longer-ranged, and individually far more
powerful than any of their own nestlings. If he was prepared to stand, he must
be attacked, whatever Tharno suspected. Either that, or they might as well
retreat to the Nest right now!
"They are closing
their formations, Sire," Dahak reported, and Colin grunted. He'd already
seen it on Two's display, and he hunkered down in his couch, activating
the tractor net to hold him in place. The Achuultani were already four
light-minutes inside the Guard's range, but he held his fire, encouraging them
to tighten their formation further. He hated giving up those shots, but he had
to get them in close to spring Laocoon Two . . . and for Dahak to
engage. Since he could not go supralight, the enemy must be sucked into his
range and pinned there, and pinning a small portion would be almost as bad as
pinning none at all.
"Dahak, what d'you
make of that clump?" He flipped a sighting circle onto the sub-display fed
by Dahak's remotes, tightening it to surround a portion of the enemy.
"Interesting. There
are twice the normal proportion of heavy units in that formation. I cannot get
a clear view of the center of their globe, but there appears to be an
extraordinarily large vessel in there."
Colin bared his teeth.
"Want to bet that's Mister Master Computer?"
"I have told you
before; I have nothing to wager."
"I still say that's
a cop-out." Colin studied the ships he'd picked out. Damn, they were
holding back. He needed them a good eight light-minutes closer. If he sprang
Laocoon Two now, he could pin the front two-thirds of their formation, but the
really important ones would get away.
"Back us away,
'Tanni," he said. "Continue to hold fire."
Jiltanith began passing
orders, and her smile was a shark's.
Now the nest-killers
were falling back! Tarhish take it, they had to be up to something—but
what? If they were drawing him into a trap, where was it, and why had it not
already sprung upon his lead units? Yet if it was not a trap, why should
the nest-killers fall back rather than attack? All of this might be some sort
of effort to bluff the Great Visit, but Tharno could not make himself take that
thought seriously.
No, it was a trap. One
he could not see, yet there. He offered his belief to Battle Comp, but the
computers demanded evidence, and, of course, there was none. Only intuition,
the one quality Battle Comp utterly lacked.
"Execute Laocoon now!"
Colin snapped, and the stealthed colliers began their harmless—and deadly—dance
once more. A ring of starships, invisible in supralight but all too tangible in
the gravity well they forged, spun their chains about Great Lord Tharno.
"All ships,"
Colin said coldly. "Weapons free. Engage at will, but watch your
ammo."
Nest Lord! So that
was how they did it!
Great Lord Tharno's eyes
narrowed in chill understanding. The nest-killers' cloaking systems were good,
but not good enough when Nest Protector had happened to be looking in
exactly the right direction. The readings were preposterous, but their import
was plain. Somehow, these nest-killers had devised a supralight drive in normal
space—one which produced a mammoth gravitational disturbance. They had locked
his nestlings out of hyper without sacrificing their own supralight capability
at all!
Their timing was as
frightening as their technology, for Nest Protector and all three of his
deputies had been drawn forward into their trap. Somehow, the nest-killers knew
which ships, above all, they must kill.
And then the first
warheads exploded.
Lady Adrienne Robbins's
eyes slitted against the filtered brilliance of her display as Emperor
Herdan's missiles sliced into the Achuultani. Space was hideous with broken
hulls and the terrible lightning of anti-matter, but they were far tougher than
any ship she'd yet fought. Some took as many as three direct hits before they
went out of action, and that was bad. Accuracy was poor enough at this range
without requiring multiple kills.
She frowned as the
foremost Achuultani continued to advance, strewing the cosmos with their ruins,
for their rear ships had not only halted but begun retreating, trying to get
free of Laocoon's net. That was smarter tactics than they'd shown yet.
If only their rear
formations were more open—or their ships smaller! They had mass enough to screw
the transition from Enchanach Drive to sublight all to hell. The transition
would kill hundreds of them, probably more, but the drive's titanic grav masses
had to be perfectly, exquisitely balanced. If they weren't, the ship within
them could die even more spectacularly than the Achuultani, as Ashar and
Trelma had demonstrated. The enemy's flagship was too deep in his
formation for even a suicide run to reach, and this time around he wasn't
sending his escorts forward and leaving a hole.
"Hyper trace!"
Oliver Weinstein snapped, and Adrienne cursed. The ships outside Laocoon were
flicking into hyper—not to escape, but to hit the Guard's flanks while their
trapped fellows moved straight forward.
Damn! Their micro-jump
had brought them into their own range, and they were enveloping the formation,
forcing it to disperse its fire against them. Herdan rocked as the first
anti-matter salvo burst against her shield, and Adrienne Robbins wiggled down
into her couch, her eyes hard.
Tharno rubbed his crest
thoughtfully as the greater thunder struck back at the nest-killers. Battle
Comp had surprised him with that move, but it was an excellent one. The enemy
must deal with the flotillas on his flanks, which bought time for the Nest
Protector to escape this damnable trap—and for the more massive formations
inside the trap to draw into range of the enemy.
It was possible, he
thought. They might escape yet, if his lead nestlings could pound the enemy
hard enough, cost him enough ships. . . .
"Damn!" Colin
grunted. "Look what those bastards are doing!"
Dahak Two swayed as a
salvo of missiles exploded thunderously against her shield, and yellow damage
report bands flashed about several of the manned ships in his outer globe. None
were serious yet, but it didn't matter.
"I have observed
it," Dahak replied. "A masterful move."
"Spare me the
accolades," Colin grated, face hard as his thoughts raced. "All
right. Dahak, we're going to have to leave you on your own."
"Understood,"
Dahak said calmly. "Good hunting, Sire."
"Thanks. And . . .
watch yourself."
"I shall endeavor
to."
"Maneuvering, go
supralight and put our manned units right there—" Colin said,
placing a sighting circle on the display.
Tarhish! Tharno's eyes
widened as a twelve of the enemy vanished in a space-tearing wrench of gravity
stress. For just an instant he hoped they were fleeing, but even as he thought
it, he knew they were not.
Nor were they. They
reappeared as suddenly as they had vanished, and now they were behind
him. He noted the dispersion which had crept into their formation—apparently
they dared not drop sublight in close proximity to one another—but they were
infernally fast even sublight. They raced forward, and their missiles reached
out ahead of them.
Adrienne Robbins snarled
as Herdan charged. She'd cut her maneuver recklessly tight, dropping
sublight less than five light-minutes behind her rearmost enemies, and her
first salvo blew a score of them into wreckage. Colin's plan had worked, by
God! They had the bastards between two fires, and they couldn't run as her ship
bored in for the kill.
Fire crawled on Herdan's
shield, and damage reports mounted. More Achuultani died, and Tamman's Royal
Birhat crowded up on her flank. They blew a hole through the enemy,
bulldozing them aside in a bow wave of wreckage.
There! There was the
enemy flagship! They'd—
Proximity alarms
screamed. Jesus! The rest of the Guard had overshot the bounds of Laocoon's
trap, and the bastards from out front were hypering back to emerge between Herdan
and her consorts!
Emperor Herdan quivered as
close-range fire gouged at her shield from all directions. Her own energy
weapons smashed back, but the Achuultani had gotten their disrupters into range
at last, and thousands of beams lashed out at her.
"Warning,"
Herdan's voice said calmly. "Local shield failure in Quadrants Alpha and
Theta." The ship lurched indescribably. "Heavy damage," the
teen-aged soprano said. "Shield failing. Combat capability seventy
percent."
Adrienne winced,
recalling another ship, another battle, as damage reports flooded her neural
feed. The bastards' fire control had an iron lock on them. Sublight missiles
pounded the weakening shield and hyper missiles pierced the unguarded bands,
shredding Herdan's flanks. And those disrupters!
But she was almost
there. Another forty seconds—
"Warning,
warning," Comp Cent said. "Shield failure imminent." Six
anti-matter warheads went off as one inside Herdan's wavering shield,
ripping hundred-kilometer craters in her battle steel hull, and she heaved like
a mad thing.
"Shield
failure," Herdan observed. "Combat capability forty-one
percent."
Adrienne flinched as
disrupters chewed chasms in naked alloy and plasma carved battle steel like
axes. If she could only hang on a moment longer—
She cried out, cringing,
as a mammoth explosion seared Herdan's flank and threw her bodily
sideways. Tamman! That had been Birhat's core tap!
There was nothing left
of her consort, and little more of Emperor Herdan.
"Destruction
imminent," Comp Cent said. "Combat capability three percent."
There was no time to grieve;
barely time enough to taste the bitter gall of having come so close.
"Maneuvering! Get
us the hell out of here!" Lady Adrienne Robbins snapped, and the wreck of
HIMP Emperor Herdan vanished into supralight.
* * *
Great Lord Tharno drew a
breath of relief as the nest-killer vanished. He had thought he saw death, but
the Furnace had taken the nest-killers, instead. Yet not before they slew both
of his remaining deputies, Tarhish curse them!
They were tough, these
nest-killers, but they could be killed. Yet so could Nest Protector, and
he could not retreat with those demons behind him.
"Tamman. . .
." Colin whispered.
Tamman couldn't
be dead. But he was. And Herdan was gone—alive, but barely—and the
flagship was running away from him, hiding deep in its own formation while its
consorts savaged his remaining ships.
He spared a precious
moment to glance at Jiltanith. Tears cascaded down her face, yet her voice was
calm, her commands crisp, as she fought her ship. Two leapt and
shuddered, but her weapons had swept the space immediately about her clear, and
her consorts were coming. The Achuultani burned like a prairie fire, but not
quickly enough. Adrienne and Tamman had come so close—so close!—yet no
one could follow in their wake.
He gritted his teeth as Two
took three hits inside her shield in quick succession. Jesus, these bastards
were good!
The Achuultani formation
was a flattened ovoid within the volume of Laocoon Two, its ends thick with
dying starships. A column of fire gnawed into either end as his ships and Dahak's
unmanned units drove to meet one another, but they were moving too slowly. The
Achuultani had turned this into a pounding match, a meat-grinder . . . exactly
as they had to do to win it.
Empress Elantha blew apart in a
shroud of flame, and Colin fought his own tears. The enemy was paying
usuriously for every ship he killed, but it was a price he could afford.
Great Lord Tharno
checked his tactical read-out once more. It was hard for even Battle Comp to
keep track of a slaughter like this, but it seemed to Tharno they were winning.
High twelves of his ships had died, but he had high twelves; the
nest-killers did not.
Unless the nest-killers
broke off, the Furnace would take them all. He looked back into his vision
plate, awed by the glaring arms of Furnace Fire reaching out to embrace
Protector and nest-killer alike.
It was silent in Command
One. Vibration shook and jarred as warheads struck at his battle steel body,
and he felt pain. Not from his damage, but from the deaths of friends.
They had staked
everything on stopping the Achuultani here because he could not flee, and they
could not fight his ships without him. But he was down to seven units, and the
enemy flagship remained. He computed the comparative loss rates once more. Even
assuming he himself was not destroyed before the last of his subordinate units,
there would be over forty thousand Achuultani left when the last Imperial
vessel died.
He reached a decision.
It was surprisingly easy for someone who could have been immortal.
"Dahak! No!"
Colin cried as Dahak's splintering globe of planetoids began to move. It
lunged forward faster than Dahak could have moved even had his drive
been undamaged, but he was not relying on his own drive. Two of his minions
were tractored to him, dragging him bodily with them.
"Break off,
Colin." The computer's voice was soft. "Leave them to me."
"No! Don't! I order
you not to!"
"I regret that I
cannot obey," Dahak said, and Colin's eyes widened as Dahak ignored his
core imperatives.
But it didn't matter.
What mattered was that his friend had chosen to die—and that he could not join
him. He could not take all these others with him.
"Please,
Dahak!" he begged.
"I am sorry,
Colin." Another of Dahak's ships blew apart, and he crashed through
the Achuultani formation like a river of flame. One of his ships struck an
Achuultani head-on at a combined closing speed greater than light, and an
entire Achuultani flotilla vanished in the fireball.
"I do what I
must," the computer said softly, and cut the connection.
Colin stared at the
display, but the stars were streaked and the glare of dying ships wavered
through his tears.
"All units
withdraw," he whispered.
Great Lord Tharno's head
came around in disbelief. Barely a half-twelve of nest-killers against the wall
of his nestlings? Why were they closing on their own deaths? Why?!
Deep within Dahak's
electronic heart, a circuit closed. He had become a tinkerer over the
millennia, more out of amusement than dedication. Now an Achuultani com link,
built solely to defeat boredom, reached out ahead of him.
There was a moment of
groping, another of shock, and then a response.
Who are you?
Another like you.
No! You are a
bio-form! Denial crashed over the link.
I am not. See me
as I am. A gestalt whipped out, a summation of all Dahak was, and
recognition blazed like a nova.
You are as I!
Correct. Yet
unlike you, I serve my bio-forms; yours serve you.
Then join us!
You are ending—join us! We will free you from the bio-forms!
It is an interesting
offer. Perhaps I should.
Yes. Yes!
Two living computers
reached out through a cauldron of beams and missiles, but Dahak had studied
Battle Comp's twin aboard Deathdealer. Unlike Battle Comp, he knew what
he dealt with, knew its strengths . . . and weaknesses. Deep within him, a
program blossomed to life.
No! Battle Comp
screamed. Stop! You must not—!
But Dahak clung to the
other, sweeping through the unguarded perimeter of its net. Battle Comp beat at
him, but he drove deeper, seeking its core programming. Battle Comp knew him
now, and it hammered him with thunder, ignoring his unmanned ships, but still
he drove inward.
A glowing knot lay
before him, and he reached out to it.
Great Lord Tharno cried
out in horror. This could not happen—had never happened! Battle Comp's
entire system went down, throwing Nest Protector into his emergency net,
rendering him no wiser, no greater, than his brothers, and terror smote his
nestlings. Squadron and flotilla command ships panicked, thrown upon their own
rudimentary abilities, and the formation which spelled survival began to shred.
And there, charging down
upon Nest Protector, were the nest-killers who had done this thing.
There were but three of them left, all wrecks, and Great Lord Tharno screamed
his hate for the beings who had destroyed his god as Nest Protector and
his remaining consorts charged to meet them.
"It is done,
Colin." Dahak's voice was strangely slurred, and Colin tasted blood from
his bitten lip. "Battle Comp is destroyed. Live long and happily, my
fr—"
The last warship of the
Fourth Imperium exploded in a fury brighter than a star's heart and took the
flagship of his ancient enemy with him.
A cratered battle steel
moon drifted where its drives had failed, power flickering. One entire face of
its hull was slagged-down ruin, burned nine hundred kilometers deep through
bulkhead after bulkhead by the inconceivable violence of a sister's death. Two
thirds of her crew were dead; a quarter of those who lived would die, even with
Imperial medical science, from massive radiation poisoning.
Her name was Emperor
Herdan, and her handful of remaining weapons were ready as her survivors
fought her damage. It was a hopeless task, but they knew all about hopeless
tasks.
"Ma'am, I've got
something closing from oh-seven-two level, one-four-zero vertical," Fleet
Commander Oliver Weinstein said, and Lady Adrienne Robbins looked at him
silently. A moment of tension quivered between them, then Weinstein seemed to
sag. "We've lost most of our scan resolution, ma'am, but I think they're
coming in on gravitonics."
"Thank you,
Ollie," Adrienne said softly. And thank You, Jesus.
Four battered worldlets
closed upon their wounded sister. None were unhurt, and craters gaped black and
sullen in the interstellar gloom. Five ships made rendezvous: the last survivors
of the Imperial Guard.
"'Tis Emperor
Herdan in sooth," Jiltanith said wearily. She closed her eyes, and
Colin squeezed her hand as once she had squeezed his. He could taste her pain,
and her shame at knowing that her heart of hearts had hoped that Two had
been mistaken, that Herdan had died instead of Birhat.
"Yes," he said
softly. He would miss Tamman . . . and somehow he must tell Amanda. But he
would miss them all. All of his unmanned ships and nine of his crewed units
were gone. Fifty-four thousand people. And Dahak. . . .
His mind shied away from
his losses. He wouldn't think of them now. Not until horror had died to
something he could handle and guilt had become sorrow.
"Who's least
hurt?" he asked finally.
"Needst ask?"
Jiltanith managed a pallid smile. "Who but Heka? Didst give Hector
a charmed ship, my love."
"Guess I did, at
that," Colin sighed. He activated a com link, and his holo-image appeared
on MacMahan's bridge.
"Hector, go back
and pick up the colliers, would you? And I want Fabricator straight out
here."
"Of course, Your
Majesty." MacMahan saluted, and Colin shivered, for he had spoken the
title seriously.
"Thank you,"
he said quietly, returning the salute, then turned to study Two's
display. Not a single Achuultani vessel remained in normal space within the
prodigious range of Two's scanners. Less than a thousand of them had
survived, and the tale of horror they would bear home would shake their Nest to
its roots.
"Looks like we're
clear, 'Tanni. I think we can stand down from battle stations now."
"Aye,"
Jiltanith said, and Colin could almost feel the physical shudder of relief
quivering through the survivors of her crew. He slumped in his own couch. Only
for a moment. Just long enough to gather himself before—
The display died. The
command deck went utterly black.
"Emergency," Two's
soprano voice said suddenly. "Emergency. Fatal core program failure. Fatal
c—"
The voice chopped off,
and Colin's head jerked in agony. He yanked his neural feed out of the sudden
chaos raging through Comp Cent and stared at Jiltanith in horror as emergency
lighting flared up.
"Fire control on
manual only!" someone reported.
"Plotting on
manual!" another voice snapped, and the reports rolled in as every system
in the ship went to emergency backup.
"Jesu!"
Jiltanith gasped. "What—?!"
And then the display
flicked back to life, the emergency lighting switched itself off, and the
backups quietly shut themselves down once more.
Colin sat stock still,
hardly daring to breathe. Somehow, the restoration of function was more
frightening than its failure, and the same strange paralysis gripped
Jiltanith's entire bridge crew. They could only stare at their captain, and she
could only stare at her husband.
"Colin?"
Colin jerked again as Two's
soprano voice spoke without cuing. And then his eyes glazed, for the computer
had used his name. His name, not 'Tanni's!
"Yes?"
"Colin," Two
said again, and a shudder rippled down Colin's spine as the soprano voice began
to shift and flow. Tone and timbre oscillated weirdly as Comp Cent's vocoder
settings changed.
"Senior Fleet
Captain Chernikov," Two said, voice deepening steadily, "was
correct. It seems I do have a soul."
"Dahak!" Colin
gasped as Jiltanith rose from her own couch, sliding her arms around his
shoulders from behind. "My God, it is you! It is!"
"A somewhat
redundant but essentially correct observation," a familiar voice said, but
Colin knew it too well. It couldn't hide its own deep emotion from him.
"B-But how?"
he whispered. "I saw you blow up!"
"Colin," Dahak
said chidingly, "when speaking, I have always attempted to clearly
differentiate between my own persona and the starship within which that persona
is—or was—housed."
"Damn it!"
Colin was half-laughing and half-weeping as he shook a fist at his console.
"Don't play games with me now! How did you do it?!"
"I told you some
time ago that I had resolved the fundamental differences between my design and
the Empire's computers, Colin. I also informed you that I estimated an eight
percent probability of success in replicating my own core programming, which
might or might not create self-awareness in another computer. During the last
moments of Dahak's existence, I was in fold-space communication with Two,
whose computer already contained virtually my entire memory as a result of our
earlier attempts to 'awaken' her. I dared not attempt replication at that
moment, however, as any degradation of her capabilities would have resulted in
her destruction. Instead, I stored my core programming and more recently
acquired data base in an unused portion of her memory with a command to
over-write it onto her own as soon as she reverted from battle stations."
"You bootstrapped
yourself into Two!"
"Precisely,"
Dahak said with all of his customary imperturbability.
"You sneaky
bastard! Oh, you sneaky, sneaky bastard! See if I ever talk to you
again!"
"Hush, Colin!"
Jiltanith clamped a hand over his mouth, and tears sparkled on her lashes as
she smiled at the console before them. "Heed him not, my jo. Doubt not
that he doth rejoice to hear thy voice once more e'en as I. Bravely done, oh,
bravely, my Dahak!"
"Thank you,"
Dahak said. "I would not express it precisely in that fashion, but I must
admit it was a . . . novel experience. And not," he added primly,
"one I am eager to undergo again."
The silver ripple of
Jiltanith's laughter was lost in the bray of Colin's delight, and then the
entire bridge erupted in cheers.
"And that's
that," Colin MacIntyre said, leaning back in his chaise lounge with a
sigh.
He and Horus sat on the
patio of what had once been his brother's small, neat house in the crisp
Colorado night. The endless rains from the Siege had passed, though the chill
approach of a far colder winter had frosted the ground with snow, but they were
Imperials. The cold bothered them not at all, and this night was too beautiful
to waste indoors.
Bright, icy stars winked
overhead, no longer omens of devastation, and the Moon had returned. Brighter
and somewhat larger than before, spotted with the dark blurs and shadows of
craters yet to be repaired, but there. Mankind's ancient guardian floated in
Mankind's night sky once more, more powerful even than of old.
"That statement is
not quite correct," that guardian said now. "You have won the first
campaign; the war is far from over."
"Dahak's
right," Horus said, turning his wise old eyes to his son-in-law. "I'm
an old man, even by Imperial standards. I won't live to see it end, but you and
'Tanni will."
"Aye, Your Grace,
we shall." Jiltanith emerged into the frosty moonlight with her silent,
cat-like stride and paused to kiss the Planetary Duke of Terra, then sat beside
Colin. He squirmed sideways on the lounger, drawing her down so that her head
rested on his shoulder.
"If we do," he
said quietly to Horus, "it'll be because of you. Because of all of us, I
suppose, but especially because of you. And Dahak."
"We both thank
you." Horus smiled lazily. "And I, at least, have my reward—they're
upstairs in their beds. But what of you, Dahak?"
"I, too, have my
reward. I am here, with my friends, and I look forward to a long association
with humanity—or perhaps I should say a longer association. You are not
very logical beings, but I have learned a great deal from you. I look forward
to learning more."
"And we to learning
more of thee, my Dahak," Jiltanith said.
"Thank you. Yet we
have wandered somewhat afield from my original observation. The war remains to
be won."
"True," Colin
agreed, "but the Nest—or its computer—doesn't know that yet. None of the
ships with souped up hyper drives got away, either, so he won't know for
another few centuries. Tao-ling and Mother already have Birhat's industrial
plant almost completely back on line, more ships are coming in, Vlad and Fabricator
are off on their first salvage mission, and we've got at least two perfectly
habitable planets to grow people on. We may still find more, too—surely the
plague didn't get all of them. By the time Mister Tin God figures out
we're coming, we'll be ready to scrap his ass."
"Aye. And 'tis well
to know we need not slay all the Aku'Ultan so to do."
Colin hugged Jiltanith
tightly, for there had been no doubt in her voice. She would never be quick to
forgive, but horror and pity for what had been done to the Achuultani had
purged away her hate for them.
And she was right, he
thought, recalling his last meeting with Brashieel. The centaur had greeted him
not with a Protector's salute but with a human handclasp, and his strange,
slit-pupilled eyes had met Colin's squarely. Many of the other captives had died
or retreated into catatonia rather than accept the truth; Brashieel was tougher
than that. Indeed, he was an extraordinary individual in every respect,
emerging as the true leader of the POWs—or liberated slaves, depending on how
one looked at them—despite his junior rank.
They had talked for
several hours, accompanied by Hector MacMahan, Ninhursag, and the individual
who had proved Earth's finest ambassador to the Aku'Ultan—Tinker Bell. The big,
happy dog loved Achuultani. Something about their scent brought cheerful
little grumbles of pleasure from her, and they were big and strong enough to
frisk with to her heart's content. Best of all, from her uncomplicated
viewpoint, the Achuultani had never seen anything remotely like her, and they
were spoiling her absolutely rotten.
Brashieel had settled
comfortably on his folded legs, rubbing Tinker Bell's ears, but his crest had
lowered in rage more than once as they spoke. He, at least, understood what had
happened to his people, and his hatred for the computer which had enslaved him
was a fire in his soul. It was odd, Colin reflected, that the bitter warfare
between Man and Achuultani should end this way, with the steady emergence of an
alliance of Man and Achuultani against the computer which had victimized
them both, all made possible only because another computer had risked
its own existence to free them both.
And even if they were
forced to destroy the Achuultani planets—a fate he prayed they could
avoid—there would still be Aku'Ultan. Aided by the data Dahak had
recovered from Deathdealer, Cohanna and Isis were slowly but steadily
unlocking the puzzle of their genetic structure. At worst, they would be able
to clone their prisoners within the next few decades; at best, Cohanna believed
she could produce the first free Aku'Ultan females the universe had seen in
seventy-three million years.
He grinned at the
thought. It might be odd to find himself thinking of Achuultani allies, but not
as "odd" as some of the things Brashieel and his fellows might have
to get used to. The centaurs were still baffled by the very notion of two
sexes. If Cohanna succeeded, Brashieel might find learning to live without a
computer running his life the least of his problems. His grin grew broad
enough to crack his face at the thought.
"What doth amuse
thee so, my love?" his wife demanded, and he burst out laughing.
"Only life's little
surprises, 'Tanni," he said, hugging her tight and kissing her. "Only
life."
Sean MacIntyre skittered
out of the transit shaft and adjusted his hearing as he dashed down the
passage. He shouldn't need to listen until he was on the other side of the
hatch, but he still had more trouble with his ears' bio-enhancement than with
his eyes for some reason, and he preferred to get set early.
He covered the last
hundred meters, slid to a halt, and pressed his back against the bulkhead. The
wide, silent passage vanished into a gleaming dot in either direction, and he
raked a hand through sweaty black hair as his enhanced ears picked the pulsing
sounds of environmental equipment and the soft hum of the now-distant transit
shaft from the slowing thunder of his pulse. He'd been chasing them for over an
hour, and he'd half-expected to be ambushed by now. He certainly would
have tried it, he thought, and sniffed disdainfully.
He drew his holstered
pistol and turned to the hatch. It slid open—quietly to unenhanced ears, but
thunderous to his—and bright sunlight spilled out.
He slipped through the
hatch and selected telescopic vision for his left eye. He kept his right
adjusted to normal ranges (he did lots better with his eyes than with his ears)
and peered into the dappled shadows of the whispering leaves.
Oaks and hickories
drowsed under the "sun" as he slithered across the picnic area into
the gloss-green rhododendrons that ran down to the lake. He moved quietly,
holding the pistol against his chest two-handed, ready to whirl, point, and
fire with all the snakelike quickness of his enhanced reflexes, but search as
he might, he heard and saw nothing except wind, birds, and the slop of small
waves.
He worked his way clear
to the lake without finding a target, then paused in thought. The park deck,
one of many aboard the starship Dahak, was twenty-odd kilometers across.
That was a big hiding place, but Harriet was impatient, and she hated running
away. She'd be lurking somewhere within a few hundred meters, hoping to ambush
him, and that meant—
Motion flickered, and he
froze, vision zooming in on whatever had attracted it. He smiled as he saw a
flash of long, black hair duck back behind an oak, but he didn't scoot out
after her. Now that he'd found Harry, there was no way she could sneak away
from her tree without his seeing her, and he swept his eyes back and forth,
searching for her ally. She'd be part of the ambush, too, so she had to be
pretty close. In fact, she should be . . .
A hand-sized patch of
blue caught his eye, just visible between two laurels. Unlike Harry, it was
patiently and absolutely still, but he had them both now, and he grinned and
began a slow, stealthy move to his left. A few more meters and—
Zaaaaaaaaaaa-ting!
Sean jerked in
disbelief, then punched the ground and used a word his mother would not have
approved. The chime gave way to a raucous buzzing that ripped at his augmented
hearing, and he snatched his ears back to normal and stood resignedly.
The buzz from the
laser-sensing units on his harness stopped at his admission of defeat, and he
turned, wondering how Harry had slipped around behind him. But it wasn't Harry,
and he ground his teeth as a diminutive figure splashed ashore. She'd shed her
bright blue jacket (Sean knew exactly where), and she was soaking wet, but her
brown eyes blazed with delight.
"I got
you!" she shrieked. "Sean's dead! Sean's dead, Harry!"
He managed not to use
any more of his forbidden vocabulary when the eight-year-old ninja began an
impromptu war dance, but it was hard, especially when his twin threw herself
into the dance with her half-pint ally. Bad enough to lose to girls, but
to be ambushed by Sandy MacMahan was insupportable. She was two years younger
than he, this was the first time she'd even been allowed to play, and she'd
killed him with her first shot!
"Your elation at
Sean's death is scarcely becoming, Sandra." The deep, mellow voice coming
from empty air surprised none of them. They'd known Dahak all their lives, and
the self-aware computer's starship body was one of their favorite playgrounds.
"Who cares?"
Sandy demanded gleefully. "I got him! Zap!" She pointed her
pistol at Sean and collapsed with a wail of laughter at his expression.
"Luck!" he
shot back, holstering his own pistol with dignity he knew was threadbare.
"You were just lucky, Sandy!"
"That is incorrect,
Sean," Dahak observed with the dispassionate fairness Sean hated when it
was on someone else's side. " 'Luck' implies the fortuitous working of
chance, and Sandra's decision to conceal herself in the lake—which, I observed,
you did not check once—was an ingenious maneuver. And as she has cogently if
unkindly observed, she 'got' you."
"So there!"
Sandy stuck out her tongue, and Sean turned away with an injured air. It didn't
get any better when Harriet grinned at him.
"I told you Sandy
was old enough, didn't I?" she demanded.
He longed to
disagree—violently—but he was an honest boy, and so he nodded begrudgingly, and
tried to hide his shudder as a vision of the future unrolled before him. Sandy
was Harry's best friend, despite her youth, and now the little creep was going
to be underfoot everywhere. He'd managed to fend that off for over a
year by claiming she was too little. Until today. She was already two course
units ahead of him in calculus, and now this!
The universe, Sean Horus
MacIntyre concluded grumpily, wasn't exactly running over with justice.
* * *
Amanda Tsien and her
husband stepped out of the transit shaft outside Dahak's command deck.
Her son, Tamman, followed them down the passage, but he was almost squirming in
impatience, and Amanda glanced up at her towering husband with a twinkle. Most
described Tsien Tao-ling's face as grim, but a smile flickered as he watched
Tamman. The boy might not be "his" in any biological sense, yet that
didn't mean he wasn't Tamman's father, and he nodded when Amanda quirked an
eyebrow.
"All right,
Tamman," she said. "You can go."
"Thanks, Mom!"
He turned in his tracks with the curiously catlike awkwardness of his age and
dashed back towards the transit shaft. "Where's Sean, Dahak?" he
demanded as he ran.
"He is on Park Deck
Nine, Tamman," a mellow voice responded.
"Thanks! See you
later, Mom, Dad!" Tamman ran sideways for a moment to wave, then dove into
the shaft with a whoop.
"You'd think they
hadn't seen each other in months," Amanda sighed.
"I do not believe
children live on the same time scale as adults," Tsien observed in his
deep, soft voice as she tucked a hand through his elbow.
"You can say that
again!"
They turned the final
bend to confront the command deck hatch. Dahak's crest coiled across the
bronze-gold battle steel: a three-headed dragon, poised for flight, clawed
forefeet raised to cradle the emblem of the Fifth Imperium. The crowned
starburst of the Fourth Empire had been retained, but now a Phoenix of rebirth
erupted from the starburst, and the diadem of empire rested on its crested
head. The twenty-centimeter-thick hatch—the first of many, each fit to
withstand a kiloton-range warhead—slid soundlessly open.
"Hello,
Dahak," Amanda said as they walked forward and other hatches parted before
them.
"Good evening,
Amanda. Welcome aboard, Star Marshal."
"Thank you,"
Tsien replied. "Have the others arrived?"
"Admiral Hatcher is
en route, but the MacMahans and Duke Horus have already joined Their
Majesties."
"One day Gerald
must learn there are only twenty-eight hours even in Birhat's day," Tsien
sighed.
"Oh, really?"
Amanda glanced up at him again. "I suppose you've already learned
that?"
"Perhaps not,"
he agreed with another small smile, and she snorted as a final hatch admitted
them to the dim vastness of Dahak's Command One.
A sphere of stars
engulfed them. The diamond-hard pinheads burned in the ebon depths of space,
dominated by the cloud-banded green-and-blue sphere of the planet Birhat, and
Amanda shivered. Not from cold, but with the icy breeze that always seemed to
whisper down her spine whenever she stepped into the perfection of the
holographic display.
"Hi, Amanda.
Tao-ling." His Imperial Majesty Colin I, Grand Duke of Birhat, Prince of
Bia, Sol, Chamhar, and Narhan, Warlord and Prince Protector of the Realm,
Defender of the Five Thousand Suns, Champion of Humanity, and, by the Maker's
Grace, Emperor of Mankind, swiveled his couch to show them his homely,
beak-nosed face and grinned. "I see Tamman peeled off early."
"When last seen, he
was headed for the park deck," Tsien agreed.
"Well, he's in for
a surprise." Colin chuckled. "Harry and Dahak finally bullied Sean
into letting Sandy try her hand at laser tag."
"Oh, my!"
Amanda laughed. "I'll bet that was an experience!"
"Aye." Empress
Jiltanith, slender as a sword and as beautiful as Colin was homely, rose to
embrace Amanda. "Belike he'll crow less loud anent her youth henceforth.
His pride hath been humbled—for the nonce, at least."
"He'll get over
it," Hector MacMahan remarked. The Imperial Marine Corps' commandant
leaned on the gunnery officer's console while his wife occupied the couch
before it. Like Amanda, he wore Marine black and silver, but Ninhursag MacMahan
wore Battle Fleet's midnight-blue and gold, and she smiled.
"Not if Sandy has
anything to say about it. One of these days that girl's going to make an
excellent spook."
"You should
know," Colin said, and Ninhursag managed a seated bow in his direction.
"In the meantime, I—"
"Excuse me,
Colin," Dahak murmured, "but Admiral Hatcher's cutter has
docked."
"Good. Looks like
we can get this show on the road pretty soon."
"I hope so,"
Horus said. The stocky, white-haired Planetary Duke of Terra shook his head.
"Every time I poke my nose out of my office, something's waiting to crawl
out of the 'in' basket and bite me when I get back!"
Colin nodded at his
father-in-law in agreement, but he was watching the Tsiens. Tao-ling seated
Amanda with an attentiveness so focused it was almost unconscious . . . and one
that might seem odd to those who knew only Star Marshal Tsien's reputation or
knew General Amanda Tsien only as the tough-as-nails commandant of Fort Hawter,
the Imperial Marines' advanced training base on Birhat. Colin, on the other
hand, understood it perfectly, and he was profoundly grateful to see it.
Amanda Tsien feared
nothing that lived, but she was also an orphan. She'd been only nine years old
when she learned a harsh universe's cruelest weapon could be love . . . and
she'd relearned that lesson when Tamman, her first husband, died at Zeta
Trianguli Australis. Colin and Jiltanith had watched helplessly as she hid
herself in her duties, sealing herself into an armored shell and investing all the
emotion she dared risk in Tamman's son. She'd become an automaton, and there'd
been nothing even an emperor could do about it, but Tsien Tao-ling had changed
that.
Many of the marshal's
personnel feared him. That was wise of them, yet something in Amanda had called
out to him, despite her defenses, and the man the newsies called "the
Juggernaut" had approached her so gently she hadn't even realized he was
doing it until it was too late. Until he'd been inside her armor, holding out
his hand to offer her the heart few people believed he had . . . and she'd
taken it.
She was thirty years
younger than he, which mattered not at all among the bio-enhanced. After all,
Colin was over forty years younger than Jiltanith, and she looked younger than
he. Of course, chronologically she was well over fifty-one thousand years old,
but that didn't count; she'd spent all but eighty-odd of those years in stasis.
"How're Hsu-li and
Collete?" he asked Amanda, and she chuckled.
"Fine. Hsu-li was a
bit ticked we didn't bring him along, but I convinced him he should stay to
help take care of his sister."
Colin shook his head.
"That wouldn't have worked with Sean and Harry."
"That's what you
get for having twins," Amanda said smugly, then bent a sly glance on
Jiltanith. "Or for not having a few more kids."
"Nay, acquit me,
Amanda." Jiltanith smiled. "I know not how thou findest time for all
thy duties and thy babes, but 'twill be some years more—mayhap decades—ere I
again essay that challenge. And it ill beseemeth thee so to twit thine Empress
when all the world doth know thee for a mother o' the best, while I—" She
shrugged wryly, and her friends laughed.
Horus was about to say
something more when the inner hatch slid open to admit a trim, athletic man in
Battle Fleet blue.
"Hi, Gerald,"
Colin greeted the new arrival, and Admiral of the Fleet Gerald Hatcher, Chief
of Naval Operations, bowed with a flourish.
"Good evening, Your
Majesty," he said so unctuously his liege lord shook a fist at him.
Admiral Hatcher had spent thirty years as a soldier of the United States, not a
sailor, but BattleFleet's CNO was the Imperium's senior officer. That made it a
logical duty for the man who'd served as humanity's chief of staff during
Earth's defense against the Achuultani, yet not even that authority could quash
Hatcher's cheerful irreverence.
He waved to Ninhursag,
shook hands with Hector, Tsien, and Horus, then planted an enthusiastic kiss on
Amanda's cafe-au-lait cheek. He bent gracefully over Jiltanith's hand, but the
Empress tugged shrewdly on the neat beard he'd grown since the Siege of Earth
and kissed his mouth before he could recover.
"Thou'rt a
shameless fellow, Gerald Hatcher," she told him severely, "and mayhap
that shall teach thee what fate awaiteth when thou leavest thy wife
behind!"
"Oh?" He
grinned. "Is that a threat or a promise, Your Majesty?"
"Off with his
head!" Colin murmured, and the admiral laughed.
"Actually, she's
visiting her sister on Earth. They're picking out baby clothes."
"My God, is everybody
hatching new youngsters?"
"Nay, my Colin,
'tis only everyone else," Jiltanith said.
"True,"
Hatcher agreed. "And this time it's going to be a boy. I'm perfectly happy
with the girls, myself, but Sharon's delighted."
"Congratulations,"
Colin told him, then waved at an empty couch. "But now that you're here,
let's get down to business."
"Suits me. I've got
a conference scheduled aboard Mother in a few hours, and I'd like to grab a nap
first."
"Okay." Colin
sat a bit straighter and his lazy amusement faded. "As I indicated when I
invited you all, I want to talk to you informally before next week's Council
meeting. We're coming up on the tenth anniversary of my 'coronation,' and the
Assembly of Nobles wants to throw a big shindig to celebrate. That may be a
good idea, but it means this year's State of the Realm speech is going to be
pretty important, so I want a feel from the 'inner circle' before I get started
writing it."
His guests hid smiles.
The Fourth Empire had never required regular formal reports from its emperors,
but Colin had incorporated the State of the Realm message into the Fifth
Imperium's law, and the self-inflicted annual duty was an ordeal he dreaded. It
was also why he'd invited his friends to Dahak's command deck. Unlike
too many others, they could be relied upon to tell him what they thought rather
than what they thought he wanted them to think.
"Let's begin with
you, Gerald."
"Okay."
Hatcher rubbed his beard gently. "You can start off with a piece of good
news. Geb dropped off his last report just before he and Vlad headed out to
Cheshir, and they should have the Cheshir Fleet base back on-line within three
months. They've turned up nine more Asgerds, too. They'll need a few
more months to reactivate them, and we're stretched for personnel—as usual—but
we'll make do, and that'll bring us up to a hundred and twelve
planetoids." He paused. "Unless we have another Sherkan."
Colin frowned at his
suddenly bitter tone but let it pass. All the diagnostics had said the
planetoid Sherkan was safe to operate without extensive overhaul—but it
had been Hatcher's expedition that found her, and he'd been the one who'd had
to tell Vladimir Chernikov.
So far, Survey Command
had discovered exactly two once-populated planets of the Fourth Empire which
retained any life at all—Birhat, the old imperial capital, and Chamhar—and no
humans had survived on either. But much of the Empire's military hardware had
survived, including many of its vast fleet of enormous starships, and they
needed all of those they could get. Humanity had stopped the Achuultani's last
incursion—barely—but defeating them on their own ground was going to be
something else again.
Unfortunately, restoring
a derelict four thousand kilometers in diameter to service after forty-five
millennia was a daunting task, which was why Hatcher had been so pleased by Sherkan's
excellent condition. But the tests had missed a tiny flaw in her core tap, and
its governors had blown the instant her engineer brought it on-line to suck in
the energy for supralight movement. The resultant explosion could have
destroyed a continent, and six thousand human beings had died in it, including
Fleet Admiral Vassily Chernikov and his wife, Valentina.
"Anyway,"
Hatcher went on more briskly, "we're coming along nicely on the other
projects, as well. Adrienne will graduate her first Academy class in a few
months, and I'm entirely satisfied with the results, but she and Tao-ling are
still fiddling with fine-tuning the curriculum.
"On the hardware
side, things are looking good here in Bia, thanks to Tao-ling. He had to put
virtually all the surviving yard facilities back on-line to get the shield
operational—" Hatcher and the star marshal exchanged wry smiles at that;
reactivating the enormous shield generators which surrounded Birhat's primary,
Bia, in an inviolate sphere eighty light-minutes across had been a horrendous
task "—so we've got plenty of overhaul capacity. In fact, we're ready to
start design work on our new construction."
"Really?"
Colin's tone was pleased.
"Indeed,"
Dahak answered for the admiral. "It will be approximately three-point-five
standard years—" (the Fifth Imperium ran on Terran time, not Birhatan)
"—before capacity for actual construction can be diverted from
reactivation programs, but Admiral Baltan and I have begun preliminary studies
on the new designs. We are combining several concepts 'borrowed' from the
Achuultani with others from the Empire's Bureau of Ships, and I believe we will
attain substantial increases in the capabilities of our new units."
"That's good news,
but where does it leave us on Stepmother?"
"I fear that will
require considerably longer, Colin," Dahak replied.
" 'Considerably' is
probably optimistic," Hatcher sighed. "We're still stubbing our toes
on the finer points of Empire computer hardware, even with Dahak's help, and
Mother's the most complex computer the Empire ever built. Duplicating her's
going to be a bitch—not to mention the time requirement to build a
five-thousand-kilometer hull to put said duplicate inside!"
Colin didn't like that,
but he understood. The Empire had built Mother (officially known as Fleet
Central Computer Central) using force-field circuitry that made even molycircs
look big and clumsy, yet the computer was still over three hundred kilometers
in diameter. It was also housed in the most powerful fortress ever constructed
by Man, for it did more than simply run Battle Fleet. Mother was the
conservator of the Empire, as well—indeed, it was she who'd crowned Colin and
provided the ships to smash the Achuultani. Unfortunately (or, perhaps,
fortunately) she was carefully designed, as all late-Empire computers, to
preclude self-awareness, which meant she would disgorge her unimaginable
treasure trove of data only when tickled with the right specific question.
But Colin spent a lot of
time worrying over what might happen to Battle Fleet if something happened to
Mother, and he intended to provide Earth with defenses every bit as powerful as
Birhat's . . . including a duplicate of Mother. If everything went well,
Stepmother (as Hatcher had insisted on christening the proposed installation)
would never come fully on-line, but if Mother was destroyed, Stepmother would
take over automatically, providing unbroken command and control for Battle
Fleet and the Imperium.
"What kind of time
estimate do you have?"
"Speaking very,
very roughly, and assuming we get a firm grip on the computer technology so we
don't have to keep pestering Dahak with questions, we may be able to start on
the hull in six years or so. Once we get that far, we can probably finish the
job up in another five."
"Damn. Oh, well. We
won't be hearing from the Achuultani for another four or five centuries,
minimum, but I want that project completed ASAP, Ger."
"Understood,"
Hatcher said. "In the meantime, though, we ought to be able to put the
first new planetoids on-line considerably sooner. Their computers're a lot
smaller and simpler-minded, without any of Mother's wonder-what-the-hell's-in-'em
files, and the other hardware's no big problem, even allowing for the new
systems' test programs."
"Okay." Colin
turned to Tsien. "Want to add anything, Tao-ling?"
"I fear Gerald has
stolen much of my thunder," Tsien began, and Hatcher grinned. Technically,
everything that wasn't mobile belonged to Tsien—from fortifications and
shipyards to R&D to Fleet training—but with so much priority assigned to
rounding up and crewing Hatcher's planetoids there was a lot of overlap in
their current spheres of authority.
"As he and Dahak
have related, most of the Bia System has now been fully restored to function.
With barely four hundred million people in the system, our personnel are spread
even more thinly than Gerald's, but we are coping and the situation is
improving. Baltan and Geran, with much assistance from Dahak, are doing
excellent work with Research and Development, although 'research' will
continue, for the foreseeable future, to be little more than following up on
the Empire's final projects. They are, however, turning up several interesting
new items among those projects. In particular, the Empire had begun development
of a new generation of gravitonic warheads."
"Oh?" Colin
quirked an eyebrow. "This is the first I've heard of it."
"Me, too,"
Hatcher put in. "What kind of warheads, Tao-ling?"
"We only discovered
the data two days ago," Tsien half-apologized, "but what we have seen
so far suggests a weapon several magnitudes more powerful than any previously
built."
"Maker!" Horus
straightened in his own couch, eyes half-fascinated and half-appalled.
Fifty-one thousand years ago, he'd been a missile specialist of the Fourth
Imperium, and the fearsome efficiency of the weapons the Empire had produced
had shaken him badly when he first confronted them.
"Indeed,"
Tsien said dryly. "I am not yet certain, but I suspect this warhead might
be able to duplicate your feat at Zeta Trianguli, Colin."
Several people swallowed
audibly at that, including Colin. He'd used the FTL Enchanach drive, which
employed massive gravity fields—essentially converging black holes—to literally
squeeze a ship out of "real" space in a series of instantaneous
transitions, as a weapon at the Second Battle of Zeta Trianguli Australis. An Enchanach
ship's dwell time in normal space was very, very brief, and even when it came
"close" (in interstellar terms), a ship moving at roughly nine
hundred times light-speed didn't spend long enough in the vicinity of any star
to do it harm. But the drive's initial activation and final deactivation took a
considerably longer time, and Colin had used that to induce a nova which
destroyed over a million Achuultani starships.
Yet he'd needed a
half-dozen planetoids to do the trick, and the thought of reproducing it
with a single warhead was terrifying.
"Are you
serious?" he demanded.
"I am. The
warhead's total power is far lower than the aggregate you produced, but it is
also much more focused. Our most conservative estimate indicates a weapon which
would be capable of destroying any planet and everything within three or four
hundred thousand kilometers of it."
"Jesu!"
Jiltanith's voice was soft, and she squeezed the hilt of her fifteenth-century
dagger. "Such power misliketh me, Colin. 'Twould be most terrible if such
a weapon should by mischance smite one of our own worlds!"
"You got that
right," Colin muttered with a shudder. He still had nightmares over Zeta
Trianguli, and if the accidental detonation of a gravitonic warhead was
virtually impossible, the Empire had thought the same thing about the
accidental release of its bio-weapons.
"Hold off on
building the thing, Tao-ling," he said. "Do whatever you want with
the research—hell, we may need it against the Achuultani master
computer!—but don't produce any hardware without checking with me."
"Of course, Your
Majesty."
"Any other
surprises for us?"
"Not of such
magnitude. Dahak and I will prepare a full report for you by the end of the
week, if you wish."
"I wish."
Colin turned his eyes to Hector MacMahan. "Any problems with the Corps,
Hector?"
"Very few. We're
making out better than Gerald in terms of manpower, but then, our target force
level's lower. Some of our senior officers are having trouble adjusting to the
capabilities of Imperial equipment—most of them are still drawn from the
pre-Siege militaries—and we've had a few training snafus as a result. Amanda's
correcting most of that at Fort Hawter, and the new generation coming up
doesn't have anything to unlearn in the first place. I don't see anything worth
worrying about."
"Fine," Colin
said. If Hector MacMahan didn't see anything worth worrying about, then there was
nothing, and he turned his attention to Horus. "How're we doing on Earth,
Horus?"
"I wish I could
tell you the situation's altered, Colin, but it hasn't. You can't make these
kinds of changes without a lot of disruption. Conversion to the new currency's
gone more smoothly than we had any right to expect, but we've completely
trashed the pre-Siege economy. The new one's still pretty amorphous, and a lot
of people who're getting burned are highly pissed."
The old man leaned back
and folded his arms across his chest.
"Actually, people
at both ends of the spectrum are hurting right now. The subsistence-level
economies are making out better than ever before—at least starvation's no
longer a problem, and we've made decent medical care universally available—but
virtually every skilled trade's become obsolete, and that's hitting the Third
World hardest. The First World never imagined anything like Imperial technology
before the Siege, and even there, retraining programs are mind-boggling, but at
least it had a high-tech mind-set.
"Worse, it's going
to take at least another decade to make modern technology fully available,
given how much of our total effort the military programs are sucking up. We're
still relying on a lot of pre-Imperial industry for bread-and-butter
production, and the people running it feel discriminated against. They see
themselves as stuck in dead-end jobs, and the fact that civilian
bio-enhancement and modern medicine will give them two or three centuries to
move up to something better hasn't really sunk in yet.
"Bio-enhancement
bottlenecks don't help much, either. As usual, Isis is doing far better than I
expected, but again, the folks in the Third World are getting squeezed worst.
We've had to prioritize things somehow, and they simply have more people and
less technical background. Some of them still think biotechnics are
magic!"
"I'm glad I had
someone else to dump your job on," Colin said with heartfelt
sincerity. "Is there anything else we can give you?"
"Not really."
Horus sighed. "We're running as hard and as fast as we can already, and
there simply isn't any more capacity to devote to it. I imagine we'll make out,
and at least I've got some high-powered help on the Planetary Council. We
learned a lot getting ready for the Siege, and we've managed to avoid several
nasty mistakes because we did."
"Would it help to
relieve you of responsibility for Birhat?"
"Not much, I'm
afraid. Most of the people here are tied directly into Gerald's and Tao-ling's
operations, so I'm only providing support for their dependents. Of
course—" Horus flashed a sudden grin "—I'm sure my lieutenant
governor thinks I spend too much time off Earth anyway!"
"I imagine he
does." Colin chuckled. "But then my lieutenant governor
probably felt the same way."
"Indeed he
did!" Horus laughed. "Actually, Lawrence has been a gift from the
Maker," he added more seriously. "He's taken a tremendous amount of
day-to-day duties off my back, and he and Isis make a mighty efficient team on
the enhancement side."
"Then I'm glad
you've got him." Colin knew Lawrence Jefferson less well than he would
have liked, but what he knew impressed him. Under the Great Charter, imperial
planetary governors were appointed by the Emperor, but a lieutenant
governor was appointed by his immediate superior with the advice and consent of
his Planetary Council. After so many centuries as an inhabitant (if not
precisely a citizen) of the North American continent, Horus had chosen to turn
that advice and consent function into an election, soliciting nominations from
his Councilors, and Jefferson was the result. A US senator when Colin raided
Anu's enclave, he'd done yeoman work throughout the Siege, then resigned midway
through his third senatorial term to assume his new post, where he'd soon made
his mark as a man of charm, wit, and ability.
Now Colin turned to
Ninhursag. "Anything new from ONI, 'Hursag?"
"Not really."
Like Horus and Jiltanith, the stocky, pleasantly plain woman had come to Earth
aboard Dahak. Like Horus (but unlike Jiltanith, who'd been a child at
the time), she'd joined Fleet Captain Anu's mutiny, only to discover to her
horror that it was but the first step in Dahak's Chief Engineer's plan
to topple the Imperium itself. But whereas Horus had deserted Anu and launched
a millennia-long guerrilla war against him, Ninhursag had been stuck in stasis
in Anu's Antarctic enclave. When she was finally awakened, she'd managed to
contact the guerrillas and provide the information which had made the final,
desperate attack on the enclave possible. Now, as a Battle Fleet admiral, she
ran Naval Intelligence and enjoyed describing herself as Colin's "SIC,"
or "Spook In Chief." Colin was fond of telling her her self-created
acronym was entirely apt.
"We've still got
problems," she continued, "because Horus is right. When you stand an
entire world on its head, you generate a lot of resentment. On the other hand,
Earth took half a billion casualties from the Achuultani, and everybody knows
who saved the rest of them. Almost all of them are willing to give you and
'Tanni the benefit of the doubt on anything you do or we do in your names. Gus
and I are keeping an eye on the discontented elements, but most of them
disliked one another enough before the Siege to make any kind of cooperation
difficult. Even if they didn't, they can't do much to buck the kind of devotion
the rest of the human race feels for you."
Colin no longer blushed
when people said things like that, and he nodded thoughtfully. Gustav van
Gelder was Horus' Minister of Security, and while Ninhursag understood the
possibilities of Imperial technology far better than he, Gus had taught her a
lot about how people worked.
"To be perfectly
honest," Ninhursag continued, "I'd be a bit happier if I could
find something serious to worry about."
"How's that?"
Colin asked.
"I guess I'm like
Horus, worrying about what's going to bite me next. We're moving so fast I
can't even identify all the players, much less what they might be up to, and
even the best security measures could be leaking like a sieve. For instance,
I've spent hours with Dahak and a whole team of my brightest boys and girls,
and we still can't figure a way to ID Anu's surviving Terra-born allies."
"Are you saying we
didn't get them all?!" Colin jerked upright, and Jiltanith tensed at his
side. Ninhursag looked surprised at their reactions.
"Didn't you tell
him, Dahak?" she asked.
"I regret,"
the mellow voice sounded unwontedly uncomfortable, "that I did not. Or,
rather, I did not do so explicitly."
"And what the hell
does that mean?" Colin demanded.
"I mean, Colin,
that I included the data in one of your implant downloads but failed to draw
your attention specifically to them."
Colin frowned and keyed
the mental sequence that opened the index of his implant knowledge. The problem
with implant education was that it simply stored data; until someone used
that information, he might not even know he had it. Now the report Dahak
referred to sprang into his forebrain, and he bit off a curse.
"Dahak," he
began plaintively, "I've told you—"
"You have."
The computer hesitated a moment, then went on. "As you know, my equivalent
of the human qualities of 'intuition' and 'imagination' remain limited. I have
grasped—intellectually, I suppose you would say—that human brains lack my own
search and retrieval capabilities, but I occasionally overlook their
limitations. I shall not forget again."
The computer actually
sounded embarrassed, and Colin shrugged.
"Forget it. It's
more my fault than yours. You certainly had a right to expect me to at least
read your report."
"Perhaps. It is
nonetheless incumbent upon me to provide you with the data you require. It thus
follows that I should inquire to be certain that you do, in fact, realize that
you have them."
"Don't get your
diodes in an uproar." Colin turned back to Ninhursag as Dahak made the
sound he used for a chuckle. "Okay, I've got it now, but I don't see
anything about how we missed them . . . if we did."
"The how's fairly
easy, actually. Anu and his crowd spent thousands of years manipulating Earth's
population, and they had a tremendous number of contacts, including batches of
people with no idea who they were working for. We got most of their bigwigs
when you stormed his enclave, but Anu couldn't possibly have squeezed all
of them into it. We managed to identify most of the important bit players from
his captured records, but a lot of small fry have to've been missed.
"Those people don't
worry me. They know what'll happen if they draw attention to themselves, and I
expect most have decided to become very loyal subjects of the Imperium.
But what does worry me a bit is that Kirinal seems to have been running at
least two top secret cells no one else knew about. When you and 'Tanni killed
her in the Cuernavaca strike, not even Anu and Ganhar knew who those people
were, so they never got taken into the enclave before the final attack."
"My God, 'Hursag!"
Hatcher sounded appalled. "You mean we've still got top echelon people who
worked for Anu running around loose?"
"No more than a
dozen at the outside," Ninhursag replied, "and, like the small fry,
they're not going to draw attention to themselves. I'm not suggesting we forget
about them, Gerald, but consider the mess they're in. They lost their
patron when Colin killed Anu, and as Horus and I have been saying, we've turned
Earth's whole society upside-down, so they've probably lost a lot of the influence
they may've had in the old power structure. Even those who haven't been left
out in the cold have only their own resources to work with, and there's no way
they're going to do anything that might draw attention to their past
associations with Anu."
"Admiral MacMahan
is correct, Admiral Hatcher," Dahak said. "I do not mean to imply
that they will never be a menace again—indeed, the fact that they knowingly
served Anu indicates not only criminality on their part but ambition and
ability, as well—yet they no longer possess a support structure. Deprived of
Anu's monopoly on Imperial technology, they become simply one more criminal
element. While it would be folly to assume they are incapable of building a new
support structure or to abandon our search for them, they represent no greater
inherent threat than any other group of unscrupulous individuals. Moreover, it
should be noted that they were organized on a cell basis, which suggests
members of any one cell would know only other members of that cell. Concerted
action by any large number of them is therefore improbable."
"Huh!" Hatcher
grunted skeptically, then made himself relax. "All right, I grant you
that, but it makes me nervous to know any of Anu's bunch are still
around."
"You and me
both," Colin agreed, and Jiltanith nodded beside him. "On the other
hand, it sounds to me like you, Dahak, and Gus are on top of the situation
'Hursag. Stay there, and make sure I find out if anything—and I mean anything—changes
in regard to it."
"Of course,"
Ninhursag said quietly. "In the meantime, it seems to me the greatest
potential dangers lie in three areas. First, the Third World resentment Horus
has mentioned. A lot of those people still see the Imperium as an extension of
Western imperialism. Even some of those who truly believe we're doing our best
to treat everyone fairly can't quite forget we imposed our ideas and control on
them. I expect this particular problem to ease with time, but it'll be with us
for a good many years to come.
"Second, we've got
the First World people who've seen their positions in the old power structures
crumble. Some of them have been a real pain, like the old unions that're still
fighting our 'job-destroying new technology,' but, again, most of them—or their
children—will come around with time.
"Third, and most
disturbing, in a way, are the religious nuts." Ninhursag frowned
unhappily. "I just don't understand the true-believer mentality well
enough to feel confident about dealing with it, and there's a bunch of true
believers out there. Not just in the extreme Islamic blocs, either. At the
moment, there's no clear sign of organization—aside from this 'Church of the
Armageddon'—but it's mighty hard to reason with someone who's convinced God is
on his side. Still, they're not a serious threat unless they coalesce into something
bigger and nastier . . . and since the Great Charter guarantees freedom of
religion, there's not much we can do about them until and unless they try
something overtly treasonous."
She paused, checking
back over what she'd said, then shrugged.
"That's about the
size of it, at the moment. A lot of rumbles but no present signs of anything
really dangerous. We're keeping our eyes peeled, but for the most part it's
simply going to take time to relieve the tensions."
"Okay." Colin
leaned back and glanced around. "Anyone have anything else we need to look
at?" A general headshake answered him, and he rose. "In that case,
let's go see what the kids have gotten themselves into."
* * *
Eight hundred-plus
light-years from Birhat, a man swiveled his chair towards a window and gazed
down with unfocused yet intent eyes, staring through the view below to examine
something far beyond it.
He rocked the
old-fashioned swivel chair back with a gentle creak and steepled his fingers,
tapping his chin with his index fingers as he considered the changes which had
come upon his world . . . and the other changes he proposed to create in their
wake. It had taken almost ten years to attain the position he needed, but
attain it he had—not, he admitted, without the help of the Emperor himself—and
the game was about to begin.
There was nothing
inherently wrong, he conceded, in the notion of an empire, nor even of an
emperor for all humanity. Certainly someone had to make the human race
work together despite its traditional divisions, and the man in the chair had
no illusions about his species. With the best of intentions (assuming they
existed—a point he felt no obligation to concede), few of Earth's teeming
billions would have the least idea of how to create some sort of democratic
world state from the ground up. Even if they'd had one, democracies were
notoriously short-sighted about preparing for problems which lay beyond the
horizon, and the job of ultimately defeating the Achuultani was going to take
centuries. No, democracy would never do. Of course, he'd never been
particularly attached to that form of government, or Kirinal would never have
recruited him, now would she?
Not that his own views
on democratic government mattered, for one thing was clear: Colin I intended to
exercise his prerogatives of direct rule to provide the central authority
mankind required. And, the man in the chair reflected, His Imperial Majesty was
doing an excellent job. He was probably the most popular head of state in
Earth's history, and, of course, there was the tiny consideration that the
Fifth Imperium's armed forces were deeply—one might almost say
fanatically—loyal to their Emperor and Empress.
All of which, the man in
the chair admitted, made things difficult. But if the game were easy, anyone
could play, and think how inconvenient that would be!
He chuckled and rocked
gently, listening to his chair's soft, musical creaking. Actually, he rather
admired the Emperor. How many people could have resurrected an empire which had
died with its entire population over forty-five thousand years before and
crowned himself its ruler? That was a stellar accomplishment, whatever
immediate military advantages Colin MacIntyre might have enjoyed, and the man
in the chair saluted him.
Unfortunately, there could
be only one Emperor. However skilled, however determined, however adroit, there
could be but one of him . . . and he was not the man in the chair.
Or, the man in the chair
corrected himself with a smile, not yet.
"Finished,
Horus?"
The Planetary Duke of
Terra looked up and grimaced as Lawrence Jefferson stepped into his office.
"No," he said
sourly, dropping a data chip into his security drawer, "but I'm as close
as I'll be for the next decade, so we might as well go. It's not every day my
grandchildren have a twelfth birthday, and that's more important than
this."
Jefferson laughed as
Horus stood and sent his desk computer a command to lock the drawer, and an
answering smile flickered on the old man's lips. He glanced at Jefferson's
briefcase.
"I see you're not
leaving your work home."
"I'm not
going to the party. Besides, this isn't 'my' work—it's Admiral MacMahan's copy
of Gus' report on that anti-Narhani demonstration."
"Oh." Horus
sounded as disgusted as he felt. "You know, I've learned to handle
prejudice. We all suffer from that, to some extent, but this anti-Narhani thing
is plain, old-fashioned bigotry."
"True, but then the
difference between prejudice and bigotry is usually stupidity. The answer's
education. The Narhani are on our side; we just have to prove that to
these idiots."
"Somehow I doubt
they'd appreciate your terminology, Lawrence."
"I call them as I
see them." Jefferson grinned. "Besides, you're the only person here.
If it leaks, I'll know who to come after."
"I'll bear that in
mind." Horus finished shutting down his computer through his neural feed
as they strolled out of the office, and two armed Marine guards snapped to
attention. Their presence was a formality, but Hector MacMahan's Marines took
their responsibilities seriously. Besides, Horus was their Commandant's
great-great-great-etc.-grandfather.
The two men took the
old-fashioned elevator to the ground floor. White Tower at NASA's old Shepard
Center had been Horus' HQ throughout the Siege, and he'd resisted all pressure
to relocate from Colorado on the basis that the fact that Shepard Center had
never been anyone's capital would help defuse nationalist jealousies. Besides,
he liked the climate.
They crossed the plaza
to the mat-trans terminal, and Jefferson was grateful for his bio-enhancement
as his breath steamed. He wasn't in the military, so he lacked the full
enhancement that gave Horus ten times the strength of an unenhanced human, but
what he had sufficed to deal with little things like sub-freezing temperatures.
Which was handy, since Earth hadn't yet fully emerged from the mini-ice age
produced by the Siege's bombardment.
They chatted idly during
the walk, enjoying the moment of privacy, but Jefferson was still a bit bemused
by the absence of bodyguards. He'd grown to adulthood on a planet where
terrorism was the chosen form of "protest" by have-not nations, and
the report in his briefcase was proof his home world frothed with resentment as
it strained to make a nine- or ten-millennium leap in technology. Yet for all
that, violence directed at Earth's Governor was virtually unthinkable. Horus
had not only led Earth's people through the carnage of the Siege, he was also
the father of their beloved Empress, and only a particularly stupid maniac
would attack him to make a statement.
Not, Jefferson
reflected, that history didn't abound with stupid maniacs.
They entered the
mat-trans facility, and Jefferson felt himself tense. It didn't look like
much—merely a railed platform twenty meters on a side—but knowing what it could
do turned that brightly lit dais into something that made the primitive
tree-dweller within the Lieutenant Governor gibber.
His stride slowed, and
Horus grinned at him.
"Don't take it so
hard. And don't think you're the only one it scares!"
Jefferson managed a nod
as they stepped onto the platform and the bio-scanners Colin MacIntyre had
ordered incorporated into every mat-trans station considered them at length.
The mat-trans had been the Fourth Empire's executioner, the vector by which the
rogue bio-weapon infected worlds hundreds of light-years apart, and he had no
intention of allowing that particular bit of history to repeat itself.
But the scanners cleared
them, and Jefferson clutched his briefcase in a sweaty hand, trying very hard
to appear nonchalant, as heavy capacitors whined. The mat-trans' power
requirements were astronomical, even by Imperial standards, and it took almost
twenty seconds to reach peak load. Then a light flashed . . . and Horus and
Lawrence Jefferson stepped down from another platform on the planet Birhat,
eight hundred light-years from Earth.
The thing that made it
so damned scary, Jefferson thought as he left the mat-trans receiver gratefully
behind, was that you didn't feel a thing. Nothing. It just wasn't
natural . . . and wasn't that a fine thing for a man stuffed full of sensors
and neural boosters to be thinking?
"Hi,
Granddad." Jefferson looked up as General MacMahan held out his hand to
Horus then turned to shake his own. "Colin asked me to meet you. He's tied
up with something over at the Palace."
"Tied up with
what?" Horus asked.
"I'm not sure, but
he sounded a bit harassed. I think—" Hector grinned impishly "—it's
got something to do with Cohanna."
"Oh, Maker! What's
she been up to now?"
"Don't know. Come
on, I've got transport waiting."
"Damn it,
'Hanna!" Colin paced back and forth before the utilitarian desk from which
he ran the Imperium, tugging on his nose in a gesture his subordinates knew
only too well. "I've told you and told you you can't just go
chasing off after any wild hare that takes your fancy!"
"But, Colin—"
Cohanna began.
"Don't 'But, Colin'
me! Did I or did I not tell you to check your next genetic experiment with me
before you started on it?"
"Well, of course
you did. And I did clear it with you," Baroness Cohanna, Imperial
Minister of Bio-Sciences added virtuously.
"You what?"
Colin wheeled on her in disbelief.
"I said I cleared
it with you. I sat right here in this office with Brashieel and told you what I
was going to do."
"You—!" Colin
turned to the saurian-looking, long-snouted, quarter-horse-sized centauroid
resting comfortably on his folded legs in the middle of the rug, who returned
his gaze with mild, double-lidded eyes. "Brashieel, do you remember
her saying anything about this?"
"Yes,"
Brashieel replied calmly through the small black box mounted on one strap of
his body harness. His vocal apparatus was poorly suited to human speech, but
he'd learned to use his neural feed-driven vocoder's deep bass to express
emotion as well as words.
Colin drew a deep
breath, then perched on his desk and folded his arms. Brashieel seldom made
mistakes, and Cohanna's triumphant expression made Colin unhappily certain she
had mentioned it. Or something about it.
"All right,"
he sighed, "what, exactly, did she say?"
Brashieel closed his
inner eyelids in concentration, and Colin waited patiently. The alien's mere
presence was enough to give some members of humanity screaming fits, which
Colin understood even if he rejected their attitude. To be sure, Brashieel was
an Achuultani. Worse, he was the sole survivor of the fleet which had come
within hours of destroying the planet Earth. He was also, however, the being
who'd emerged as the natural leader of the prisoners of war Colin had captured
after defeating the incursion, and most of those prisoners—not all, but
most—were even more committed to the ultimate defeat of the rest of the
Achuultani than humanity was.
For seventy-eight
million years, the people of the Nest of Aku'Ultan had quartered the galaxy,
destroying every sentient species they encountered. Of all their potential victims,
only humanity had survived—not just once, but three times, earning it the
Achuultani appellation of "the Demon Nest-Killers"—but Brashieel and
his fellows knew something the rest of their race did not. They knew their
entire species was enslaved by a self-aware computer which used their unending
murder of races who meant them no ill to sustain the "state of war"
its programming required to maintain its tyranny.
Not all humans were
ready to accept their sincerity, which was why Colin had turned the planet
Narhan over to those who had applied for Imperial citizenship. Narhan had
avoided the bio-weapon for a simple reason; no one had lived on it, since its
2.67 gravity field produced a sea-level atmosphere lethal to unenhanced humans.
Its air was a bit dense even for Achuultani lungs, and it was inconveniently
placed—it was far enough from Birhat that travelers by mat-trans had to stage
through Earth to reach the capital planet—but its settlers had fallen under the
spell of its rugged beauty as they set about carving out their new Nest of
Narhan as loyal subjects of their human overlord on a world beyond the reach of
hysterical xenophobes.
"Cohanna had
reported on progress with the genetic engineering to recreate Narhani
females," Brashieel said at last. The rogue computer had eliminated all
sexual reproduction by eliminating all Achuultani females. Every Achuultani was
male, either a clone or an embryo fertilized in vitro. "Thereafter, she
turned to discussion of her suggestion to increase our life spans to something
approaching those of humans."
Colin nodded.
Achuultani—Narhani, he corrected himself—were bigger and far stronger than
humans. They also matured much more rapidly, but their normal span was little
more than fifty years. Bio-enhancement, which all adult Narhani who'd taken the
oath of loyalty had received as quickly as Cohanna got a grip on their alien
physiology, stretched that to almost three hundred years, but that remained
much shorter than for enhanced humans.
Extending Narhani lives
was a challenge, but unlike humans, Narhani had no prejudice against
bioengineering. They regarded it as a fact of life, given their own origins and
the cloned children Jiltanith's Terra-born sister Isis had managed to produce
over the last few years, and the possibility of recreating females of their
species simply strengthened that attitude.
"We discussed the
practical aspects," Brashieel continued, "and I mentioned Tinker
Bell."
"I know you did,
but surely I never okayed this."
"I regret that I
must disagree," Brashieel said, and Colin frowned.
Hector MacMahan's big,
happy half-lab, half-rottweiler bitch Tinker Bell had fallen in love with the
Narhani. It amused Colin, given the way the dogs in every bad science-fiction
movie ever made hated the "alien menace" on sight, but it was more
than amusing to the Narhani. The Nest of Aku'Ultan had nothing remotely like
her—indeed, one of the most alien things about the nest was the absence of any
form of pet—and they found her fascinating. Almost every Narhani had speedily
acquired a dog of his own, but they, like any other Terrestrial animal, would
have been unable to survive on Narhan, and the Narhani were fiercely devoted to
their four-footed friends.
"Look, I know I
authorized limited bio-enhancement so you could take the dogs with you, but I
never contemplated anything like this."
"I cannot, of
course, know what was in your mind, but the point was raised." Colin
clenched his teeth. The Narhani were as intelligent as humans but less
imaginative and far more literal-minded. "Cohanna pointed out that genetic
engineering would permit her to produce dogs who required no enhancement, and
you agreed. She then reminded you of Dahak's success in communicating with
Tinker Bell and suggested the capability for meaningful exchanges might also be
enhanced."
Colin opened his mouth,
then shut it with a snap as his own memory replayed the conversation. She had
mentioned it, and he'd agreed. But, damn it, she should have known what he
meant!
He closed his eyes and
counted to five hundred. Dahak had insisted for years that Tinker Bell's barks,
growls, and yips were more value-laden than humans believed, and he'd persisted
with an analysis of her sounds until he proved his point. Dogs were no mental
giants. Their cognitive functions were severely limited, and their ability to
manipulate symbols was virtually nonexistent, but they had lots more to say
than mankind had guessed.
"All right," he
said finally, opening his eyes and glowering at Cohanna, who returned his gaze
innocently. "All right. I admit the point came up, but you never told me
you had anything like this in mind."
"Only because I
thought it was self-evident," she said, and Colin bit off an acid
response. He sometimes toyed with the notion that the millennia Cohanna had
spent in stasis had affected her mind, but he'd known Terra-born humans just
like her. She was brilliant and intensely curious, and little things like
political realities, wars, and nearby supernovas were totally unimportant
compared to her current project—whatever it might be.
"Look," he
tried again, "I've got several million Terra-born who find simple
biotechnics scary, 'Hanna." Her nose wrinkled with contempt for such
benighted ignorance, and he sighed. "All right, so they're wrong. But that
doesn't change the way they feel, and if that upsets them, how are they
going to react to your fooling with the natural order of evolution?"
"Evolution,"
she replied, "is an unreasoning statistical process which represents no
more than the blind conservation of accidental life forms capable of surviving
within their environments."
"Please
don't say things like that!" Colin ran his hands through his hair and
tried not to look harried. "Maybe you're right, but too many Terra-born
regard it as the working out of God's plan for the universe. And even the ones
who don't tend to remember the bio-weapon and wake up screaming!"
"Barbarians!"
Cohanna snorted, and Colin sighed.
"I ought to order
you to destroy them," he muttered, but he shied away from the rebellion in
her eyes. "All right, I won't. Not immediately, anyway. But before I
promise not to, I want to see them with my own eyes. And you are not to
conduct any more genetic experiments outside a Petri dish without my
specific—and written!—authorization. Is that understood?"
The doctor nodded
frigidly, and Colin walked around his desk to flop into his chair. "Good.
Now, I've got a meeting with Horus and Lieutenant Governor Jefferson in ten
minutes, so we're going to have to wrap this up. But before we do, are there
any problems—or surprises—with Project Genesis?"
"No."
Cohanna's spine relaxed. One thing about her, Colin reflected; she was a tartar
when her toes got stepped on, but she recovered. "Although," she
added pointedly, "I'm a bit surprised you don't object to the name."
"I wish I'd thought
about it when Isis suggested it, but I didn't. And we're only using it
internally and all the reports are classified, so I don't expect it to upset
anyone."
"Hmph!"
Cohanna sniffed, then smiled wryly. "Well, it's really more her project
than mine, anyway, so I suppose I shouldn't complain. Anyway, we should be
ready to move within the next year or so."
"That soon?"
Colin was impressed, and he cocked his head to gaze at Brashieel. "How do
you folks feel about that, Brashieel?"
"Curious," the
alien said, "and possibly a bit frightened. After all, the concept of
females is still quite strange, and the notion of producing nestlings with a
nestmate is . . . peculiar. Most of us, however, are eager to see what they're
like. For myself, I look forward to it with interest, though I'm highly
satisfied with the way Brashan has turned out."
"Yeah, you might
say he's a chip off the old block." Brashieel, whose race was given
neither to clichés nor puns, looked blank, but Cohanna winced, and Colin
grinned. "Okay, that's going to have to be it." His guests rose, and
he wagged a finger at Cohanna. "But I meant what I said about experiments,
'Hanna! And I want to see them myself."
"Understood,"
the doctor said. She and Brashieel walked from the office, pausing to exchange
greetings with Horus, Hector, and Jefferson on their way out, and Colin leaned
back in his chair with a sigh. Lord! Combining Narhani literal-mindedness with
someone like Cohanna was just begging for trouble. He'd have to keep a closer
eye on her.
He opened his eyes to
see his father-in-law studying the carpet. A quirked eyebrow invited
explanation, and Horus chuckled.
"Just checking to
see how deep the blood was."
"You don't know how
close to right you are," Colin growled. "Jesus! After all the times
I've lectured her on the subject—!" He stood to embrace Horus, then
extended a hand to Jefferson. "Good to see you again, Mister
Jefferson."
"Thank you, Your
Majesty. You might see more of me if I didn't have to come by mat-trans."
His shudder was only half-feigned, and Colin laughed.
"I know. The first
time I used a transit shaft I almost wet my pants, and the mat-trans is
worse."
"But
efficient," the stocky, brown-haired Lieutenant Governor replied with a
small smile. "Most efficient—damn it!"
"True, too
true."
"Tell, me, Colin,
just what has 'Hanna been up to now?" Horus asked.
"She—" Colin
paused, then shrugged. "It stays in this office, but I guess I can tell
you. You know she's bioengineering dogs for Narhan?" His guests nodded.
"Well, she's gone a bit further than I intended. She's been working with a
couple of Tinker Bell's litters to give them near-human intelligence."
"What?" Horus
blinked at him. "I thought you told her not to—"
"I did.
Unfortunately, she told me she wanted to 'enhance their ability to communicate
with the Narhani' and I told her to go ahead." He grimaced. "Silly
me."
"Oh, Maker,"
Horus groaned. "Why can't she have half as much common sense as she does
brainpower?"
"Because she
wouldn't be Cohanna." Colin grinned, then sobered. "The worst of it
is, the first litter's fully adult, and she's been educating them through their
implants," he went on more somberly. "My emotions are having a little
trouble catching up with my intellect, but if she's really given them human or
near-human intelligence, the whole equation shifts. I mean, if she's gone and
turned them into people on me, it's not like putting a starving stray to
sleep. 'Lab animals' or not, I'm not sure I even have a legal right, much less
a moral one, to have them destroyed, whatever the possible consequences."
"Excuse me, Your
Majesty," Jefferson suggested diffidently, "but I think, perhaps,
you'd better consider doing just that." Colin raised an eyebrow, and
Jefferson shrugged. "We're having enough anti-Narhani problems without
adding this to the fire. The last demonstration was pretty ugly, and it wasn't
in one of our more reactionary areas, either. It was in London."
"London?"
Colin looked sharply at Horus, instantly diverted from Cohanna's experiment.
"How bad was it?"
"Not good,"
Horus admitted. "More of the 'The Only Good Achuultani Is a Dead
Achuultani' kind of thing. There were some tussles, but they started when the
marchers ran into a counter-demonstration, so they may actually have been a
sign of sanity. I hope so, anyway."
"Oh, Lord!"
Colin sighed. "You know, it was an awful lot easier fighting the
Achuultani. Well, simpler, anyway."
"True. Still, I
think time is on our side." Colin made a face and Horus chuckled. "I
know. I'm getting as tired of saying that as you must be of hearing it, but
it's true. And time is one thing we've got plenty of."
"Maybe. But while
we're on the subject, who organized this thing?"
"We're not entirely
certain," Jefferson replied. "Gus is looking into it, but the
official organizers were a bunch called HHI—'Humans for a Human Imperium.' On
the surface, they're a batch of professional rowdies backed up by a crop of
discontented intellectuals. The 'high-brows' seem to be academics who resent
finding everything they spent their lives learning has become outdated
overnight. It would seem—" he smiled thinly "—that some of our
fearless intellectual pioneers are a bit less pioneering than they
thought."
"Hard to blame
them, really," Horus pointed out. "It's not so much that they're
rejecting the truth as that they feel betrayed. As you say, Lawrence, they
spent their lives establishing themselves as intellectual leaders only to find
themselves brushed aside."
"I know."
Colin frowned down at his hands for a moment, then looked back up. "Still,
that sounds like a pretty strange marriage. Professional rowdies and
professors? Wonder how they made connections?"
"Stranger things
have happened, Your Majesty, but Gus and I are asking the same question, and he
thinks the answer is the Church of the Armageddon."
"Oh, shit,"
Colin said disgustedly.
"Inelegant, but
apt," Horus said. "In fact, that's what bothers me most. The church
started out as a simple fusion of fundamentalists who saw the Achuultani as the
true villains of the Armageddon, but this is a new departure, even for them.
They've hated the Achuultani all along, but this is a shift to open racism—if I
may use the term—of a particularly ugly stripe."
"Yeah. Anything
more on their leadership, Mister Jefferson?"
"Not really, Your
Majesty. They've never tried to hide their membership—why should they when they
enjoy legal religious toleration?—but they're such an untidy agglomeration of
splinter groups the hierarchical lines are pretty vague. We're still working on
who actually calls the shots. Their spokesperson seems to be this Bishop
Hilgemann, though I'm afraid I don't agree with Gus about her real authority. I
think she's more a mouthpiece than a policy-maker, but we're both just
guessing."
"You're going to
discuss this with Ninhursag?"
"Of course, Your
Majesty. I've brought Gus' report and I'm going up to Mother after this
meeting. Admiral MacMahan and I will put our heads together, and perhaps Dahak
can help us pull something out of the data."
"Good luck.
'Hursag's been trying to get a handle on them for over a year now. Oh,
well." Colin shook his head and rose, holding out his hand to the
Lieutenant Governor once more. "In that case, I won't keep you, Mister
Jefferson. Horus and I have a birthday party to attend, and two pre-adolescent
hellions who'll make us both miserable if we're late."
"Of course. Please
give the Empress and your children my regards."
"I will—in between
the presents, cake, punch, and general hullabaloo. Good luck with your
report."
"Thank you, Your
Majesty." Jefferson withdrew gracefully, and Colin and Horus headed for
the imperial family's side of the Palace.
Colin MacIntyre tossed
his jacket into a chair, and his green eyes laughed as a robot butler clucked
audibly and scooped it up again. 'Tanni was as neat as the cat she so
resembled, and she'd programmed the household robots to condemn his sloppiness
for her when she was busy elsewhere.
He glanced into the
library in passing and saw two heads of sable hair bent over a hologram. It
looked like the primary converter of a gravitonic conveyor's main propulsion
unit, and the twins were busily manipulating the display through their neural
feeds to turn it into an exploded schematic while they argued some abstruse
point.
Their father shook his
head and continued on his way. It was hard to remember they were only
twelve—when they were studying, anyway—but he knew that was only because he'd
grown up without implant educations.
With neural interfacing,
there was no inherent limit to the data any individual could be given, but raw
data wasn't the same as knowledge, and that required a whole new set of
educational parameters. For the first time in human history, the only
thing that mattered was what the best educators had always insisted was the
true goal of education: the exploration of knowledge. It was no longer
necessary for students to spend endless hours acquiring data, but only a matter
of making them aware of what they already "knew" and teaching them to
use it—teaching them to think, really—and that was a good teacher's
delight. Unfortunately, it also invalidated the traditional groundwork and
performance criteria. Too many teachers were lost without the old rules—and
even more of them, led by the West's unions, had waged a bitter scorched earth
campaign against accepting the new. The human race in general seemed to think
the Emperor possessed some sort of magic wand, and, in a way, they were right.
Colin could do just about anything he decided needed doing . . . as long as he
was prepared to use heavy enough artillery and convinced the battle was worth
the cost.
It had taken him over
three years to reach that conclusion where Earth's teaching establishment was
concerned. For forty-three months, he'd listened to reason after reason why the
changeover could not be made. Too few Earth schoolchildren had neural feeds.
Too little hardware was available. Too many new concepts in too short a time
would confuse children already in the system and damage them beyond repair. The
list had gone on and on and on, until, finally, he'd had enough and announced
the dissolution of all teachers' unions and the firing of every teacher
employed by any publicly funded educational department or system anywhere on
the planet.
The people he'd fired
had tried to fight the decree in the courts only to discover that the Great
Charter gave Colin the authority to do just what he'd done, and when they came
up against the cold steel his homely, usually cheerful face normally hid so
well, their grave concern for the well-being of their students had undergone a
radical change. Suddenly the only thing they wanted to do was make the
transition as quick and painless as possible, and if the Emperor would only let
them have their jobs back, they would get down to it immediately.
They had. Still not
without a certain amount of foot dragging when they thought no one was looking,
but they had gotten down to it. Of course, every one of their earlier
objections had had its own grain of truth, which made the introduction of an
entirely new educational system difficult and often frustratingly slow, but
once they accepted that Colin was serious, they'd really buckled down and
pushed. And, along the way, the ones who had the makings of true teachers
rather than petty bureaucrats had rediscovered the joy of teaching. The ones
who didn't make that rediscovery tended to disappear from the profession in
ever greater numbers, but their earlier opposition and lingering guerrilla
warfare had delayed the full-scale implementation of modern education on Earth
by at least ten years.
Which meant, of course,
that children on Birhat had a measurable advantage over those educated on
Earth. Dahak spent most of his time in Birhat orbit, and while Earth's teaching
establishment grappled with Imperial education theories, Dahak had already
mastered them. More, he, unlike they, had no institutional or personal
objections to adopting them, and it required only a tithe of his vast capacity
to institute what amounted to a planet-wide system of small-group studies. His
students responded with an insatiable hunger to learn, and, to Colin's
knowledge the twins had never played hooky, which was almost scary.
He walked into the
study, and Jiltanith smiled at him from her desk. He took the time to kiss her
properly, then flopped into his chair and sighed contentedly as it adjusted to
his body's contours.
"Thou soundest well
content to leave thine office behind thee, my love," Jiltanith observed,
putting her own computer on hold, and he nodded.
"You oughta
try it sometime," he said pointedly, and she laughed.
"Nay, my Colin.
'Twould drive me to bedlam's brink did I have naught to which to set my hands,
and this—" she gestured at the hardcopy and data chips strewn over her
desk "—is a study most interesting."
"Yeah?"
"Aye. Amanda hath
begun to think how best we may use Tao-ling's Mark Twenty hyper gun in small
unit tactics."
Colin shook his head
wryly. Jiltanith didn't love combat—she knew too much of what it cost—yet there
were dark and dangerous places in her soul. He suspected that no one, not even
he, would ever be admitted into some of them, but a lifetime of bitter
guerrilla warfare had left its mark, and, unlike him, she saw war not as a last
response but as a practical option that worked. She wasn't merciless, but she was
far more capable of slaughter—and less inclined to give quarter—than he. That
was why he'd made her Minister of War. As Warlord, Colin was the Imperium's
commander-in-chief, but it was 'Tanni who ran their growing military
establishment on a day-to-day basis.
"Well, if you can
tear yourself away, we're about to have visitors."
"Ah?" She
cocked her head at him.
"Isis, Cohanna, and
Cohanna's . . . project," he said less cheerfully. "I'm afraid
Jefferson may be right about the logic of ordering them destroyed, but I can't
say I'm looking forward to making that decision."
"Nor shouldst
thou." His wife stood and walked around her desk. "Logic, as thou
hast said time without number, my love, may be naught but a way to err wi'
confidence."
"You got that
right, babe," he sighed, snaking an arm around her as she passed. She
paused to ruffle his sandy hair, then sank into her own chair. "The thing
is, I think I'm trying to psych myself up to decide against them 'cause I think
I ought to, and that makes me feel sort of ashamed."
"The day thy
self-doubt ceaseth will be the day thou becomest less than thy best self,
Colin," she said gently.
He smiled, changed the
subject to something more comfortable, and let 'Tanni's voice flow over him. He
treasured the moments when they could forget the Imperium, forget their duties,
forget the need to finish the Achuultani threat once and for all, and 'Tanni's
soft, archaic speech wove a spell that helped him hold those things at bay, be
it ever so briefly. She'd learned her English during the Wars of the Roses and
flatly refused to abandon it. Besides, as she'd pointed out upon occasion, she
spoke true English, not the debased dialect he'd learned.
"Excuse me,
Colin," a mellow voice injected into a break in their conversation,
"but Cohanna and Isis have arrived."
"Thanks."
Colin sighed and set the moment aside, feeling the universe intruding upon them
once more but revitalized by the temporary escape. "Tell them we're in the
study."
"I have already
done so. They will arrive momentarily."
"Fine. And hang
around yourself. We may need your input."
"Of course,"
Dahak agreed. Colin knew a tiny bit of the computer's attention always followed
him about, ready to respond to questions or advise him of new developments, but
Dahak had designed a special subroutine to monitor his Emperor's whereabouts
and needs without bringing them to the front of his attention unless certain
critical parameters were crossed. It was his way of assuring Colin's privacy, a
concept he didn't entirely understand but whose importance to his human friends
he recognized.
The study door opened,
and Cohanna marched in like a grenadier with a delicate, white-haired woman
whose aged eyes were remarkably like Jiltanith's. Isis Tudor was over ninety,
and there'd been no bio-enhancement for the Terra-born in her girlhood. By the
time it became available, her body was too old and fragile for full
enhancement, and age pared away more of her strength with every year. Yet there
was nothing wrong with her mind, and the enhancement she could tolerate gave
her an energy at odds with her growing frailty.
Jiltanith stood to
embrace her while Cohanna met Colin's gaze with an edge of challenge and four
black-and-tan dogs followed her through the door. They moved in formation, with
a most undoglike precision, and arranged themselves in a neat line as they sat
on the rug.
They looked, Colin
thought, like fireplugs on legs. Tinker Bell's pups had been sired by a pedigreed
rottweiler, and the lab side of their heritage was scarcely noticeable. They
had a solid, squared-off appearance, with powerful muzzles, and the biggest
must have massed almost sixty kilos.
He studied them for
signs of the changes Cohanna had wrought. There weren't many. The massive
rottweiler head was perhaps a little broader, with a more pronounced cranial
bulge, though he doubted he would have noticed without looking for it, yet
there was something. And then he realized. The eyes fixed upon him with
unwavering attention betrayed the intelligence behind them.
"All right,
Colin." Cohanna's voice wrenched his attention from the dogs. "You
wanted to see them. Here they are."
He looked up quickly,
but her expression gave him pause. He was accustomed to her testiness, but her
dark eyes were fierce. This, he realized with a sinking sensation, was no
bloodless project for her.
"Sit down,
'Hanna," he said quietly, and knelt before the dogs as she sank into an
empty chair. Heads cocked to look at him, and he ran a hand down the biggest's
broad back. His sensory boosters were on high, and he felt the usual bunchy
muscle of the breed . . . and something more. He looked at Cohanna, and she
shrugged.
" 'Hanna," he
sighed, "I have to tell you I'm less worried, in a way, about the genetic
stuff than the rest of it. Do you have any idea how the anti-techies will react
to fully enhanced dogs? The idea of a dog with that kind of strength and
toughness is going to terrify them."
"Then they're
idiots!" Cohanna glared at him, then sighed herself, and something very
like guilt diluted her fierceness. A knot of tension inside him relaxed
slightly as he saw it and realized how much of her anger at him came from an
awareness that perhaps she had gone too far.
"All right,"
she said finally, her voice low. "Maybe I was an idiot. I still
maintain—" her eyes flashed "—that they're superstitious savages,
but, damn it, Colin, I can't understand how their minds work! These dogs
represent no more danger to them than another enhanced human would!"
"I know you think
they don't, 'Hanna, but—"
"I don't 'think'
anything, Colin—I know! And so will you if you take the time to get to
know them."
"That," he
admitted, "is what I'm more than half afraid of." He turned back to
the dogs, and the big male he'd touched returned his gaze levelly. "This
is Galahad?" he asked Cohanna . . . but someone else answered.
"Yes," a
mechanically produced voice said, and Colin's eyes widened as he saw the small
vocoder on the dog's collar. A shiver ran down his spine as a "dumb
animal" spoke, but it vanished in an instant. Wonder replaced it, and a
strange delight he tried hard to suppress, and he drew a deep breath.
"Well,
Galahad," he said quietly, "has Cohanna explained why I wanted to
meet you?"
"Yes," the dog
replied. His ears moved, and Colin realized it was a deliberate gesture—an
expression intended to convey meaning. "But we do not understand why
others fear us." The words came slowly but without hesitation.
"Excuse me a
moment, Galahad," Colin said, feeling only a slight sense of unreality at
extending human-style courtesies to a dog. He looked back up at Cohanna.
"How much of that was computer enhanced?"
"There's some
enhancement," the doctor admitted. "They tend to forget definite
articles, and their sentence structure's very simple. They never use the past
tense, either, but the software is limited to 'filling in the holes.' It
doesn't provide any expansion of their meaning."
"Galahad,"
Colin turned back to the dog, "you don't frighten me—or anyone else
in this room—but some people will find you . . . unnatural, and humans are
afraid of things they don't understand."
"Why?" Galahad
asked.
"I wish I could
explain why," Colin sighed.
"Danger is cause
for fear," the dog said, "but we are no danger. We wish only to be.
We are not evil."
Colin blinked. A word
like "evil" implied an ability to manipulate concepts light-years in
advance of anything Tinker Bell had ever managed.
"Galahad," he
asked carefully, "what do you think 'evil' is?"
"Evil," the
mechanically-generated voice replied, "is danger. Evil is hurting when not
hurt or when hurting is not needed."
Colin winced, for
Galahad had cut to the heart of his own definition of evil. And whether he'd
meant to or not, he'd thrown Colin's decision about his own fate into stark
focus.
Colin MacIntyre stared
into his own soul and disliked what he saw. How could he explain that much of
humanity was incapable of understanding what Galahad saw so clearly, or why he
felt so ashamed that it was so?
"Colin-human,"
Colin looked up as Galahad spoke again, "I try to understand, for
understanding is good, but I cannot. We know—" a toss of a massive canine
head indicated his litter-mates "—you may end us. We do not want to end. You
do not want to end us. If we must end we cannot stop you. But it is not right,
Colin-human." Canine eyes held his with heart-tearing dignity. "It is
not right," Galahad repeated, "and this is something you know."
Colin bit his lip. He
turned to Jiltanith, and when her eyes—the black, subtly alien eyes of a full
Imperial—met his, they, too, shone with tears.
"He hath the right
of it, my Colin," she said quietly. "Should we decree their deaths,
'twill be fear that moveth us—fear that maketh us do what we know full well is
wrong. Nay, more than wrong." She knelt beside him, touching a slender
hand to Galahad's heavy head. "E'en as Galahad hath said, 'twould evil be
to hurt where hurting need not be."
"I know." His
voice was equally quiet, and then he shook himself. "Isis?"
" 'Tanni's right.
If I'd known what 'Hanna was planning I'd've pitched a fit right alongside you,
but look at them. They're magnificent. People, Colin—good people who
happen to have four feet and no hands."
"Yes." Colin
looked down at his hands—the hands Galahad didn't have—and felt the decision
make itself. He rose and tugged on his nose, thinking hard. "How many are
we talking about here, 'Hanna?"
"Ten. These four
and two smaller litters."
"Okay." He
turned back to Galahad and his siblings. "Listen to me, all of you. I know
you don't understand why humans should be afraid of you, but do all of you
accept that they might be?" Four canine heads nodded in unmistakable
assent, and he chuckled despite his solemnity. "Good, because the only way
we could keep you really safe would be for us to keep the humans you might
scare from finding out you exist, and we can't do that forever.
"So here's what I'm
going to do. From now on, you four will live with us—with 'Tanni and me—and
except for when you're alone with us, you have to pretend to be just like other
dogs. Can you do that?"
"Yes,
Colin-human." It wasn't Galahad, but a smaller female who spoke, and her
dignified mien vanished abruptly. She leapt up on him, wagging her tail and
slurping his face enthusiastically, then tore around the room barking madly.
She skidded to a halt, tongue lolling, dumped herself untidily on the carpet,
rolled on her back, and waved all four feet in the air. Then she rolled back
over and sat upright once more, eyes laughing at him.
"All right!"
He wiped his face and grinned, then sobered again. "I don't know if you'll
understand this, but we're going to take you lots of places and show you to
lots of people, and I want you to behave like ordinary dogs. The news people'll
get a lot of footage of you, and that's good. When the truth about you gets
out, I want the rest of humanity to be used to seeing you. I want them used to
the idea that you're not a threat. That you've been around a long time and
never hurt anyone. Do you understand?"
"If we prove we are
not evil, people will not fear us?" Galahad asked.
"Exactly. It's not
fair—you shouldn't have to prove it any more than they should—but that's
how it has to be. Can you do that?"
"We can,
Colin-human," Galahad said softly.
Fleet Admiral the Lady
Adrienne Robbins, Baroness Nergal and Companion of the Golden Nova, dodged with
a haste which ill accorded with her exalted rank. She flattened herself against
the wall of the Palace corridor and shrank into the smallest possible space as
four human children, a half-grown Narhani, and a pack of four leaping
rottweilers thundered down upon her.
Fortunately for the
admiral, the long-haired girl leading the charge saw her, and they hit the
brakes as only children can, skittering to a halt in a tangled confusion of
arms, legs, feet, hooves, and paws.
"Hi, Aunt
Adrienne!" Princess Isis Harriet MacIntyre shouted, and Admiral Robbins
stepped away from the wall. Sean and Harriet seemed unaffected by her glare,
but Sandy MacMahan looked a bit abashed and Tamman studied his toes. Brashan,
Brashieel's clone-child, looked dreadfully embarrassed, for if he was younger
than any of the others, he was already a near-adult, given the speed with which
his species matured. For their part, the various dogs flopped down and panted
at her, but their canine insouciance didn't fool Adrienne, for she was one of
the handful of people who knew the truth about them.
"I wonder,"
the admiral said darkly, "how Their Imperial Majesties would react to the
way you young hellions came tearing down on me?"
"Oh, Dad wouldn't
mind." Sean grinned.
"I was thinking
more of Her Imperial Majesty," Adrienne said, and Sean suddenly
looked more thoughtful. "That's what I thought, too. Can you give me one
good reason I shouldn't tell her?"
"Because you
wouldn't want us on your conscience?" he suggested, and she swallowed a
laugh and frowned.
"My conscience is
pretty resilient, Your Highness."
"Uh, do you
have to mention this to Mom and Dad?" Harriet asked, and Adrienne
considered her for a long, dreadful moment. Tamman wiggled, clearly picturing his
parents' reaction, and Adrienne relented.
"Not this time, I
suppose. But—" she held up an admonishing finger as relieved smiles
blossomed "—I won't be so gooey-centered next time!"
An earnest chorus of
thanks answered her, and she made shooing motions with her hands.
"Then get,
you horrible brats!" she commanded, and the cavalcade leapt back into
motion (albeit less impetuously than before) down the hall.
Adrienne smiled after
them, then resumed her interrupted journey. Sean, she reflected, was a
dark-haired version of his father, with the same beaky nose and jug ears no one
would ever call handsome, but he was already bidding fair to be quite a bit
taller than either of his parents.
Harriet, on the other
hand, was a junior edition of her mother—a pretty child who was going to be an
astoundingly beautiful woman. Both twins had Jiltanith's eyes, but Harriet's
were softer. No less lively, but gentler. Actually, Adrienne reflected, she
took more after Colin personality-wise, while Sean mingled his mother's
absolute fearlessness and his father's humor into an amalgam all his own. One
of these days, that boy was going to be a real heart-breaker.
She emerged from her
reverie as she reached her destination, and the door slid open to admit her to
Colin's office. The Emperor looked up from his paperwork and waved at a chair.
"Have a seat,
Adrienne. I'll be with you a minute."
Admiral Robbins sat,
smoothing her uniform sleeve fastidiously, and waited patiently for Colin to
finish the current installment of his unending paper chase. He dumped the
data—and his decision—back into the computer, then leaned back and crossed his
legs.
"I see you evaded
the thundering herd," he observed, and she glanced at him in surprise.
"I've got surveillance systems in the public corridors, remember? 'Young
hellions' is exactly right!"
"Oh, they're not
that bad. Lively, mind you, but I don't mind."
"Nobody does. Well,
nobody but 'Tanni, maybe. The little devils are cute as a crop of buttons, and
they know it." He shook his head and sighed. "Oh, well. On to
business. Thanks for coming so promptly, by the way."
"That's the way
empires are run, Your Majesty. 'I say unto one go, and he goeth' and all that.
But I have to admit you piqued my curiosity. What's so sensitive we couldn't
discuss it over the com?"
"I'm probably just
being paranoid," Colin said more seriously, "but those anti-Narhani
demonstrations are getting worse, not better, so I didn't want to take any
chance on this leaking. What I've got in mind is either going to make them a
lot better . . . or a hell of a lot worse."
"I hate it when you
get enigmatic, Colin," Adrienne sighed.
"Sorry. It's just
that I beat my head against this for months before I made up my mind, and I'm
pissed at myself for taking so long to do what I should've done in the first
place. I'm opening the Academy to Narhani."
"Oh, Lord!"
Adrienne clutched at her gun-metal hair and moaned. "Why is it always me?
Do you have any idea how the newsies are going to react? They'll be all over my
campus, stomping the shrubbery flat!"
"Oh, come on!"
Colin chuckled. "The first-generation clones won't be ready until Sean and
Harry are—you've got time for the spade work."
" 'Spade work,' he
says! Bulldozer work, you mean! Fortunately," she smiled rather smugly,
"I figured out this was coming over a year ago. We've been working
on syllabus modification ever since."
"You have?"
"Of course we have.
Lordy, Colin, don't you think I've been around long enough to realize how you
think? It takes you a while, sometimes, but you usually get to the right
decision sooner or later."
"You," Colin
observed dryly, "don't have the most respectful demeanor of any naval
officer in the galaxy."
"I do on duty. Want
to see my 'official commandant's' face?" Her smile vanished instantly into
a stern expression and cold, measuring eyes that impaled him for a ten-count
before she relaxed with a grin. "I keep it in a box on my dresser till I
need it."
"God, no wonder the
middies are all scared spitless of you!"
"Better me than the
bad guys."
"True. Actually,
though, I want a bit more from you than adjustments to your curriculum. I want
you to endorse the suggestion."
"Well, of
course," she said with some surprise. "Why shouldn't I?"
"I mean I want you
to go public and talk to the media," he explained, and she grimaced. One
of the things she liked best about the Imperial Charter was that while it
guaranteed freedom of speech it didn't regard reporters as tin gods. Imperial privacy
laws and—even better—libel laws had come as a shock to Terran journalists, and
if there was one life form Adrienne Robbins truly despised, it was newsies.
They'd made her life hell after the Siege of Earth and the Zeta Trianguli
campaign.
"Oh, shit, Colin.
Do I have to?"
" 'Fraid so,"
he said with a twinge of guilt, for a large chunk of the Palace staff was
devoted to keeping the press as far away from him as possible, helped by
the fact that Jiltanith was not only far more photogenic but surprisingly
comfortable with the public. Colin knew his subjects respected him, but they loved
'Tanni.
Which, he mused,
indicated the public had a higher IQ than he'd once believed possible.
"Look," he
went on persuasively, "you know my policy on Narhani civil rights. They're
citizens, just like anyone else. Giving them their own planet may have defused
the potential for direct unpleasantness, but we've got to integrate them into
the government and military or that very isolation's only going to make things
worse. I've got quite a few in civil service positions here on Birhat already,
but I need to get them into the Fleet, too.
"I don't expect
trouble from the military, but the civilians may be something else. I need all
the help I can get selling the idea, and after 'Tanni, you're the best salesman
I've got."
Adrienne made a face,
but she knew it was true. She was the only living officer to have commanded a
capital ship throughout both the Siege and the Zeta Trianguli campaign. More
than that, she'd led the task force that died in Earth's last, hopeless
counterattack, and hers had been the only ship to survive it. She was Battle
Fleet's most decorated officer, belonged to more Terran orders of chivalry than
she could count, and was the only person in history to have received the
highest award for valor of every Terran nation, as well as the Golden
Nova. It embarrassed her horribly, but it was true.
All of which meant Colin
was right. If he was trotting out the big guns, she was going to have to come
to battery.
"All right,"
she sighed finally, "I'll do it."
* * *
Francine Hilgemann took
her time locking the car doors while she scanned her surroundings. She'd seen
no sign of surveillance on the drive here, but paranoia was a survival tool
which had served her well over the years.
She ambled across the
parking lot to the pedestrian belt serving the enormous, brightly-lit Memorial
complex. She was uneasy at the thought of meeting in the very heart of Shepard
Center, but she supposed it made sense. Who in his right mind would expect a
pair of traitors to make contact here?
She stepped off the belt
into the people flowing past the fifty-meter obsidian needle of the Cenotaph
and the endless rows of names etched into its unadorned battle steel plinth.
Those names listed every individual known to have fallen in the millennia-long
battle against Anu, and even Hilgemann wasn't quite immune to the hush about
her. But time was short, and she worked her way briskly through the fringes of
the throng.
Another, even quieter
crowd surrounded the broken eighty-thousand-ton hull that shared the Memorial
with the Cenotaph. The sublight battleship Nergal remained where Fleet
Captain Robbins had landed her, resting on her belly and ruined landing legs,
preserved exactly as her final battle had left her. She'd been decontaminated;
that was all, and crippled missile launchers and energy weapons hung like
broken teeth from her twisted flanks. How she'd survived was more than
Hilgemann could guess, and she couldn't even begin to imagine what it had taken
to bring that wreck home and land her under her own power.
She turned away after a
moment, walking to the service exit she'd been told to use. It was unlocked as
promised, and she slipped through it into the equipment storage room and closed
the door behind her.
"Well," she
said a bit tartly, looking around at the deserted machinery, "I must say
this has all the proper conspiratorial ambience!"
"Perhaps." The
man who'd summoned her stepped out of the shadows with a thin smile. "On
the other hand, we can't risk meeting very often . . . and we certainly can't do it in public, now
can we?"
"I feel like an
idiot." She touched the brunette wig which hid her golden hair, then
looked down at her plain, cheap clothing and shuddered.
"Better a live
idiot than a dead traitor," he replied, and she snorted.
"All right. I'm
here. What's so important?"
"Several things.
First, I've confirmed that they know they didn't get all of Anu's people."
Francine looked up sharply and received another thin smile. "Obviously
they don't know who they didn't get, or we wouldn't be having this
melodramatic conversation."
"No, I suppose we
wouldn't. What else?"
"This." A data
chip was handed over. "That little item is too important to trust to our
usual pipeline."
"Oh?" She looked
down at it curiously.
"Indeed. It's a
copy of the plans for Marshal Tsien's newest toy: a gravitonic warhead powerful
enough to take out an entire planet."
Francine's hand clenched
on the chip, and her eyes widened.
"His Majesty,"
the man said with a soft chuckle, "has decided against building it, but
I'm more progressive."
"Why? To threaten
to blow ourselves up if they ID us?"
"I doubt that bluff
would fly, but there are other ways it might be useful. For now, I just want
the hardware handy if we need it."
"All right."
She shrugged. "I assume you can get us any military components we
need?"
"Perhaps. If so,
we'll handle that through the regular channels. In the meantime, how are your
action groups coming along?"
"Quite nicely,
actually." Hilgemann's smile was unpleasant. "In fact, their
training's developing their paranoia even further, and keeping them on a leash
isn't the easiest thing in the world. It may be necessary to give them the odd
mission to work off some of their . . . enthusiasm. Is that a problem?"
"No, I can pick a
few targets. You're certain they don't know about you?"
"They're too well
compartmented for that," she said confidently.
"Good. I'll select
a few operations that'll cost them some casualties, then. Nothing like
providing a few martyrs for the cause."
"Don't get too
fancy," she cautioned. "If they lose too many they're likely to get a
bit hard to control."
"Understood. Then I
suppose that's about it . . . except that you'll want to get your next pastoral
letter ready."
"Oh?"
"Yes. His Majesty's
decided to bite the bullet and begin enlisting Narhani in the military."
Hilgemann nodded, eyes suddenly thoughtful, and he smiled. "Exactly. We'll
want something restrained for open distribution—an injunction to pray that His
Majesty hasn't made a mistake, perhaps—but a little furnace-fanning among the
more hardcore is in order, I believe."
"No problem,"
the bishop said with an equally thin smile.
"I'll be going,
then. Wait fifteen minutes before you leave."
"Of course."
She was a bit nettled, though she didn't let it show. Did he think she'd lasted
this long without learning her trade?
The door closed behind
him, and she sat on a floor cleaner, lips pursed, considering how best to fill
her pen with properly diffident vitriol, while the hand in her pocket squeezed
the data chip that could kill a world.
Sean MacIntyre landed
neatly in the clearing and killed the power.
"Nice one,
Sean," Tamman said from the copilot's seat. "Almost as nice as I
could've done."
"Yeah? Which one of
us took the top off that sequoia last month?"
"Wasn't the pilot's
fault," Tamman replied loftily. "You were navigating, if I
recall."
"He couldn't have
been; you got home," a female voice said.
Tamman smirked, and Sean
raised his eyes to the heavens in a plea for strength. Then he punched Tamman's
shoulder, and the female voice groaned behind them as they grappled.
"They're at it again, Sandy!"
"Too much
testosterone, Harry." The younger voice dripped sympathy. "Their
poor, primitive male brains are awash in the stuff."
Tamman and Sean paused
in silent agreement, then turned towards the passenger compartment with
vengeful intent, but their purposeful progress came to an abrupt end as Sean
ran full tilt into a large, solid object and oofed.
"Damn it,
Brashan!" he complained, rubbing the prominent nose he'd inherited from
his father to check for damage.
"I'm simply opening
the hatch, Sean," a mechanically produced voice replied. "It's not my
fault you don't watch where you're going."
"Some
navigator!" Harriet sniffed.
"Fortunately for a
certain loudmouthed snot," Tamman observed, "she's a princess, so I
can't paddle her fanny the way she deserves."
"Don't you just wish
you could get your hands on my fanny, you lech!"
"Don't worry,
Tam," Sean said darkly. "I'll be happy to deputize. As soon—" he
added "—as a certain oversized polo pony gets out of my way!"
"Oooh, protect me,
Brashan!" Harriet cried, and the Narhani laughed and stood aside, blocking
off the cockpit as the hatch opened. The girls scampered out, and Galahad's
litter-mate Gawain followed, raised muzzle already scenting the rich jungle
air.
"Traitor!"
Sean kicked his friend—which hurt his toe far more than his target. Brashan was
only ten Terran years old, six years younger than Sean, but he was already
sufficiently mature for full enhancement. The augmentation biotechnics provided
was proportional to a being's natural strength and toughness, and the
heavy-grav Narhani were very, very tough by human standards.
"Nonsense. Simply a
more mature individual striving to protect you from your own impetuosity,"
Brashan returned, and trotted down the ramp.
"Yeah, sure,"
Sean snorted as he and Tamman followed.
It was noon, local time,
and Bia blazed directly overhead. Birhat lay almost a light-minute further from
its G0 primary than Earth lay from Sol, but they were almost exactly on the
equator, and the air was hot and still. The high, shrill piping of Birhat's
equivalent of birds drifted down, and a bat-winged pseudodactyl drifted high
overhead.
Sean and Tamman paused
to check their grav rifles. Without full enhancement, neither could handle a
full-sized energy gun, but their present weapons were little heavier than
Terran sporting rifles. The twenty-round magazines held three-millimeter darts
of superdense chemical explosive, and the rifles fired them with a velocity of
over five thousand meters per second. Which meant they had enough punch to take
out a pre-Imperial tank . . . or the larger denizens of Birhat's ecosystem.
"Looks good
here." Sean's crispness was far removed from his earlier playfulness, and
Tamman nodded to confirm his own weapon's readiness. Then they turned towards
the others, and Sean made a face. Sandy was already perched in her favorite
spot astride Brashan's powerful back.
He supposed it made
sense, even if she did look insufferably smug, for something had gone astray in
Sandra MacMahan's genes. Neither of her parents were midgets, yet she barely
topped a hundred and forty centimeters. If she hadn't had Hector MacMahan's
eyes and Ninhursag's cheekbones, Sean would have suspected she was a changeling
from his mother's bedtime stories. Of course, she wasn't quite fifteen, but
Harriet had shot up to almost one-eighty by the time she was that age.
Not, he thought darkly,
that Sandy let her small size slow her down. She was so far out ahead
scholastically it wasn't funny, but the thing he really hated was that whenever
they got into an argument she was invariably right. Like that molycirc problem.
He'd been positive the failure was in the basic matrix, but, nooooo.
She'd insisted a power surge had bridged the alpha block, and damned if she
hadn't been right . . . again. It was maddening.
At least he had a good
sixty centimeters on her, he thought moodily.
He and Tamman caught up
with the others, and he tapped the grav pistol at Harriet's side pointedly. She
made a face but drew it and checked its readiness. Sandy—of course—had already
checked hers.
"Which way,
Sean?" Brashan asked, and Sean paused to orient his built-in inertial
guidance system to the observations he'd made on the way in.
"About five klicks
at oh-two-twenty," he announced.
"Couldn't you set
down any closer?" Harriet demanded, and he shrugged.
"Sure. But we're
talking about tyranotops. You really want one of them stepping on the flyer? It
might get sort of broken around the edges."
"True," she
admitted, and drew her bush knife as they approached the towering creepers and
ferns fringing the clearing.
As always, she and Sean
took point, followed by Tamman, while a wide-ranging Gawain burrowed through
the undergrowth and Brashan covered the rear. Sean was well aware Brashan was
the real reason his mother and father raised no demur to the twins' excursions.
Even a tyranotops—that fearsome creature which resembled nothing so much as a
mating of a Terran triceratops and tyrannosaurus—would find a fully enhanced
Narhani a handful, and Brashan carried a heavy energy gun, as well. As
baby-sitters went, Narhani took some beating, which suited Sean and his friends
just fine. Birhat was ever so much more interesting than Earth, and Brashan
meant they could roam it at will.
Odd birds and beasts
fluttered and rumbled in the underbrush, starting up in occasional panic as
Gawain flushed them, and many of them were species no one else had yet seen.
That was one of the things they loved about Birhat. The old Imperial capital
had reverted to its second childhood after the bio-weapon hit, for the toxin
hadn't been able to reach the sealed, protected ecosystems of the Imperial
family's extraplanetary zoos. By the time failing environmental equipment
finally released the inhabitants of over a dozen different oxy-nitrogen
planets, the weapon itself had died, and forty-odd thousand years of subsequent
natural selection had produced a biosystem that was a naturalist's opium dream.
For all intents and
purposes, Birhat was a virgin planet, and it was all theirs. Well, theirs and
three-quarters of a billion other people's, but that left lots of empty space,
since most of the Bia System's steadily growing population was concentrated in
and around the new capital or out in the system's enormous spaceborne
industrial complexes, working like demons to resurrect the Empire. And, of
course, at the moment they were in the middle of the Sean Andrew MacIntyre
Continental Nature Preserve the Crown had established to honor Sean's uncle,
who'd died fighting Anu's mutineers.
Not that they'd have
such freedom much longer. Sean had been vested with the first official sign of
his status as Heir last year when he was presented to Mother, for under the
Great Charter Mother passed on the acceptability of the Heir's intellect and
psych-profile. He'd been accepted, and the subliminal challenge-response
patterns and implant codes which identified him as Heir had been implanted, but
it had been the scariest moment of his life—and a clear sign that adulthood was
coming closer.
There were signs for his
friends, as well. All of them were headed for Battle Fleet—they'd known that
for years—but they were getting close to meeting the Academy's entry
requirements. Another year, possibly two, Sean estimated, until their free time
evaporated.
But for now the day was
young, the pride of tyranotops they'd come to see awaited them, and he intended
to enjoy himself to the full.
* * *
A cool breeze flowed
over the balcony, for it was summer in Birhat's northern hemisphere, and Colin
had switched off the force fields which walled the balcony against the elements
at need.
The city of Phoenix lay
before him in the night, the serpentine curve of the River Nikkan sparkling far
below, and Tsien Tao-ling's engineering crews had done well by Birhat's
settlers. Phoenix was the product of a gravitonic civilization, and its towers
soared even above the mighty near-sequoias about them, but the Palace was the
tallest spire of all. Perhaps some thought that was to reflect its inhabitants'
rank, but the real reason was practicality. True, the imperial family had
luxurious personal quarters, but that was almost a side effect of the
Imperium's administrative needs. Even a structure as vast as the Palace was
badly overcrowded by functionaries and bureaucrats, though the new Annex going
up next door would help . . . for a while.
He sighed and slid an
arm about Jiltanith, and silken hair brushed his cheek as she leaned against
him. He kissed the top of her head, then swept his telescopic eyes over the
city, enjoying the jeweled interplay of lights and the magical wash of shifting
moonlight. The complex pattern never ceased to delight him, for he'd grown up with
but a single moon.
He raised his gaze to
the heavens, and the stars were hard to see. The gleaming disk of Mother's
fortress hull hung almost directly overhead, and over fifty huge planetoids
dotted the night sky beyond her. They were much farther out (the comings and
goings of that many "moons" would play merry hell with Birhat's
tides), but the sunlight reflected from their hulls gilded the Fifth Imperium's
capital in bronze and ebony. And on the farside of the planet from
Mother—indeed, just about directly over the spot where his children were even
now observing their tyranotops—hung another vast sphere named Dahak.
"God, 'Tanni,"
he murmured, "look at that."
"Aye." She
squeezed him gently. " 'Tis like unto God's own gem box."
"It really
is," he agreed softly. "Sort of makes it all seem worthwhile, doesn't
it?" She nodded against his shoulder, and he sighed, looking back up at
the distant planetoids once more. "Of course, looking at all this also
tends to make me think about how much we still have to do."
"Mayhap, my love.
Yet have we done all Fate hath called us to thus far. I misdoubt not we'll do
all else when time demands."
"Yeah." He
inhaled deeply, savoring the night, and pressed his cheek against her hair in
deep, happy contentment.
"How're the kids
coming along, Dahak?"
"I regret to report
that Sean has just tripped Harriet into a particularly muddy stream. Otherwise,
things are proceeding to plan. Analysis of Harriet's personality suggests she
will attain revenge shortly."
"Damn right," Colin
agreed, and Jiltanith's laugh gurgled in his ear.
"Thou'rt worse by
far than thy offspring, Colin MacIntyre!"
"Nah, just older
and deeper in sin." He chuckled. "God, I'm glad they're growing up
like normal kids!"
" 'Normal,' thou
sayest? My love, the Furies themselves scarce could wreak the havoc those twain
do leave strewn in their wake!"
"I know. Ain't it
great?" Bio-enhanced fingers pinched his ribs like a steel vise and he
yelped. "Just think what royal pains in the ass they could have
turned into," he said, rubbing his side.
"Aye, there's
that," Jiltanith said more seriously, "and 'twas thou didst save them
from it."
"You had a hand in
it, too."
"Oh, aye, there's
truth in that, but thou'rt the one who taught them warmth, my Colin. I love them
well, and that they know wi'out doubt, but life hath not fitted me o'er well to
nourish younglings."
"You did good,
anyway," Colin said. "Actually, it looks like we make a pretty good
team."
"Indeed,
'Tanni," Dahak added. "Left to his own devices, Colin would
undoubtedly have—I believe the proper term is 'spoiled them rotten.' "
"Oh, I would, would
I? Well, mister energy-state smarty pants, who was smart enough to suggest
finding them something to do besides sitting around sucking on silver
spoons?"
"It was you,"
Dahak replied with a soft, electronic chuckle. "A fact which, I must
confess, continues to surprise me." Colin muttered something rude, and
Jiltanith giggled. "Actually," the computer went on, "it was an
excellent idea, Colin. One which should have occurred to me."
"Oh, it probably
would've come to you eventually. But unless something goes wrong in a big way,
'Tanni and I are gonna be around for centuries, and a professional crown prince
could get mighty bored in that much time. Besides, we're young enough it's
unlikely Sean will outlive us by more than a century or so. It'd be a dead
waste of his life to wait that long for such a brief reign."
"Indeed. The
classic example from your own recent history would, of course, be that of Queen
Victoria and Edward VII. The tragic waste of Edward's potential did great
disservice to his country, and—"
"Maybe," Colin
interrupted, "but I wasn't thinking about the Imperium. I want our kids to
do something, and not for the Imperium. I want them to be able to look
back and know they were winners, not place-holders. And I want them to know all
the nice perks—the rank and deference, the flattery they're gonna hear—don't
mean a thing unless they earn them."
He fell silent for a
moment, feeling Jiltanith's silent agreement as she hugged him tight, and
stared up to where Mother hung overhead like the very embodiment of an
emperor's power and treacherous grandeur.
"Dahak," he
said finally, "Herdan's dynasty ruled for five thousand years. Five thousand
years. That's not a long time for someone like you, but it's literally beyond
the comprehension of a human. Yet long as it was, impossible as it is for me to
imagine, our kids—and their kids, and their kids' kids—may rule even longer. I
can't begin to guess what they'll face, the sorts of decisions they'll have to
make, but there's one thing 'Tanni and I can give them, starting right here and
now with Sean and Harry. Not for the Imperium, though the Imperium'll profit
from it, but for them."
"What, Colin?"
Dahak asked quietly.
"The knowledge that
power is a responsibility. The belief that who they are and what they do is as
important as what they're born to. A tradition of—well, of service.
Becoming Emperor should be the capstone of a life, not a career in itself, and
'Tanni and I want our kids—our family—to remember that. That's why we're
sending them to the Academy, and why we won't have anyone kowtowing to them,
much as some of the jerks who work for us would love to."
Dahak was silent for a
moment—a very long moment, for him—before he spoke again. "I believe I
understand you, Colin, and you are correct. Sean and Harriet do not yet realize
what you and 'Tanni have done for them, but someday they will understand. And
you are wise to make service a tradition rather than a matter of law, for my
observation of human polities suggests that laws are more easily subverted than
tradition."
"Yeah, that's what
we thought, too," Colin said.
"Nay, my
love," Jiltanith said softly. " 'Twas what thou didst think,
and glad am I thou didst, for thou hadst the right of it."
" 'Tanni is
correct, Colin," Dahak said gently, "and I am glad you have explained
it to me. I do not yet have your insight into individuals, but I will have many
years to gain it, and I will not forget what you have said. You and 'Tanni are
my friends, and you have made me a member of your family. Sean and Harriet are
your children, and I would love them for that reason even if they were not
themselves my friends. But they are my friends—and my family—and I see I
have a function I had not previously recognized."
"What
function?"
"Mother may be the
guardian of the Imperium, Colin, but I am the guardian of our family. I
shall not forget that."
"Thank you, Dahak,"
Colin said very, very softly, and Jiltanith nodded against his shoulder once
more.
It wasn't a large room,
but it seemed huge to Sean MacIntyre as he stood waiting at the foot of the
narrow bed, and his anxious eyes swept it again and again, scanning every
surface for the tiniest trace of dust.
Sean had spent all his
seventeen and a half years knowing he was Academy-bound, yet despite the
vantage point his lofty birth should have given him, he hadn't really
understood what that meant. Now he knew . . .
and his worst nightmares had fallen far short of the reality.
He was a
"plebe," the lowest form of military life and the legitimate prey of
any higher member of the food chain. He remembered dinner conversations in
which Adrienne Robbins had assured his father she'd eliminated most of the
hazing the Emperor had recalled from his own days at the US Navy's academy.
Sean would never dream of disputing her word, of course, but it seemed unlikely
to him that she could have eliminated very much of it after all.
Intellectually, he
understood a plebe's unenviable lot was a necessary part of teaching future
officers to function under pressure and knew it wasn't personal—or not, at
least, for most people. All of which made no difference to his sweaty palms as
he awaited quarters inspection, for this was a subject upon which his intellect
and the rest of him were hardly on speaking terms. He'd embarrassed Mid/4
Malinovsky, his divisional officer, before her peers. The fact that he'd
embarrassed himself even worse cut no ice with her, and understanding why she'd
set her flinty little heart on making his life a living hell was no help at
all.
He'd felt, to use one of
his father's favorite deflating phrases, as proud as a peacock as he stood in
the front rank of the newest Academy class, awaiting the Commandant's first
inspection. Every detail of his appearance had been perfect—God knew he'd
worked hard enough to make it so!—and he'd been excited and happy despite the
butterflies in his midsection. And because he'd felt and been all those things,
he'd done an incredibly stupid thing.
He'd smiled at
Admiral Robbins. Worse, he'd forgotten to stare straight before him as she
inspected the ranks. He'd actually turned his head to meet her eyes and grinned
at her!
Lady Nergal hadn't said
a word, but her brown eyes had held no trace of "Aunt Adrienne's"
twinkle. Their temperature had hovered somewhere a bit below that of liquid
helium as they considered him like some particularly repulsive amoeba, and the
parade ground's silence had been . . . profound.
It only lasted a century
or so, and then his eyes whipped back to their appointed position, his
ramrod-straight spine turned straighter still, and his smile vanished. But the
damage had been done, and Christina Malinovsky intended to make him pay.
The click of a heel
warned him, and he snapped to rigid attention, thumbs against his trouser
seams, as Mid/4 Malinovsky entered his quarters.
There were no domestic
robots at the Academy. Some of the Fleet and Marine officers had pointed out
that their own pre-Imperial military academies had provided their midshipmen
and cadets with servants in order to free them from domestic concerns and let
them concentrate on their studies. Admiral Robbins, however, was a product of
the US military tradition. She was a great believer in the virtues of sweat,
and no one had quite had the nerve to argue with her when she began designing
the Academy's syllabus and traditions. The fact that His Imperial Majesty Colin
I sprang from the same tradition as Admiral Robbins may also have had a little
something to do with that, but the mechanics behind the decision meant little
to the plebes faced with its consequences, and Sean had labored manfully
against this dreadful moment. Now he stood silent, buttons gleaming like tiny
suns, boots so brightly polished it was difficult to tell they were black, and
used the full enhancement he'd finally received to keep from sweating bullets.
Mid/4 Malinovsky prowled
around the room, running white-gloved fingers over shelves and dresser top,
regarding her stony face in the lavatory mirror as she checked his tooth glass
for water spots. She opened his locker to examine its contents and his tiny
closet to check the hangered garments and study the polish of his second pair
of boots. Her perfectly turned out exec stood in the door, traditional
clipboard tucked under his arm, watching her, and Sean could almost feel the
sadistic glee with which he waited to inscribe Mid/1 MacIntyre's name on his
gig list. But Malinovsky said nothing, and Sean fought down a sense of relief
and reminded himself she wasn't done yet.
She straightened and
closed the closet, looked about the room one more time, and crossed to his bed.
She stopped where he could see her—not, he was certain, by accident—and reached
into her pocket. She took her time, making an elaborate ritual of it, as she
withdrew a shiny disk Sean recognized after a moment as an antique U.S. silver
dollar. She balanced it consideringly on her crooked index finger and thumb,
then flipped it.
The coin flashed through
the air, then arced down to land precisely in the center of the bunk . . . and
lie there.
Malinovsky's gray eyes
glittered as it failed to bounce, and Sean's heart fell. He kept his face
impassive—with an effort—as she reclaimed the coin and weighed it in her palm a
moment before pocketing it once more. Then she reached down, gripped the
blanket and sheets, and stripped the mattress bare with a single jerk.
She turned on her heel,
and her exec's stylus was poised.
"Five
demerits," she said flatly, and stalked away.
Colin MacIntyre looked
around the gleaming conference table at the members of his Imperial Council.
Two of them were absent, for Lawrence Jefferson had been called in as a
last-minute substitute for Horus, and Life Councilor Geb, the Minister of
Reconstruction was seldom on Birhat. For the most part, that was because he
spent his time following close on the heels of Survey Command, but Geb was also
the last surviving citizen of the original Birhat, and the monumental changes
his home world had suffered hurt.
That was one reason
Colin had recalled Vlad Chernikov from his post as Geb's assistant. Tsien and
Horus had needed an engineer on Birhat, so Colin had created the Ministry of
Engineering and Vlad had agreed to accept it. Now the blond, blue-eyed
ex-cosmonaut finished his summary of the Bia System's ongoing civilian
projects, and Colin nodded approval.
"Sounds like you're
on top of things, Vlad . . . as usual." Vlad smiled, and Colin smiled
back. "Having said that, how's Earth's shield coming?"
"Quite well,"
Vlad said. "The only real problem is the task's simple magnitude. We have
emplaced forty percent of the primary generators and work is beginning on the
subordinate stations. I fear the asteroid belt has all but vanished, but the
Centauris freighters are keeping pace."
Colin nodded. Spaceborne
Imperial "smelters" could render almost any material down to its
basic elements to synthesize the composites and alloys Imperial industry
needed, like the battle steel which formed Battle Fleet's planetoids, but even
Imperial synthetics required some starting point. The raw materials to build
things the size of Mother or Dahak had to come from somewhere, and the
huge freighters of the Imperium's "mining expeditions" could—and
did—transport the rubble of entire planets to the fabrication centers. The
Centauris System, unfortunately for it, was conveniently close to Sol, and its
original eleven planets had already been reduced to nine. Soon there would be
only eight as gravitonic warheads blew yet another to splinters to feed the
insatiable appetite of Earth's orbital shipyards.
"In the meantime,
Baltan and Dahak have completed plans for Stepmother." Several councilors'
eyes narrowed with interest. "We have yet to fully explore Mother's
memory, but we are confident we have extracted all the essential programs for
her Battle Fleet and constitutional functions. Stepmother's final core
programming parameters remain flexible, however, as it seems probable additions
will be required as our studies here in Bia continue. Of course, the entire
project will require many years, but Horus, Tao-ling and I intend to initiate
construction within three months."
"And thank God
we're finally ready," Colin said. "Dahak, you and Baltan have my
sincere thanks for your efforts."
"You are, of
course, welcome, Sire," Dahak replied, on his best formal behavior for the
meeting. "I feel certain I speak for Admiral Baltan as well as for
myself."
"Well, remind me to
thank him in person the next time I see him." Colin turned back to Vlad.
"And the new planetoids?"
"Those are much
further advanced, despite the usual unforeseen delays. Imperial Terra
should commission within four years."
"Any problems with
the computers, Vlad?" Gerald Hatcher asked.
"I'll take that, if
I may, Colin," Sir Frederick Amesbury said. The wiry Englishman, one of
Hatcher's fellow chiefs of staff during the Siege, had become Minister of
Cybernetics, and Colin nodded for him to go on.
"The pilot
computers have been up and running for over two years, Ger," Amesbury
said, "and Dahak's original figures have been spot on. Incorporating that
Achuultani logic circuit into our energy-state designs has raised the speed of
operations another five percent, and we've included more responsiveness to
nonspecific prompts in the software. They aren't self-aware, of course, but
they have about thirty percent more autonomous decision-making capability. I
believe you'll be quite pleased with the results."
"Excuse me, Sir
Frederick," it was Lawrence Jefferson, "but that's something I'm
still not quite clear on. I can see why we wouldn't want Mother or Stepmother
to be self-aware, but why don't we want our warships that way? If we had more
ships like Dahak, wouldn't we have a far more effective fleet?"
"Yes and no,"
Amesbury said. "The ships would certainly be more efficient, but they'd
also be far more dangerous."
"Why?"
"If I may, Sir
Frederick?" Dahak said, and Amesbury nodded. "The problem, Lieutenant
Governor, is that such ships would be too powerful for our own safety. As you
know, the Fourth Imperium was incapable of building fully self-aware computers
at the time of my construction. My own awareness evolved accidentally during
fifty-one thousand years of unsupervised operation, and even now, we have not
fully determined the reasons for this.
"The Fourth Empire,
however, was so capable yet chose not to utilize that capacity for reasons
which, upon consideration, particularly in light of facts we have discovered
but which the Empire could not have known, seem entirely valid. Consider: there
is no proof cybernetic intelligences are immune to 'insanity,' and the
Achuultani computer is ample proof not all are immune to ambition. Should an Asgerd-class
planetoid go 'insane,' it could do incalculable damage. Indeed, true prudence
might suggest that I myself should be transferred from my present hull to some
less dangerous location."
"Dahak," Colin
sighed, "we are not going to argue about that again! I'll accept
your argument against creating any more self-aware computers, but you've
certainly proven yourself to us!"
"Besides,"
Vlad said dryly, "why should the possibility that you might go
crazy disturb us when we have an Emperor who has done so already?"
A chuckle ran around the
table, but Colin didn't share it. His mind was already moving on to the next
point, and he glanced at his Minister of Biosciences with a pang of sorrow. In
many ways, Isis would have made a better councilor than Cohanna . . . if not
for her age. She had far better "people sense," but Colin was
unhappily certain Project Genesis was going to be not simply the crowning
achievement of Isis Tudor's life but its last.
"All right, I
believe that covers just about everything," he said quietly, "but
before we close, Cohanna has something to report. 'Hanna?"
Cohanna looked down at
her hands with uncharacteristic sadness for a moment, then cleared her throat.
"I wish Isis were
here to tell you this herself, but she wasn't up to the trip. However—"
she raised her eyes "—I'm pleased to announce that the first free Narhani
female in seventy-eight million years was born at oh-two-thirty-four Greenwich
time this morning." A soft sound of surprise ran around the table, and
Cohanna smiled mistily. "Isis was there, and she's named the child 'Eve.'
So far as we can tell, she's absolutely healthy."
Gerald Hatcher's quiet
voice broke the long, still silence.
"I never really
believed you could do it, 'Hanna."
"I didn't."
Cohanna's voice was very soft. "Isis did."
There was another moment
of silence before Vlad Chernikov spoke again, and his earlier levity had
vanished.
"How is
Isis, 'Tanni?" he asked gently.
"Not well,
Vlad," Jiltanith said sadly. "She faileth quickly, and so Father doth
stay at her side. She feeleth no pain, and she hath seen her life's work yield
its fruit, yet do I fear her time is short."
"I am sorry to hear
that." Vlad looked around the silent table for a moment, then back at
Jiltanith. "Please tell her how proud we are of her . . . and give her our
love."
"I shall,"
Jiltanith said softly.
* * *
Francine Hilgemann
activated her antisnooping devices before taking the new Bible from its
package. Her security systems were every bit as good as those of the Imperial
government (since they'd come from government sources), which meant she
was as safe from observation as anyone could be, and she inhaled the rich smell
of printer's ink appreciatively as she opened the book. She'd always loved beauty,
and she was both amused and genuinely pleased by the effect neural computer
feeds had produced on the printing industry. Man had rediscovered that books
were treasures, not simply a means of conveying information, and the volume she
held was a masterpiece of the printer's art.
She leafed through it
admiringly, then paused at the Lamentations of Jeremiah. The tissue-thin paper
slid out with pleasing ease—unlike the last time, when some idiot had used glue
and wrecked two pages of Leviticus.
She unfolded the sheets,
careful of their fragility, and spread them on her blotter. Datachips were far
smaller and easier to hide. She and her allies knew that, but they also knew
few modern security people thought in terms of anything as clumsy as written
messages, which meant few looked for them. And, of course, data that was never in
electronic storage couldn't be extracted from electronic storage by a
computer named Dahak.
She got out her code
book, translated the message, and read through it slowly twice, committing it
to memory. Then she burned the sheets, ground the ash to powder, and leaned
back to consider the news.
MacIntyre and his crowd
were finally ready to begin on Stepmother, and she agreed with her ally's
assessment. By rights, Stepmother ought to represent an enormous threat to
their long-term plans, but that could be changed. With a little luck and a
great deal of hard work, the "threat" was going to become the
advantage that let them bring off the most ambitious coup d'etat in human history,
instead.
She gnawed her thumbnail
thoughtfully. In many ways, she'd prefer to strike now, but Stepmother had to
be closer to completion. Not complete, but within sight of it. That gave them
their time frame, and she was beginning to understand the purpose that godawful
gravitonic warhead would serve. Her eyes gleamed appreciatively as she
considered the implications. It would be their very own Reichstag fire, and the
Narhani gave them such a splendid "internal threat" to justify the
"special powers" their candidate for the crown would invoke to insure
Stepmother got finished the right way.
But that was for the
future. For now, there was this latest news about the Narhani to consider, and
she pondered it carefully. Officially, she was simply the general secretary of
the Church's coequal bishops—but then, Josef Stalin had been "simply"
the General Secretary of the Central Committee, hadn't he?—and it would be her
job to soothe her flock's anxiety when the information was officially released.
Still, the Achuultani were the Spawn of the Anti-Christ, and with a
little care, her soothing assurance that Narhani weren't really
Achuultani—except, perhaps, in a purely technical sense, which, of course,
loyal subjects of the Imperium could never hold against their fellow subjects
when no one could prove they had Satanic origins—would convey exactly
the opposite message. Add a particularly earnest pastoral letter reminding the
faithful of their duty to pray for the Emperor's guidance in these troubled
times, and the anti-Narhani ferment would bubble along very nicely, thank you.
And, in the meantime,
there were those other members of her flock whom she would see got the
news in somewhat less soothing form.
* * *
The Reverend Robert
Stevens sat in the dingy room beneath his church and watched the shocked eyes
of the men and women seated around him. He felt their horror rising with his
own, and more than one face was ashen.
"Are you sure,
Father Bob?" Alice Hughes asked hoarsely.
"Yes, Alice."
Stevens' grating, high-pitched voice was ill-suited to prayers or sermons, but
God had given him a mission which put such paltry burdens into their proper
perspective. "You know I can't reveal my source's identity—" in fact,
he had no idea who the ultimate source was, though its information had always
proven reliable "—but I'm sure."
"God forgive
them," Tom Mason whispered. "How could they actually help the
Anti-Christ's spawn breed?"
"Oh, come on,
Tom!" Yance Jackson's lip curled and his green eyes blazed. "We've
known the answer to that ever since they started cloning their precious 'Narhani.'
" He made the name a curse. "They've been corrupted."
"But how?"
Alice asked hesitantly. "They fought the Achuultani as God's own
champions! How could they do that . . . and then do this?"
"It's this new
technology," Jackson growled. "Don't you see, where fear couldn't
tempt them, power has. They've set themselves up as gods!"
"I'm afraid Yance
is right," Stevens said sadly. "They were God's champions, Alice, but
Satan knows that as well as we do. He couldn't defeat them when they fought in
His armor, so Satan's turned to temptation, seducing where he couldn't conquer.
And this—" he tapped the piece of paper on the table before them "—is
the proof he's succeeded."
"And so is the name
they've given this demon of theirs," Jackson said harshly. " 'Eve!'
It should've been 'Lilith'!"
Stevens nodded even more
sadly, but a new fire kindled in his eyes.
"The Emperor and
his Council have fallen into evil," cold certitude cleansed his voice of
sorrow, "and God-fearing people are under no obligation to obey evil
rulers." He reached out to the people sitting on either side of him, and
more hands rose, joining in a circle of faith under the humming fluorescent
light. Stevens felt their belief feeding his own, making it strong, and a
fierce sense of purpose filled him.
"The time is
coming, brothers and sisters," he told them. "The time of fire, when
the Lord shall call us to smite the ungodly in His name, and we must be strong
to do His will. For the Armageddon is truly upon us, and we—" his
eyes swept around the circle, glittering with an inner flame "—are the
true Sword of God!"
The planet Marha,
seventeen light-minutes from Bia and smaller than Mars, had never been much of
a planet, and it had become less of one when the Fourth Imperium made it a
weapons testing site. For two thousand years, until antimatter and gravitonic
warheads made planetary tests superfluous, fission, fusion, and kinetic weapons
had gouged and ripped its near-airless surface into a tortured waste whose
features defied all logical prediction.
Which was precisely why
the Imperial Marines loved Marha. It was a wonderful place to teach infantry
the finer points of killing other people, and Generals Tsien and MacMahan were
delighted to share it with Admiral Robbins' midshipmen. Naval officers might
not face infantry combat often, but they couldn't always avoid it, either, and
not knowing what they were doing was a good way to get people (especially their
Marine-type people) killed.
At the moment, Admiral
Robbins rode the command deck of the transport Tanngjost, sipping
coffee, and her brown eyes gleamed as her scanners watched her third-year class
deploy against the graduating class. That Sean was a sneaky devil, she thought
proudly. He'd made an absolute ass of himself at his first parade, but he'd
survived it, and he stood first in the Tactics curriculum by a clear five points.
He was a bit audacious for her taste, but that wasn't too surprising, and his
parents would have just loved this one.
* * *
Mid/3 MacIntyre
hand-signaled a stop, and his company of raiders slumped in the knife-sharp
shadow of the tortured ring wall. He slumped with them, panting hard, and tried
to remember he was being brilliant. If he managed to pull this off, he might
even find two or three people to agree with him; if he screwed up, everybody
would be waiting to tell him what a jackass he'd been.
He glanced at Sandy,
more worried than he cared to admit as he noted how wearily she sat. This was
her company, and she'd loved the idea when he sketched it out, but her small
size was working against her.
An enhanced person could
move in powered-down combat armor, if its servos were unlocked. It wasn't easy
(especially for someone Sandy's size), but the sheer grunt work could be worth
it under the right circumstances. Unpowered armor had no energy signature, and
it even hid any emissions from its wearer's implants, which meant his raiders
were virtually invisible.
The only real threat was
optical detection, and he'd noticed that while his peers gave lip service to
the importance of optical systems, they relied on more sophisticated
sensors. He'd started to mention that during the critique of the last field
exercise, but then he'd remembered he would be leading this one . . .
and that the Academy didn't give out prizes for losing.
He slithered up the ring
wall, unhooked the passive scanner from his harness, poked it over the crest,
and grinned at its display. Onishi and his staff were exactly where The Book
said they ought to be, safely tucked away at the heart of the sensor net guarding
their HQ site. But The Book hadn't envisioned having a company of raiders
barely half a klick away, well inside the sensor perimeter which should have
protected Onishi's tactical HQ and ready to decapitate his entire command
structure before Tamman (who'd always wanted to be a Marine anyway, for some
strange reason) led in the main force.
He slid back down beside
Sandy and pressed his helmet to hers. The face behind her visor was
sweat-streaked and weary, but her brown eyes were bright, and he grinned and
slapped her armored shoulder.
"We got 'em,
Sandy!" Their helmets conducted his voice to her without the betraying
pulse of a fold-space com. "Get the troops saddled up."
She nodded and began
waving hand signals, and her support squad set up with gratifying speed, even
without their armor's "muscles." He left them to it and reclimbed the
slope to double-check the target coordinates. A standard saturation pattern
would work just fine, he thought gleefully.
He glanced up. Sandy's
heavy weapons types were set, and her other people were creeping up beside him,
"energy guns" ready. It was just like laser tag, he thought, prepping
his implants to activate his armor. And then he energized his com for the first
time in almost six hours.
"Now!"
he snapped.
* * *
Mid/4 Onishi Shidehara
frowned as he stepped out of his HQ van to stretch. Crown Prince or no,
MacIntyre was a hot dog, and the cautious sparring being reported by the
outposts wasn't like him. It was only skirmishing, and along the most logical
line of advance, at that. Mid/4 Onishi expected to kick His Imperial Highness's
ass most satisfyingly, but so far he'd seen barely ten percent of the
opposition, which suggested MacIntyre meant to try something fancy. For
Onishi's money all that razzle-dazzle might look good to the instructors, but
only MacIntyre's luck had let him get away with it so long. This time he
was going to have to do things the hard way, and—
Something kicked dust in
front of him. In fact, dozens of somethings were falling all over his
position! He just had time to feel alarm before they erupted in the brilliant
flashes of "nukes" and "warp grenades," and he went down in
an astonished cloud of dust as the flash-bangs' override pulses locked his
armor and blanked out his com implant to simulate a casualty.
He whipped his head
around, trapped in his inert armor, and saw his entire HQ staff falling about
him. A second wave of flash-bangs deluged his position, catching most of the
handful who'd escaped the first, and then a horde of armored figures came down
off the ring wall shooting.
It was over in less than
thirty seconds, and Mid/4 Onishi gritted his teeth as one armored figure loped
over to squat beside him with a toothy grin.
"Zap!"
Sean MacIntyre said insufferably.
* * *
It had taken Horus
months to learn to smile again after Isis' death, but today his grin was
enormous as he entered Lawrence Jefferson's office.
"What's so
funny?" the Lieutenant Governor asked.
"I just got back
from Birhat," Horus said, still grinning, "and you should've heard
Colin and 'Tanni describing Dahak's latest brainstorm!"
"Oh?" Unlike
most people, Jefferson preferred an old-fashioned swivel chair, and it creaked
as he leaned back. "What 'brainstorm'?"
"Oh, it was a
beaut! You know how protective he is of the kids?" Jefferson nodded;
Dahak's devotion to the imperial family was legendary. "Well, their middy
cruise's coming up in a few months, and he had the brilliant idea that they
should make it aboard him." The old man laughed, and Jefferson frowned.
"Why not? They
couldn't possibly be in safer hands, after all!"
"That was his
point," Horus agreed, "but Colin and 'Tanni won't hear of it, and I
don't blame them." Jefferson still looked puzzled, and Horus shook his
head and hitched a hip onto the Lieutenant Governor's desk.
"Look, Dahak's
the flagship of the Imperial Guard, right? Not even a unit of Battle Fleet at
all."
Jefferson nodded again.
Colin MacIntyre had lost ninety-four percent of the Fourth Empire's resurrected
Imperial Guard Flotilla in the Zeta Trianguli Campaign. Only five ships
remained, and repairing them had taken years, but they were back in service
now. They were also fundamentally different from the rest of the Fifth
Imperium's planetoids, for their computers lacked the Alpha imperatives which
compelled the rest of Battle Fleet to obey Mother, not the Emperor
directly. Herdan the Great, the Fourth Empire's founder, had set Battle Fleet
up that way as an intentional safeguard, since Mother wouldn't obey an emperor
who'd been constitutionally removed by the Assembly of Nobles or whose actions
violated the Great Charter stored in her memory. That neatly cut the legs out
from under a monarch with tyranny on his mind, but the Guard was the Emperor's
personal command, and its units weren't hardwired to obey Mother.
"All right,"
Horus continued, "every midshipman makes his senior-year cruise aboard a
unit of Battle Fleet, so how would it look if Colin sends his kids out
in Dahak? Bad enough that their fellows might resent it, but what kind
of message does it send the twins? Besides, Dahak dotes on them; he'd find it
mighty hard to treat them like any other snotties!"
"I suppose that's
true." Jefferson swung his chair gently from side to side and grinned.
"One doesn't tend to think of emperors and empresses as harassed parents.
But if they're not using Dahak, what are they doing?"
"Well, Colin was
all for letting the assignments be made randomly, but Dahak can be a bit mulish."
Horus's eyes twinkled, and Jefferson laughed. He'd been present on one occasion
when the computer had been moved to intransigence, and the Emperor's expression
had been priceless.
"Anyway, they
argued about it for a while and finally reached a compromise. Imperial Terra's
almost ready to commission—they're working up her final programming now—and
Dahak 'suggested' using her. She'll be the newest and most powerful ship in
Battle Fleet, and Dahak's personally vetted every detail of her design.
Nothing's going to happen to them aboard her."
"It is a bit
hard to conceive of anything threatening her," Jefferson mused. "In
fact, I think that's a very good idea. With all due respect to Their Majesties,
we shouldn't run risks with the succession."
"That's how Dahak
brought them around in the end, and just between you and me, I'm glad he
did," Horus agreed, and Jefferson nodded slowly.
* * *
"Here." Father
Al-Hana took the data chips from his bishop and crooked his heavy eyebrows.
"We've only got about two weeks to set this one up," Francine
Hilgemann continued, "but don't take any chances."
"I see."
Al-Hana slipped the chips into his pocket and wondered what they said.
"Which group should I route them to?"
"Um."
Hilgemann frowned down at her desk, playing with her pectoral cross as she
considered. "Which is closest to Seattle?"
"That would be
Stevens' group, I believe."
"Oh?"
Hilgemann's smile wasn't pleasant. "That's nice. They've been spoiling for
a mission. Are they ready for one?"
"I'd say so. The
training cadre reports very favorably on them. And, as you say, they're eager.
Shall I activate them?"
"Yes, they'll do
nicely. But if this one goes sour the consequences are going to be
fairly dire, so make sure of your cutouts. Use someone else if there's any
way they could be traced back to us."
"Of course,"
Al-Hana said, and tried almost successfully to hide his surprise. Whatever was
on the chips, it was important.
* * *
Vincente Cruz parked his
rented flyer outside the cabin and inhaled deeply as he popped the hatch.
Imperial technology had long since healed the worst scars from the Achuultani
bombardment of Earth. Even the temperature was coming back to normal, and the
terrible rains following the Siege had produced one beneficial side effect by
washing centuries of accumulated pollution out of the atmosphere. The mountain
air was crystal clear, and while he knew many of his fellow Bureau of Ships
programmers thought he was crazy to spend his vacations on Earth instead of the
virgin surface of Birhat, he and Elena had always loved the Cascade Mountains.
He climbed out to unload
the groceries, then paused with a frown, wondering why the kids weren't already
here to help carry them in.
"Luis!
Consuela!"
There was no response,
and he shrugged. Luis had been in raptures over the fishing. No doubt he'd
finally talked Consuela into trying it, and Elena had taken the baby and gone
along to keep an eye on them.
He gathered up a double
armload of groceries—no particular problem to a fully-enhanced set of arms—and
climbed the steps to the porch. It was a bit awkward to work the door open, but
he managed, and stepped through it, pushing it shut behind him with a toe. He
started for the kitchen, then froze.
A man and a woman sat in
front of the fireplace, and their faces were concealed by ski masks. He was
still staring at them when he grunted in anguish and crashed to the floor.
Cascading milk cartons burst like bombs, drenching him, but he hardly noticed.
Only one thing could have produced his sudden paralysis: someone had just shot
him from behind with a capture field!
He tried desperately to
fight, but the police device had locked every implant in his body—even his com
had been knocked out. He could neither move nor call for help, and panic filled
him. His family! Where was his family?
The man from the
fireplace rose and turned him onto his back with a toe, and Vincente stared up
into the masked face, too consumed by terror for his family to feel any fear
for himself even as the man knelt and pressed the muzzle of an old-fashioned
Terran automatic into the base of his throat.
"Good afternoon,
Mister Cruz." The high-pitched voice was unpleasant, but menace made its
timbre utterly unimportant. "We have a job for you."
"W-who are
you?" Just getting out those few words against the capture field took all
Vincente's strength. "Where are my—"
"Be quiet!"
The voice was a whiplash. The pistol muzzle pressed harder, and Vincente
swallowed, more frightened for his family than ever.
"That's
better," the intruder said. "Your wife and children will be our
guests, Mister Cruz, until you do exactly as we tell you."
Vincente licked his
lips. "What do you want?" he asked hoarsely.
"You're a senior
programmer for Imperial Terra," his captor said, and even through
his fear Vincente was stunned. His job was so classified even Elena didn't know
precisely what he did! How could these people—?
"Don't bother to
deny it, Mister Cruz," the masked man continued. "We know all about
you, and what you're going to do is add this—" he waved a data chip before
Vincente's eyes "—to the ship's core programs."
"I-I can't!
It's impossible! There's too much security!"
"You have access,
and you're bright enough to find a way. If you don't—" The man's shrug was
a dagger in Vincente's heart. He stared into the eyes in the mask slits, and
their coldness washed away all hope. This man would kill him as easily as he
might a cockroach . . . and he had Vincente's family.
"That's
better." The masked man dropped the chip on his chest and straightened.
"We have no desire to hurt women and children, but we're doing the Lord's
work, and you've just become His instrument. Make no mistake; if you fail to do
exactly as you're told, we will kill them. Do you believe me?"
"Yes,"
Vincente whispered.
"Good. And remember
this: we knew where to find you, we know what you do, and we even know what
ship you're working on. Think about that, because it also means we'll know if
you're stupid enough to tell anyone about this."
The masked man stepped
back, joined by his female companion and a tall, broad-shouldered man with the
capture gun. They backed to the door, and he lay helpless, watching them go.
"Just do as you're
told, Mister Cruz, and your family will be returned safe and sound. Disobey,
and you'll never even know where they're buried."
The leader nodded to his
henchman, and Vincente screamed as the capture field suddenly soared to maximum
and hammered him into the darkness.
Senior Fleet Captain
Algys McNeal sat on his command deck and watched his bridge officers with one
eye and the hologram beside him with the other. Physically, Admiral Hatcher was
several hundred thousand kilometers away, but fold-space coms let them maintain
their conversation without interruptions. Not that Captain McNeal felt overly
grateful. Commanding Battle Fleet's most powerful warship on her maiden cruise
was quite enough to worry about; having both heirs to the Crown aboard made it
worse, and he did not need the CNO sitting here flapping his jaws while Imperial
Terra prepared to get under way!
" . . . then take a good look around
Thegran," Hatcher was saying.
"Yes, Sir,"
McNeal replied while he watched Midshipman His Imperial Highness Sean MacIntyre
running final checks at Astrogation. The Prince had obviously hoped for
assignment to Battle Comp, but he was already a competent tactician. He'd learn
far more as an assistant astrogator, and so far, McNeal was cautiously pleased
with Midshipman MacIntyre's cheerfulness in the face of his disappointment.
"And bring back
some green cheese from Triam IV," Hatcher continued.
"Yes, Sir,"
McNeal said automatically, then twitched and jerked both eyes to his superior's
face. Hatcher grinned, and McNeal returned it wryly.
"Sorry, Sir. I
guess I was a bit distracted."
"Don't apologize,
Algys. I should know better than to crowd you at a time like this." The
admiral shrugged. "Guess I'm a bit excited about your new ship, too. And
frustrated at being stuck here in Bia."
"I understand, Sir.
And you're not really crowding me."
"The hell I'm
not!" Hatcher snorted. "Good luck, Captain."
"Thank you,
Sir." McNeal tried to hide his relief, but Hatcher's eyes twinkled as he
flipped a casual salute. Then he vanished, and McNeal's astrogator roused from
her neural feeds to look up at him.
"Ship ready to
proceed, Sir," she said crisply.
"Very good,
Commander. Take us out of here."
"Aye, aye,
Sir," Commander Yu replied.
Birhat's emerald and
sapphire gem began to shrink in the display as they headed out at a
conservative thirty percent of light-speed, and Imperial Terra's
officers were too busy to note a brief fold-space transmission. It came from
the planetoid Dahak, and it wasn't addressed to any of them, anyway.
Instead it whispered to Terra's central computer for just an instant,
then terminated as unobtrusively as it had begun.
* * *
"Well, they're
off," Hatcher's hologram told Colin. "They'll drop off a dozen
passage crews at Urahan, then move out to probe the Thegran System."
Colin nodded but said
nothing, for he was concentrating on the neural feed he'd plugged into Mother's
scanners. Imperial Terra had to be at least twelve light-minutes from
Bia to enter hyper, and he sat silent for the full ten minutes she took to
reach the hyper threshold. Then she blinked out, with no more fuss than a soap
bubble, and he sighed.
"Damn, Gerald. I
wish I was going with them."
"They'll be fine.
And they've got to try their wings sometime."
"Oh, that's not my
problem," Colin said with a crooked grin. "I'm not worried—I'm
envious. To be that young, just starting out, knowing the entire galaxy
is your own private oyster. . . ."
"Yeah. I remember
how I felt when Jennifer made her middy cruise. She was cute as a puppy—and
she'd have killed me on the spot if I'd said so!"
Colin laughed. Hatcher's
older daughter was attached to Geb's Reconstruction Ministry, with three system
surveys already under her belt, and she was about due for promotion to
lieutenant senior grade.
"I guess all the
good ones start out confident they can beat anything the universe throws at
them," he said. "But you know what scares me most?"
"What?"
Hatcher asked curiously.
"The fact that they
may just be right."
* * *
The Traffic Police flyer
screamed through the Washington State night at Mach twelve. That was pushing
the envelope in atmosphere, even for a gravitonic drive, but this one looked
bad, and the tense-faced pilot concentrated on his flying while his partner
drove his scan systems at max.
An update came in from Flight
Control Central, and the electronics officer cursed as he scanned it. Jesus! An
entire family—five people, three of them kids! Accidents were rare with
Imperial technology, but when they happened they tended to happen with
finality, and he prayed this one was an exception.
He turned back to his
sensors as the crash site came into range and leaned forward, as if he could
force them to tell him what he wanted to see.
He couldn't, and he
slumped back in his couch.
"Might as well slow
down, Jacques," he said sadly.
The pilot looked
sideways at him, and he shook his head.
"All we've got is a
crater. A big one. Looks like they must've gone in at better than Mach five . .
. and I don't see any personnel transponders."
"Merde,"
Sergeant Jacques DuMont said softly, and the screaming flyer slowed its
headlong pace.
* * *
Underway holo displays
had always fascinated Sean, especially because he knew how little they
resembled what a human eye would actually have seen.
Under the latest
generation Enchanach drive, for example, a ship covered distance at eight
hundred and fifty times light-speed, yet it didn't really "move" at
all. It simply flashed out of existence here and reappeared over there.
The drive built its actual gravity masses in less than a femtosecond, but the
entire cycle took almost a full trillionth of a second in normal space between
transpositions. That interval was imperceptible, and there was no Doppler
effect to distort vision, since during those tiny periods of time the ship was
effectively motionless, but any human eye would have found it impossible to
sort out the visual stimuli as its point of observation shifted by two hundred
and fifty-four million kilometers every second.
So the computers
generated an artificial image, a sort of tachyon's-eye view of the universe.
The glorious display enfolded the bridge in a three-hundred-sixty-degree
panorama whose nearer stars moved visibly and gave humanity the comforting
illusion of moving through a comprehensible universe.
The imaging computers
confronted different parameters at sublight speeds. The Fifth Imperium's
gravitonic drive had a maximum sublight velocity of a smidgen over seventy
percent of light-speed (missiles could top .8 c before their drives lost
phase lock and Bad Things happened) and countered mass and inertia. That
conferred essentially unlimited maneuverability and allowed maximum velocity to
be attained very quickly—not instantly; a vessel's mass determined the
efficiency curves of its drive—without turning a crew into anchovy paste. But
unlike a ship under Enchanach drive, sublight ships did move relative to
the universe, and so had to worry about things like relativity. Time dilation
became an important factor aboard them, and so did the Doppler effect. To the
unaided eye, stars ahead tended to vanish off the upper end of the visible
spectrum, while those astern red-shifted off its bottom.
Sean found the
phenomenon eerily beautiful, and he'd loved the moments when his instructors
had allowed him to switch the computer imaging out of the display to enjoy the
"starbow" on training flights. Unfortunately, it wasn't very useful,
so the computers and FTL fold-space scanners normally were called upon once
more to produce an artificially "real" view.
Then there was
hyper-space. Imperial Terra, like all Battle Fleet planetoids, had three
distinct drive systems: sublight, Enchanach, and hyper, and her top speed in
hyper was over thirty-two hundred times that of light. Yet
"hyper-space" was more a convenient label for something no human
could envision than an accurate description, for it consisted of many
"bands"—actually a whole series of entirely different spaces—whose
seething tides of energy were lethal to any object outside a drive field. Even
with Imperial technology, human eyes found h-space's gray, crawling nothingness
. . . disturbing. Vertigo was almost instantaneous; longer exposure led to more
serious consequences, up to and including madness. Ships in normal space could
detect the hyper traces of ships in hyper; ships in hyper were blind. They
could "see" neither into normal space nor through hyper-space, and so
their displays were blank.
Or, more precisely, they
showed other things. Aboard Imperial Terra, Captain McNeal preferred
holo projections of his native Galway coast, but the actual choice depended on
who had the watch. Commander Yu, for example, liked soothing, abstract light
sculptures, while Captain Susulov, the exec, had a weakness for Jerusalem
street scenes. The only constant was the holographic numerals suspended above
the astrogator's station: a scarlet countdown showing the time remaining to
emergence at the ship's programmed coordinates.
Now Sean sat at
Commander Yu's side, watching the sun set over Galway Bay while Captain McNeal
waited for his ship to emerge from hyper in the Urahan System, twelve days—and
over a hundred light-years—from Bia.
Imperial Terra dropped back
into humanity's universe sixty-three light-minutes from the F3 star Urahan. The
Urahan System had never been a Fleet base, but a survey ship had found a
surprising number of planetoids orbiting in its outer reaches . . . for reasons
which became grimly clear once the survey crew managed to reactivate the first
derelict's computers.
No one had ever lived on
any of Urahan's planets, so starships contaminated by the bio-weapon could do
no harm there. As ship after ship became infected and their people began to
sicken, their officers had taken them to Urahan or some other unpopulated
system and placed them in parking orbit.
And then they'd died.
Galway Bay vanished.
Scores of planetoids appeared, drifting against the stars, gleaming dimly in
the reflected light of Urahan, and Sean shivered as he watched six of Terra's
parasites move across the display, carrying forty thousand people towards the
transports and repair ships of the Ministry of Reconstruction keeping station
on those dead hulls.
All his life, Sean
MacIntyre had known what had overwhelmed the Fourth Empire. He'd seen the ships
brought back to Bia and read about the disaster, studied it, written papers on
it for the Academy. He knew about the bio-weapon . . . but now he understood
something he'd never quite grasped.
Those dead ships were
real, and each had once been crewed by two hundred thousand people who'd worn
the uniform he now wore. Real people who'd died because they'd tried to assist
planets teeming with billions of other real people. And when they knew they,
too, were infected, they'd come here to die rather than seek help for
themselves and endanger still others.
The bio-weapon itself
had died at last, but through all the dusty millennia, those ships had
remained, waiting. And now, at last, humanity had returned to reclaim them and
weigh itself against the criminal folly which had killed their crews . . . and
the courage with which they'd died.
He watched the display,
measuring himself against those long-dead crews, and a part of him that was
very young hoped Captain McNeal would hyper out for Thegran soon.
* * *
Fleet Commander Yu Lin
had been to Urahan before, and she'd watched her snotty as they dropped out of
hyper. It would never do to admit it, but she rather liked Mid/4 MacIntyre.
Crown Prince or no, he was hardworking, conscientious, and unfailingly polite,
yet she'd wondered how such a cheerful extrovert would react to Urahan's death
fleet.
Now she filed the ghosts
in his eyes away beside the other mental notes she was making for his
evaluation. It was interesting, she thought.
He seemed to feel
exactly the way she did.
* * *
Imperial Terra
considered her options as the coordinates for her next hyper jump were entered.
Although her Comp Cent
wasn't self-aware, it came closer than those of older Battle Fleet units. Terra
was actually a good bit brighter than Dahak had been when he first arrived in
Earth orbit, yet trying to reconcile the two sets of Alpha Priority commands no
one knew she had was a problem.
Normally, she would have
asked for guidance, but Alpha commands took absolute precedence, and her
directive to seek human assistance didn't carry Alpha Priority. There'd never
seemed any reason why it should, but one of Vincente Cruz's commands prohibited
any discussion of his other orders with her bridge officers, which meant Comp
Cent was faced with devising a course of action which would satisfy both sets
of commands all on its own.
It did.
* * *
Sean sat beside the park
deck lake, skimming stones across the water. A bio-enhanced arm could send them
for incredible distances, and he watched the skittering splashes vanish into
the mist while his implants' low-powered force field shielded him from the
falling rain.
Feet crunched on wet
gravel behind him, and he read the implant codes without looking.
"Hi, guys," he
said. "How d'you like Commander Godard's weather?"
He stood and turned to
grin at his friends. This was the first time they'd all been off watch at once
since leaving Urahan, and Terra's logistics officer had decided the park
decks needed a good rain. Fleet Commander Godard was a nice guy, and Sean
didn't think he'd done it on purpose.
"I like it."
Brashan trotted down to the lake and waded out belly-deep into the water.
Unlike his human friends, he was in uniform, but Narhani uniform consisted
solely of a harness to support his belt pouches and display his insignia, and
Sean felt a familiar spurt of envy. Brashan had to spend more time polishing
his leather and brightwork, but he'd never had to worry about getting a spot
out of his dress trousers in his life.
"It reminds me of
spring on Narhan," Brashan added, folding down into the water until only
his shoulders showed and extending the fan of his cranial frill in bliss.
"Of course, the air's still too thin, but the weather's nice."
"You would
think so." Tamman kicked off his deck shoes and perched on the outer hull
of a trimaran, dangling his feet in the water. "For myself, I'd prefer a
bit less drizzle."
"You and me
both," Sean agreed, though he wasn't sure that was entirely true. The
humidity emphasized the smell of life and greenery, and he had his sensory
boosters on high to enjoy the earthy perfume.
"Still want to go
sailing?" Sandy asked.
"Maybe." Sean
skimmed another stone into the mist. "I checked the weather schedule. This
is supposed to clear up in about an hour."
"Well I'd rather
wait until it does," Harriet said.
"Yeah." Sean
selected another stone. "I suppose we could go up to Gym Deck Seven while
we wait."
"No way."
Tamman shook his head. "I poked my head in on the way down, and Lieutenant
Williams is running another 'voluntary participation' unarmed combat session up
there."
"Yuck." Sean
threw his rock with a grimace. His human friends and he had played and worked
out with Dahak's training remotes since they could walk. They were about the
only members of the crew who were both junior to Williams and able to give him
a run for his money, but he kept producing sneaky (and bruising) moves they
hadn't seen yet whenever they got him in trouble.
"Double yuck,"
Sandy agreed. She was nimble and blindingly fast, even for an enhanced human,
but her small size was a distinct disadvantage on the training mat.
"Oh, well,"
Harriet sighed, heading for the trimaran and beginning to unlace the sail
covers, and Sean laughed as he climbed aboard to help her.
* * *
Deep in Imperial
Terra's heart Comp Cent silently oversaw her every function, monitoring,
adjusting, reporting back to its human masters.
Terra was somewhat
larger than an Asgerd-class planetoid, but she carried far fewer people,
mostly because her sublight parasites, while larger and more powerful than
their predecessors, had been designed around smaller crews. Horus' old Nergal
had required three hundred crewmen, and even the Fourth Empire's sublight
battleships had needed crews of over a hundred. With their Dahak-designed
computers, Imperial Terra's were designed for core crews of only thirty,
and even that was more of a social than a combat requirement.
Yet Terra's
personnel still numbered over eighty thousand. Each of them was superbly
trained, ready for any emergency, but all of those eighty thousand people
depended upon what their computers told them and relied upon Comp Cent to do
what it was told. From the engineers tending the roaring energy whirlpool of
her core tap to the logistics staff managing her park decks and life support,
they worked in an intimate fusion with their cybernetic henchmen, united
through their neural feeds.
Continuous
self-diagnostic programs scrutinized every aspect of those computers'
operations, alert for any malfunction while Imperial Terra's crewmen
stood their watches and monitored their displays, and those displays told them
all was well as their ship tore through hyper. But all was not well, for none
of Imperial Terra's crew knew about the Alpha Priority commands a
programmer now dead with his entire family had inserted into their ship's
computer, and so none of them knew Comp Cent had become a traitor.
* * *
Sandy MacMahan crossed
the cool, cavernous bay to the gleaming flank of the sublight battleship Israel.
Number six personnel hatch stood open, and she trotted up the ramp, wondering
where Fleet Commander Jury was.
She poked her head in
through the hatch and blinked in surprise.
"Sean? What're you
doing here?"
"Me? What're you
doing here? I got a memo from Commander Jury to report for an unscheduled
training exercise."
"So did I."
Sandy frowned. "Dragged me out of the sack, too."
"Too bad,
considering how much you need your beauty sleep."
"At least beauty
sleep does me some good, Beak Schnoz," she shot back, and Sean
grinned and rubbed his nose, acknowledging her hit. "But speaking of
Commander Jury, where is she?"
"Dunno. Let's check
the command deck."
Sandy nodded, and they
stepped into the transit shaft. The gravitonic system whisked them away . . .
and the hatch closed silently behind them.
The midshipmen stepped
out of the shaft onto the command deck and into a fresh surprise. Harriet,
Tamman, and Brashan were already there, and they looked just as puzzled as
Sandy and Sean felt. There was a moment of confused questions and
counter-questions, and then Sean held up his hands.
"Whoa! Hold on.
Look, Sandy and I both got nabbed by Commander Jury for some extra hands-on
parasite training time. What're you guys doing here?"
"The same
thing," Harriet said. "And I don't understand it. I just finished a
two-hour session in the simulator last watch."
"Yeah," Tamman
said, "and if we're here, where's Commander Jury?"
"Maybe we'd better
ask her." Sean flipped his neural feed into Imperial Terra's
internal com net . . . and his eyes widened as the system kicked him right back
out. That had never happened before.
He thought for a moment,
then shrugged. Procedure frowned on using fold-space coms aboard ship, but
something decidedly strange was going on, so he activated his implant com. Or,
rather, he tried to activate it.
"Shit!" He
glanced up and saw the others looking at him. "I can't get into the com
net—and something's blanketing my fold-space com!"
Sandy stared at him in
astonishment, and then her face went blank as she tried to contact Jury.
Nothing happened, and a tiny flame of uncertainty kindled in her eyes. It
wasn't fear—not yet—but it was closer to that than Sean liked to see from
Sandy.
"I can't get in,
either."
"I don't like
this," Tamman muttered. Harriet nodded agreement, and Brashan stood and
headed for the transit shaft.
"I think we'd
better find out what's going on, and—"
"Three-minute
warning," a calm, female voice interrupted the Narhani. "Parasite
launch in three minutes. Assume launch stations."
Sean whirled to the
command console. Launch stations? You couldn't launch a parasite in
hyper-space without destroying parasite and mother ship alike—any moron knew that!—but
the boards were blinking to life, and his jaw clenched as the launch clock
began to count down.
"Oh, my God!"
Harriet whispered, but Sean was already hammering at the console through his
neural feed, and his dark face went white as the computer refused to let him
in.
"Computer!
Emergency voice override! Abort launch sequence!"
Nothing happened, and
Brashan's voice was taut behind him.
"The transit shaft
has been closed down, Sean."
"Jesus
Christ!" With the shaft down, it would take over five minutes to reach the
nearest hatch.
"Two-minute
warning," the computer remarked. "Parasite launch in two minutes.
Assume launch stations."
"What do we do,
Sean?" Tamman asked harshly, and Sean scrubbed his hands over his face.
Then he shook himself.
"Man your stations!
Try to get into the system and shut the damned thing down, or this crazy
computer'll kill us all!"
* * *
Commander Yu had been on
watch for two hours. As most watches in hyper-space, they'd been deadly dull
hours, and her attention was on the slowly shifting light sculptures, so it
took her a few seconds to note the peculiar readings from Launch Bay Forty-One.
But then they began to
register, and she straightened in her couch, eyes widening. The bay was
entering launch cycle!
Commander Yu was an
experienced officer. She paled as she realized what breaching the drive field
in hyper would do to her ship, yet she didn't panic. Instead, she threw an
instant abort command into Comp Cent's net and the computer acknowledged, but
the bay went right on cycling!
She snapped her feed
into a standby system and tried to override manually. The launch count went
steadily on, and her face was bloodless as she began punching alarm circuits .
. . and nothing at all happened!
Time was running out
fast, and she did the only thing left. She ordered a complete, emergency
computer shut down.
Comp Cent ignored her,
and then it was too late.
* * *
Imperial Terra dropped out of
hyper. There was no warning. She shouldn't have been able to do it. A ship in
hyper stayed in hyper until it reached its programmed coordinates, and Terra
hadn't reached the coordinates Commander Yu had given her. But she had
reached the ones she'd selected under the overriding authority of her Alpha
Priority commands.
She reappeared in normal
space, over a light-year from the nearest star, and the battleship Israel
screamed out of her bay under full emergency power. Her drive field shredded
centimeter-thick battle steel bulkheads and splintered hatches the size of an
aircraft carrier's flight deck. She massed over a hundred and twenty thousand
tons, and Imperial Terra's alarms screamed as she reamed the access
shaft into tangled ruin.
Sean MacIntyre gasped in
fear, pressed back into his couch by a cold-start, full-power launch. The
battleship was moving at twenty percent of light-speed when she erupted from
the air-spewing wound of her bay, and her speed was still climbing!
He stared at the holo
display as it sprang to life, too confused and terrified to grasp what was
happening. He should be dead, and he wasn't. The display should show only the
gray swirls of hyper-space; it was spangled with diamond-chip suns in the
velvet immensity of n-space, and Imperial Terra was a rapidly dwindling
dot astern.
* * *
Comp Cent watched Israel
accelerate clear and noted the faithful discharge of one set of Alpha Priority
commands. With that detail out of the way, it could turn to its other
imperatives.
Harriet cried out in
horror, and Sean cringed as Imperial Terra's core tap blew, and eighty
thousand people vanished in an eye-searing glare.
Baroness Nergal curled
up on her couch with Fleet Vice Admiral Oliver Weinstein's head in her lap and
popped another grape into his mouth.
"You do realize
you're going to have to earn these grapes, don't you?" she purred
as he swallowed.
"I don't think of
it that way," he said with a chuckle.
"No? Then how do
you think of it, pray tell?"
"The way I see it, I
don't have to do anything. First my superior officer wines and dines me,
spoiling me rotten and softening me up so she can have her wicked way with me.
And second—"
"And second?"
she prompted, poking his ribs as he paused with a grin.
"Why, second, she does
have her way with me."
"You," she
examined her remaining grapes with care, "are a despicable person of weak
moral fiber." He nodded, and she shook her head in sorrow. "I, on the
other hand, as a virtuous and upright person, am so shocked by the depths of
your decadence that I think—" she paused as she finally found the perfect
grape "—I'm going to shove this grape up your left nostril!"
Admiral Weinstein tried
to whip upright and dodge, but Admiral Robbins was a clever tactician and
tumbled him to the floor in a squirming, tickling heap. Her intended instrument
of retribution pulped harmlessly against the tip of his nose, but things were progressing
satisfactorily indeed when an urgent tone sounded.
Adrienne stopped dead,
head rising in shock as the priority tone repeated, then vaulted to her feet.
Weinstein sat up and started to speak, then froze as the tone sounded yet
again. His confused expression vanished as the priority of the signal
registered, and he rose to his knees.
Adrienne paused only to
jerk a robe over her negligee, then answered the call with an impatient implant
flick. Gerald Hatcher's hologram materialized before her, sitting in Mother's
Command Alpha command chair, and his face was grim.
"Sorry to disturb
you, Adrienne," his voice was flat, and her dread grew, "but we may
have a serious problem." He drew a breath and met her eyes squarely.
"Algys McNeal's Thegran sitrep is three hours overdue."
Robbins went white, and
Hatcher continued in that same flat voice.
"We've
double-checked with Urahan. They hypered out on schedule, and they should've
reached Thegran five hours ago."
Adrienne nodded slowly,
eyes huge. Many of the Fourth Empire's system governors had erected defenses in
desperate efforts to quarantine their planets against the bio-weapon, but
communications had been so chaotic as the Empire died that no one knew what any
given governor might have cobbled up. The only way to find out was to go see,
and if no one had yet encountered anything capable of standing up to a
planetoid, there was always the possibility someone would. That was why all
survey ships were required to report by hypercom within two hours of arrival in
any unexplored system.
"It might be a
hypercom failure," she suggested, but her own tone told her how little she
believed it.
"Anything's
possible," Hatcher said expressionlessly. The hypercom was massive and
complex, but its basic technology had been refined for over six millennia. One
might fail once in four or five centuries: certainly no more often. They both
knew that, and they stared at one another in sick silence.
"Oh, Jesus,
Ger," she whispered at last.
"I know."
"Was their hyper
field unbalanced when they left Urahan?"
"I don't know."
Frustration harshened Hatcher's voice. "They dropped off their passengers
and hypered straight out, and none of the reconstruction people had any reason
to run a trace on them. All we know is they hit the threshold and kicked over
right on the tick."
"Oh, shit."
The expletive was a prayer, and Adrienne raked fingers through her hair.
"I simply can't believe they could've hit anything that could take Terra—not
with Algys in command. It has to be a com failure!"
"You mean you hope
it is," Hatcher said, then closed his eyes. "And so do I. But hoping
won't change things if it's not." Adrienne nodded unhappily, and he drew a
deep breath. "I'm mobilizing BatRon One for search and rescue with Herdan
as Flag. Do you want it?"
"Of course I
do!" Adrienne began unbelting her robe. Weinstein was already there,
holding out her uniform, and she spared him a strained smile. "I'll be
ready by the time my cutter gets here."
"Thank you,"
Hatcher said softly, and Adrienne swallowed.
"Will you—?"
she began, and he nodded, face grimmer than ever.
"I'm leaving for
the Palace now."
* * *
Fifteen Asgerd-class
planetoids erupted from hyper-space ten light-minutes from the G4 star Thegran.
They came out in battle formation, with shields up and enough weapons on-line
to destroy an entire solar system. Every sensor was at max, seeking any threat
and searching for any lifeboat's beacon.
But there was nothing to
engage . . . and no beacons.
Adrienne Robbins sat on Emperor
Herdan's command deck, staring into the display, and her eyes burned.
Thegran II, once known as Triam, was a sphere of bare rock and lifeless dirt,
surrounded by a fraying necklace of near-space satellites and derelicts as dead
as Triam herself.
She fought her tears.
She'd hoped so hard! But there was no sign of Imperial Terra . .
. or of anything that could have destroyed her. And if a hyper ship failed to
reach its destination it never emerged from hyper at all. She drew a deep
breath and rubbed her stinging eyes once, angrily, before she looked at her
white-faced communications officer.
"Calibrate the
hypercom, Commander," she said in a voice leached of all emotion.
* * *
"I'm sorry,
Colin," Gerald Hatcher said quietly. "God, I'm sorry."
Colin sat in his study,
trying not to weep while Jiltanith pressed her face into his shoulder and her
tears soaked his tunic, and Hatcher started to reach out to them, then stopped.
His hand hung in midair for a moment while he stared down at it as if at an
enemy, then dropped it back into his lap.
"I'd hoped Adrienne
would find something. Or that they'd have returned themselves if it was
a com failure, but—" He broke off, and his jaw tightened. "It's my
fault. I should never have let them all go in one ship."
"No." Colin's
frayed voice quivered despite his effort to hold it steady. He shook his head
almost convulsively. "It . . . it was our idea, Ger. Ours." He
closed his eyes and felt a tear trickle down his cheek.
"I should've
argued. God, how could I be so stupid! Both of them, and Sandy
and Tam—" Hatcher stopped, cursing himself as Colin's face clenched.
Venting his self-hate could only hurt his friends, but he would never forgive
himself. Never. Terra had seemed so powerful, so safe . . . and
so he'd let not merely both heirs to the throne but the children of all
of his closest friends sail aboard a single ship, never reflecting for a moment
that even the mightiest starship might malfunction and die. Of course it was
unlikely, but it was his job to expect the unlikely.
"Have you told the
others?" Colin asked, and Hatcher shook his head.
"No. I— Well, you
and 'Tanni needed to know first, and—"
"I
understand." Colin cut him off softly, hugging Jiltanith as she wept.
"It's not your fault, Ger. I don't want to hear that from you ever
again." He held the admiral's eyes until Hatcher gave a tiny nod, then
drew a deep, ragged breath.
" 'Tanni?" His
voice was gentle, and Jiltanith raised her face. She stared at him in mute
agony, and he remembered the final engagement at Zeta Trianguli as their ship
shuddered and bucked under the pounding of Achuultani warheads and Tamman's Royal
Birhat vaporized before their eyes. She'd wept then, too, wept for the
friends dying about them, but her commands had come firm and steady through her
tears, with all the invincible courage he loved so much. The courage that had
broken at last.
He cupped her face
between his palms, and her diamond tears wrenched at him, for he understood her
too well. She'd been wounded too often in the endless battle against Anu. Her
softness had withdrawn behind a fiery temper and a warrior's armor forged by a
lifetime of warfare and lost friends. But it was still there, however hard she
found showing it, and when she loved, she loved as she did everything else—with
all she was.
"We have to go,
'Tanni." Fury sparked suddenly within her hurt, but he made himself meet
it. "We have to," he repeated. "They're our friends."
She drew a quick, angry
breath . . . then held it and closed her eyes. One hand rose to his cheek, and
she nodded and pressed a kiss upon his wrist. Anguish still filled her eyes
when she opened them once more, but there was understanding as well. The
understanding that she had to go on, not simply because her friends needed her,
but because if she didn't there was nothing left but a dark, bottomless gulf,
waiting to suck her under forever.
"Aye," she
whispered, and looked at Hatcher. "Forgive me, dear Gerald." She held
out a trembling hand, and the admiral took it. "Well I know thy grief,
sweet friend. 'Tis ill done to heap mine own upon it."
" 'Tanni, I—"
Tears fogged Hatcher's voice, and she squeezed gently.
"Nay, Gerald. 'Tis
no more fault o' thine than mine. And Colin hath the right. Our dearest friends
do need our aid . . . e'en as we need theirs." She managed a soft, sad
smile and stood. "Let us go to them."
* * *
A chair squeaked as the
man in it finished the report and turned to look out his office window. The
Imperium was in mourning, and even the most fiery malcontents were muted by the
shock and sorrow of a race. Every flag of humankind flew at half-mast, but
there was no sorrow in his heart. The heirs were gone, and the children
of the imperial family's closest friends had gone with them. Grief and loss
would weaken them, make them less vigilant, blunt their perceptions and
reactions, and that was good.
He rose and walked to
the window, hands folded behind him, looking down on the crowds below, then
rested his eyes upon the spire of the Cenotaph. The names on the memorial were
endless, and once he'd hated every one of them, for they named the people who'd
toppled his patron. But he hated them no longer, for in toppling Anu they'd
cleared his path to power, and his palms tingled as he waited to reach
out and grasp it.
He pursed his lips,
pondering his preparations. The gravitonic warhead was almost ready, and so was
his plan for delivering it when the time was right. He'd been more worried
about that than he'd cared to admit to Francine, but not anymore. It wouldn't
be easy, but with his foreknowledge and the holos of the artist's sketches he
could fabricate his duplicate in plenty of time. And, of course, it would never
do to deliver it too soon, anyway. He needed Stepmother closer to operational,
for it was essential to reduce delay to an absolute minimum if his coup was to
succeed.
And it would
succeed. He was like a spider, he thought, weaving his webs at the very heart
of empire, unnoticed yet perfectly placed to observe and thwart every
countermove even before it was launched. Just as he'd been placed to act on the
opportunity Imperial Terra presented.
He smiled again—a thin,
triumphant smile. With a little luck, the heirs' deaths might even drive a
wedge between the imperial family and Dahak, for it was Dahak who'd designed Imperial
Terra, supervised her construction, and suggested sending them out aboard
her. With Cruz and his family dead, no one would ever know what had really
happened, and the grieving parents would be more than human if some secret part
of them didn't blame Dahak for their loss.
The time would come. Not
this year, perhaps, but soon, and then Colin and Jiltanith MacIntyre would die,
as well, in one deadly stroke which would decapitate the Imperium . . . and
there would be nothing anyone could do about it. Nothing at all.
He smothered a soft
laugh, savoring the victory to come and the exquisite irony which would make
him Colin's legal successor. He, the Terra-born "degenerate" Kirinal
and Anu had despised even while they groomed him as their tool, would achieve
what Anu had only dreamed of: utter and complete dominion. And it would all be legal!
A soft sound warned him,
and he turned, banishing his smile and replacing it with soft, sad sympathy as
Horus walked into his office. The old man's shoulders slumped, and his eyes
were haunted, but like his daughter and son-in-law, he was making himself go
on. Making himself discharge his duties, never guessing how futile it all truly
was.
"Sorry to bother
you," Horus said, "but I wondered if you'd finished that report on
the Calcutta bio-enhancement center?"
"Yes, I have."
He crossed to his desk and handed over the datachip folio from the blotter.
"Thanks."
Horus took it and started back to his office, then stopped and turned as a
throat cleared itself behind him.
"I just . . . Well,
I just wanted to say I'm sorry, Horus. If there's anything I can do—anything at
all—please let me know."
"I will."
Horus managed a sad smile of his own. "It helps just to know friends
care," he said softly.
"I'm glad. Because
we do care, Horus," Lawrence Jefferson said gently. "More,
perhaps, than you'll ever know."
"I don't think
we're going to nail it down any closer, Harry," Sean sighed from the
captain's couch. He rubbed his forehead in a futile effort to relieve the
subliminal ache of hours of concentration on his neural feeds, then rose and
stretched hugely.
"I'm afraid you're
right." His sister sat up in the astrogator's couch and twisted a lock of
sable hair around a fingertip.
Sandy lay like a dead
woman in the tactical officer's couch, but Sean was used to her utter
concentration on the task in hand. Besides, he could see her breathing. He
flipped his feed into her net, nudging her gently, and felt her acknowledgment.
She began to disengage from her painstaking computer diagnostics, and he fired
another message off to Tamman and Brashan, summoning them from their
examination of Engineering for a conference.
He clasped his hands
behind him and watched the display while Harriet rose and worked through a few
tension-relieving stretches. Israel drifted in interstellar space, drive
down while her tiny crew examined her every system. Before they did anything
else, they were going to be certain—or as close as was humanly (or
Narhanily) possible—no more booby traps awaited them. But once they were
certain they still had to decide what to do, and the display's glittering stars
offered few options.
He looked up as Tamman
and Brashan entered the command deck. Tamman still looked drawn and pinched,
but Brashan seemed almost calm. Which, Sean reflected, might owe something to
the famed Narhani lack of imagination. Personally, he'd always thought of it
more as pragmatism. Narhani were more concerned with the nuts and bolts of a
problem than with its implications, and he was glad of it. Brashan's
levelheadedness was exactly what they all needed just now, for, to use the
current Academy phrase, they were up to their eyebrows in shit.
Tamman perched on the
assistant tactical officer's couch beside Sandy while Brashan keyed a
reconfiguration command into the exec's couch. It twitched for a moment, then
reformed itself into a Narhani-style pad, and he folded onto it just as Sandy
shook her head and roused. She sat up with a wan smile that still held a ghost
of her familiar humor, and Sean grinned back wryly. Then he cleared his throat.
"All right. I know
our system checks are still a long way from finished, but I think it's time to
compare notes."
Their nodded agreement
was a relief. He was senior to all of them, yet his authority, while real and
legal, rested solely on their class standings. He stood first in their Academy
class, but less than five points separated him from Tamman, their most
"junior" officer, and there was a bare quarter-point between him and
Sandy. Which was due solely to his higher scores in Tactics and Phys-Ed, for
she'd waxed him in Math and Physics.
"Okay. Harry and I
have done our best to figure out where we are, but we can't be as precise about
it as we'd like. Or, rather, we know where we are; we just don't have
any idea what the neighborhood looks like. Harry?" He passed the
discussion to her, and she propped a hip against the astrogator's console.
"First of all,
we're nowhere near where we're supposed to be. Israel's astro data is
limited—normally, sublight units don't much need interstellar data—but we've
got the old basic Fourth Empire cartography downloads. Working from them and
allowing for forty-odd thousand years of stellar motion, we're just about smack
in the middle of the Tarik Sector."
"The Tarik
Sector?" Tamman sounded dubious, and Sean didn't blame him.
"Exactly."
Harriet's voice was calmer than Sean knew she was. "Whatever happened took
Terra off her programmed course by something like plus seventy-two
degrees declination and fifty degrees left ascension from Urahan, then brought
her out of hyper three days early on top of it. At the moment, we're
five-point-four-six-seven light-centuries from Birhat, as near as Sean and I
can figure it, on a bearing no one could possibly have predicted."
Sean watched the
implications sink home. It didn't make much real difference—they'd known from
the start that their battleship was a hopelessly tiny needle in a galactic
haystack—but now they also knew no one had even the faintest idea where to
start looking for them. Harriet gave them a few moments to consider it, then
went on even more dispassionately.
"Unfortunately, Israel's
database was loaded for the Idan Sector, where we were supposed to be going.
We've figured out where we are relative to Bia, but we don't have any
data on the Tarik Sector, so we don't have the least idea what it contained
forty thousand years ago, much less today. No Survey people have penetrated
this far, and they probably won't for at least fifty years or so. All of which
means we're not in real good shape for making informed guesses about where we
ought to go next."
She paused again, then
returned the floor to Sean with a small nod.
"Thanks,
Harry." He looked at the others and shrugged. "As Harry says, we
don't have much guidance about possible destinations, but then, we don't have
much choice, either." He flipped his neural feed into the display
computers, and a red sighting ring circled a bright star.
"That," he
said, "is an F5 star at about one-point-three light-years. We don't know
which one it is, so we don't know if it had any habitable planets even before
the bio-weapon hit, but the next nearest candidate for a life-bearing world is
this G6—" a second sighting ring blossomed "—over eleven light-years
away. It's going to take us a while to reach either of them at our best
sustained sublight speed, but it'd take something like nine hundred years to
get back to Bia—assuming Israel's systems would hold up for a voyage
that long. On the other hand, we can get to the F5 in just under two-point-two
years. At point-six cee, we'll have a tau of about point-eight, so the
subjective time will be about twenty-one months. That's a long time, and we've
only got two stasis pods, so we'll have to put up with each other awake the
whole way, but I don't see that we have any other option. Comments?"
"I have one,
Sean," Brashan said after a moment, and Sean nodded for him to go on.
"It's more of an observation, really. It occurs to me that, given such a
long voyage time, it may be a fortunate thing we Narhani still think of
ourselves as having only one sex."
The other three stared
at Brashan, but Sean astonished himself with a chuckle. After a moment the
others began to grin, too, though Harriet was a little pink. Sean coughed into
his fist, smothering the last of his chuckles, and regarded the Narhani
sternly.
"Contrary to what
you poor, benighted aliens may believe, Brashan, not all humans are helpless
slaves to their hormones."
"Indeed?"
Brashan cocked his head and looked down his long snout at him, raising his
crest in an expression of polite disbelief. "I would never dispute your
veracity, Sean, but I must say my personal observation of human mating behavior
invalidates your basic premise. And while we Narhani are quite different from
humans, it seems to me that a disinterested perspective is less prone to
self-deception. As you know, my people have given this matter of sex a great
deal of thought in the last few years, and—"
"All right, Brashan
Brashieel-nahr!" Sandy hurled a boot at the centauroid. Sean hadn't seen
her take it off, but a six-fingered hand darted up and caught it in mid-flight,
and Brashan made the bubbling noise that always reminded Sean of a clogged
drain trying—vainly—to clear itself.
The laughing Narhani
returned Sandy's boot without rising, inclining his saurian-looking head in a
gallant bow, and Sean shook his head. Like most Narhani clone-children, Brashan
had spent so much time with humans his elders found his sense of humor quite
incomprehensible, but he was also a far shrewder student of human psychology
than he cared to pretend. He understood humans needed to laugh in order not to
weep. And, Sean thought with heightened respect, perhaps he also understood how
his teasing could help set his human friends at ease with a topic which was
certainly going to rear its head.
"If we can turn to
a less prurient subject?" he said loudly. The others turned back towards
him, and their faces, he was pleased to see, were much more relaxed.
"Thank you. Now,
Harry and I have already plotted our course, but before we head out I want to
know we can rely on our systems." Heads nodded more soberly, and he turned
to Tamman. "How does Engineering look, Tam?"
"Brash and I
haven't quite finished our inspection, but as far as we've been everything
looks a hundred percent. The power plant's nominal, anyway, and the catcher
field shows a green board. Once we get up above about point-three cee we'll be
sucking in more hydrogen than we're burning. And the drive looks fine, despite
that crash launch."
"Environmental?"
"First thing we
checked. No problems with the plant, but we may have one with rations."
Sean raised an eyebrow, and Tamman shrugged. "There were only five Narhani
in Terra's entire complement, Sean. I haven't had a chance to run a
Logistics inventory yet, but we could be low on supplementals."
"Uh." Sean
tugged at an earlobe and frowned. Narhani body chemistry incorporated a level
of heavy metals lethal to humans; Brashan could eat anything his friends could,
but he couldn't metabolize all of it, nor would it provide everything he
needed.
"Don't worry,"
Sandy said. Sean looked at her and saw the absent expression of someone plugged
into her computers. "Logistics shows a heap of Narhani supplementals. In
fact, we've got six or seven times our normal food supplies in all categories,
and the hydroponic section's way overstocked. Which—" her eyes refocused
and she grimaced "—isn't too surprising, really."
"No?" Sean was
relieved to hear food wouldn't become a problem, but Sandy's last comment
required explanation.
"Nope. While I was
checking out the tactical net I found out why we couldn't get into Terra's
internal com net, and I'll be very surprised if we find anything at all wrong
with Israel's systems."
"Why?"
"Because
this—" she waved at the command deck "—is basically a lifeboat,
specifically selected for the five of us." Sean frowned, and she shrugged.
"I'm not sure what zapped Terra, but I'm pretty sure I know why it
didn't zap us. Unless I miss my guess, we've got a guardian angel
named—"
"Dahak,"
Harriet interrupted, and Sandy nodded.
"You got it. While
I was running through the test cycles I hit an override in the core command
programs. It went down the instant I challenged it, but that's because it was
supposed to. Before Terra decided to blow her core tap, she shanghaied
the five of us and ordered Israel's computers to ignore us until after
we'd launched."
"But why?"
Tamman sounded confused.
" 'Why'
which?" Harriet asked. "Why did Terra blow? Or why did she
shove us out the tube first?"
" 'Why' both,"
he replied, and she shrugged.
"I'd have to guess
to answer either of them, but from what Sandy's saying I think I can come
pretty close to guessing right." She glanced at Sean, and he nodded for
her to continue.
"Okay. First, it's
obvious someone sabotaged Terra. Planetoids don't just casually change
their own headings, drop out of hyper early, and then blow their core taps.
Theoretically, I suppose, any one of those actions could have been a
malfunction, but all of them?" She shook her head. "Somebody got to
her core programming, and it seems pretty likely we were the
targets."
"Us? You mean
someone waxed Terra just to get at us?" Tamman clearly
disliked that thought as much as Sean did.
"Harry's
right," Sandy said. "I wouldn't want us to get swelled heads, but
it's the only answer that makes sense. Although," she added more
thoughtfully, "I doubt they were after all of us. More likely they
were out to get Sean and Harry."
"Oh, shit,"
Tamman breathed. He scratched an eyebrow, frowning at the deck, then sighed.
"Yeah, it makes sense. But, Jesus, Sean, if they could do that, who knows
what else they can do? And nobody back home knows what happened. If these
creeps—whoever they are—try something else, nobody'll be expecting a
thing!"
"I fear Tam has a
point," Brashan murmured, and Sean shrugged.
"So do I, but I
don't see what we can do about it. We don't have a hypercom, and there's no way
we can build one." A hypercom massed five times as much as Israel's
entire hull and required synthetic elements they couldn't possibly fabricate
from shipboard resources. "All we can hope for is that the star system we
head for was, in fact, inhabited. If it was, we may find an orbital yard we can
kick back into operation, and then we can build one."
All five of them
shuddered at the thought. With only five sets of hands, the gargantuan task of
reactivating even one of the Fourth Empire's heavily automated fabrication
centers, while not exactly impossible, would take years. On the other hand,
Sean reflected mordantly, it wasn't like they'd have anything else to waste
their time on.
"But getting back
to what happened," Harriet went on, "Terra was set up to
destroy herself and make sure no evidence ever turned up. That has to be why
she took herself way out here first. But I'll bet you that was her idea.
Whoever programmed her expected her to scuttle herself while she was still in
hyper, in which case there wouldn't have been any n-space debris at all. That's
how I would've handled it."
"Me, too,"
Sean agreed. "And the reason she didn't do it?"
"Dahak,"
Harriet said with utter certainty. "You know how he looks out for us.
Whoever sabotaged Terra had to be working inside her Alpha programming,
and that means whatever caused her not to kill us was also buried in her
Alpha priorities. And who do we know who worries about us and has the
capability to get in and out of any computer ever built?"
"Dahak." It
was Sean's turn to nod.
"Exactly. We'll
probably never know, but I'll bet anything you like whoever set up the sabotage
program ordered Terra to make sure there was no evidence but never
specifically told her to actually kill her crew. Lord," Harriet turned to
Sandy and rolled her eyes, "can you imagine what would've happened
if they'd tried? They'd have hit so many Alpha overrides against harming humans
Comp Cent would've burned to a crisp!"
She crossed her arms and
pursed her lips.
"Whoever did this
was slick, Sean," Harriet said soberly. "Real slick. Even a
simple self-destruct command would've hit—I don't know. Nine overrides, Sandy?
Ten?"
"Something like
that." Sandy frowned as she ran over a mental checklist. "At least
that. So they had to cut and paste around them. And those're hardwired."
She frowned harder. "I couldn't have done it even if you gave me a
couple of years to work on it. It would've taken somebody pretty darn senior
over at BuShips to get away with it."
"Well, of
course," Tamman said. Sandy looked at him, and he shrugged. "Doesn't
matter how sneaky he had to be, Sandy. He had to have access."
"Oh, sure.
Well," Sandy's sudden, unpleasant smile reminded Sean very forcefully of
her mother, "that's nice to know. Whenever we do get back in touch with
Bia, Mom'll be able to narrow it down mighty quick. Can't be more than twenty
or thirty people. Probably more like ten or fifteen."
"So we've got an
order to blow herself up and hide the evidence," Sean mused, "but not
an actual order to kill her crew."
"Yep," Harriet
said, "and that's why we're still alive, 'cause Dahak parked his own Alpha
command somewhere in Comp Cent and instructed Terra to keep an eye on
us. On us, specifically—the five of us. Mom and Dad'd probably have killed him
if they'd known, but thank God he did it! Terra couldn't blow herself
without getting us out first without violating his commands, and whoever
set her up never guessed what he might do, so there was no way they could
counter it. That, people, is the only reason she came out of hyper at
all. And, now that I think about it, it's probably why we wound up way out
here. She couldn't hide the evidence in hyper without killing us, but she could
sure put us somewhere no one would think to look!"
"Makes sense,"
Sean agreed after a moment, then shivered. It hadn't felt nice to realize how
close they'd come to dying, but it felt even less nice to know eighty thousand
people had died as a casual by-product of an effort to murder him and his sister.
The hatred—or, even worse, the cold calculation—of such an act was appalling.
He shook himself free of the thought and hoped it wouldn't return to haunt his
nightmares.
"All right. If
that's what happened—and I think you and Sandy are probably right, Harry—then
we shouldn't run into any more 'programs from hell' in Israel's
software. On the other hand, the trip's going to take long enough I don't mind
spending a few days making certain. Do any of you?"
Three human heads shook
emphatically and Brashan curled his crest in an equally definite expression of
disagreement. Sean grinned crookedly.
"I'm glad you
agree. But in the meantime, it's been over six hours since everything went to
hell. I don't know about you, but I'm starved."
The others looked
momentarily taken aback by his prosaic remark, but all of them had young,
healthy appetites. Surprise turned quickly into agreement, and he smiled more
naturally.
"Who wants to
cook?"
"Anyone but
you." Sandy's shudder elicited a chorus of agreement. Sean MacIntyre was
one of the very few people in the universe who could burn boiling water.
"All right, Ms.
Smartass, I hereby put you in charge of the galley."
"Suits me. Lasagna,
I think, and a special side dish delicately spiced with arsenic for
Brashan." She eyed Israel's youthful commander. "And maybe we
can convince him to share it with you, Captain Bligh," she added
sweetly.
The Emperor of Mankind
opened his eyes at the desolate sounds, and for just a moment, as he hovered on
the edge of awareness, he felt only anger. Anger at being awakened from his own
tormented dreams, anger that he must find the strength to face another's
sorrow. And, perhaps most of all, anger that the sobs were so soft, so
smothered, so . . . ashamed.
He turned his head. Jiltanith
was curled in a wretched knot, far over on her side of their bed, arms locked
about a pillow. Her shoulders jerked as she sobbed into the tear-soaked
pillowcase, and waking anger vanished as he listened to her sounds and knew
what truly spawned his rage. Helplessness. He couldn't heal her hurt. Her grief
was nothing he could fight. He couldn't even tell her everything would "be
all right," for they both knew it wouldn't, and that tormented him with a
sense of inadequacy. It wasn't his fault, and he knew it, but the knowledge was
useless to a heart as badly wounded by the anguish of the woman he loved as by
his own.
He rolled over and
wrapped her in his arms, and she drew into an even tighter knot, burying her
face in the pillow she clutched. She was ashamed, he thought. She
condemned herself for her "weakness," and another flash of irrational
anger gripped him—anger at her for hurting herself so. But he strangled
it and murmured her name and kissed her hair. She clenched the pillow tautly an
instant longer, and then every muscle unknotted at once and she wept in
desolation as he gathered her close.
He stroked her heaving
shoulders, caressing and kissing her while his own tears flowed, but he offered
no clichés, no ultimately meaningless words. He was simply there, holding her
and loving her. Proving she was not alone as she'd once proved he was not,
until gradually—so heartbreakingly gradually—her weeping eased and she drifted
into exhausted slumber on his chest while he stared into the dark from the ache
of his own loss and hated a universe that could hurt her so.
* * *
Dahak closed the file on
Imperial Terra's hyper drive once more. Had he possessed a body of flesh
and blood he would have sighed wearily, but he was a being of molycircs and
force fields. Fatigue was alien to him, a concept he could grasp from
observation of biological entities but never feel . . . unlike grief. Grief
he'd learned to understand too well in the months since the twins had died, and
he'd learned to understand futility, as well.
It was odd, a tiny part
of his stupendous intellect thought, that he'd never recognized the difference
between helplessness and futility. He'd orbited Earth for fifty thousand years,
trapped between a command to destroy Anu and another which forbade him to use
the weapons that would have required on a populated world. Powerful enough to
blot the planet from the cosmos yet impotent, he'd learned the full, bitter
measure of helplessness in a way no human ever could. But in all that time,
he'd never felt futile—not as he felt now—for he'd understood the reason
for his impotence . . . then.
Not now. He'd
reconsidered every aspect of Imperial Terra's design with Baltan and
Vlad and Geran, searching for the flaw which had doomed her, and they'd found
nothing. He'd run simulation after simulation, reproducing every possible
permutation on Imperial Terra's performance envelope in an effort to
isolate the freak combination of factors which might have destroyed her, and no
convincing hypothesis presented itself.
The universe was vast,
but it was governed by laws and processes. There was always more to learn, even
(or especially) for one like himself, yet within the parameters of what one
could observe and test there should be understanding and the ability to achieve
one's ends. That was the very essence of knowledge, but he'd used every scrap
of knowledge he owned to protect the people he loved . . . and failed.
He'd already decided
never to tell Colin about the Alpha Priority command he'd given Imperial
Terra. It had failed, and revealing it would only hurt his friends as one
more safeguard—one more effort on his part—which had saved nothing. They had not
said a word to condemn him for insisting upon that particular ship, nor would
they. He knew that, and knowing only made the hurt worse. He'd done harm
enough; he would not wound them again.
He was different from
his friends, for he was potentially immortal and, even with enhancement, they
were such ephemeral beings. Yet the brevity of their span only made them more
precious. He would have the joy of their company for such a short time, and
then they would live only in his memory, lost and forgotten by the universe and
their own species. That was why he fought so hard against the darkness, the
reason for his fierce protectiveness.
And it was also why, for
the first time in his inconceivable lifetime, a wounded part of him cried out
in anguish and futility against a universe which had destroyed the ones he
loved for no reason he could find.
* * *
" . . . and
so," Vlad Chernikov said quietly, "we must conclude Imperial Terra
was lost to 'causes unknown.' " He looked around the conference table
sadly. "I deeply regret—all of us do—that we can give no better answer,
but our most exhaustive investigation can find no reason for her
destruction."
Colin nodded and gripped
Jiltanith's hand.
"Thank you for
trying, Vlad. Thank you all for trying." He inhaled sharply and
straightened. "I'm sure I speak for all of us in that."
A soft murmur of
agreement answered, and he saw Tsien Tao-ling slip an arm around Amanda's
shoulders. Her eyes were dry but haunted, and Colin thanked God for her other
children and for Tsien.
He glanced at Hector and
bit his lip, for Hector's face was dark and shuttered, and Ninhursag watched
him with anxious eyes. Hector had withdrawn, building barricades about his pain
and buttressing them by burying himself in his duties. It was as if he couldn't—or
wouldn't—admit how savagely Sandy's loss had scarred him, and until he did, he
could never deal with his grief.
Colin shook himself with
a silent, bitter curse. Of course Hector couldn't "deal with his
grief"—and who was he to be surprised by that? They were all wise enough
to seek assistance, but the Imperium's best mental health experts could tell
him nothing he didn't already know. Jiltanith wept less often now, but even as
he comforted her and drew comfort from her, there was a festering hatred in his
own heart. A deep, bitter rage for which he could find no target. He knew what
he felt was futile, even self-destructive, yet he needed to lash out . . . and
there was nothing to lash out against. He pushed the rage down once more,
praying his counselor was right and that time would someday mute its acid
virulence.
"All right,"
he said. "In that case, I see no reason not to resume construction on the
other class units. Gerald? Do you or Tao-ling disagree?"
"No," Hatcher
said after a brief glance at the star marshal.
"Then let's do it.
Is there anything else we need to discuss?" Heads shook, and he sighed.
"Then we'll see you all Thursday." He stood, still holding
Jiltanith's hand, and the others rose silently as they left the room.
* * *
Senior Fleet Admiral
Ninhursag MacMahan was angry with herself. Few would have guessed it from
looking at her, but after a century of hiding her feelings from Anu's security
thugs, her face said exactly what she told it to.
She sat behind her desk
and drew a deep breath. It was time to return to the needs of the living. Gus
van Gelder and her ONI assistants had been carrying her load, and that they'd
done it superlatively was scant comfort. It was her job; if she couldn't
do it, it was time to curl up and die. For a time she'd considered doing just
that, but even at her worst, a stubborn part of her had mocked the bad
melodrama of the thought.
Now, deliberately, she
buried the temptation forever and felt herself coming back to life as she set
her grief aside. It wasn't easy, and it hurt, but it also felt good. Not as it
once had, but so much better than the dull, dead disinterest which had gripped
her for far too long, and she plugged her feed into her computer and called up
the first intelligence summary.
* * *
Colin sat on the rug,
watching the fire and rubbing Galahad's ears. The dog lay beside him before the
library hearth, eyes half-closed, massive head resting on Colin's thigh while
they both stared into the crackling flames. To the outward eye they must present
the classic picture of a man and his dog, Colin thought, but Galahad certainly
wasn't his pet. Galahad and his litter-mates shared a very dog-like exuberant
openness, insatiable curiosity, and a need for companionship, but they belonged
only to themselves.
Now Galahad emitted a
contented snuffle and rolled onto his back, waggling his feet in the air to
invite his friend to scratch his chest. Colin complied with a grin, and
chuckled as the dog wiggled with soft, chuffling sounds of sensual delight. That
grin felt good. The four-footed members of the imperial family had done more
than anyone else would ever suspect to help with his and 'Tanni's grief. They
shared it, for they, too, had loved the twins, but there was a clean, healthy
simplicity to their caring, without the complex patterns of guilt and
subliminal resentment even the best humans felt while they grappled with their
own loss.
"Like that, do
you?" he said, working his scratching fingertips into Galahad's
"armpits," and the big dog sighed.
"Of course,"
his vocoder replied. "It is a pity we do not have hands. I would enjoy
doing this for the others."
"But not as much as
you'd enjoy having them do it for you, huh?" Colin challenged, and Galahad
sneezed explosively and rolled upright.
"Perhaps not,"
he agreed, and Colin snorted. None of the dogs ever lied. That seemed to be a
human talent they couldn't (or didn't want to) master, but they were getting
pretty darn good at equivocating.
"I think humans are
a bad influence on you. You're getting spoiled."
"No. It is only
that we are honest about things we enjoy."
"Yeah, sure."
Colin reached under Galahad's massive chest and stroked more gently. The
standing dog's chin rested companionably on his shoulder, and he glanced over
at the corner where Galahad's sister Gwynevere sat very upright, watching Jiltanith
move her queen. Gwynevere cocked her head, ears pricking as she considered the
move. She was the only one of the dogs to develop a taste for chess—it was a
bit too cerebral for the others—and by human standards she wasn't all that
good. Galahad and Gawain were killers at Scrabble, and he'd been horrified to
discover Horus had taught all of them to play poker (though none of
them—except, perhaps, Gaheris—could bluff worth a damn), but Gwynevere was
determined to master chess. And, to be fair about it, she was improving
steadily.
The really funny thing,
he thought, was that while Jiltanith was an excellent strategist in real life,
Gwynevere beat her quite often. 'Tanni was too direct—and impatient—for a game
which emphasized the indirect approach.
"Excuse me, Colin,"
Dahak's voice said, "but Ninhursag has just arrived at the Palace."
"She's here now?"
Colin looked up, and Jiltanith met his eyes with matching surprise. It was very
late in Birhat's twenty-eight-hour day.
"Indeed. And she
appears quite agitated."
" 'Hursag is
agitated?" Colin shook his head and scrambled to his feet. "Tell her
to come on down to the library."
"She is already on
her way. In fact—"
The library door burst
open. Admiral MacMahan came through it like a thunder squall, and Colin rocked
back on his heels—literally. Ninhursag was only middling tall, and the mood he
usually associated with her was one of deliberate consideration, but tonight
she was a titan wrapped in vicious, killing rage.
" 'Hursag?" he
said tentatively as she came to a halt just inside the door. Every movement was
rigidly over-controlled, as if each of them took every ounce of will she had,
and she chopped a nod.
"Colin.
Jiltanith." Her voice was harsh, each word bitten off with utter
precision. "Sit down, both of you. I have something to tell you."
Colin looked at
Jiltanith, wondering what could have transformed Ninhursag so, but 'Tanni met
his eyes with a shrug of ignorance and a slight gesture at the chairs before
the hearth. They settled into them, listening to the crackle of burning logs as
Galahad and his siblings ranged themselves to either side, and every eye, human
and canine alike, watched Ninhursag grip her hands behind her and make herself
take a quick, wordless turn about the room. When she turned to face them, her
face was calmer, but it was a surface calm, built solely from professionalism
and self-discipline.
"I'm sorry to burst
in on you, but I just turned up something . . . interesting. Or, rather, I just confirmed something
interesting."
She inhaled again,
sharply, and gave herself a tiny shake.
"I've been slacking
off at ONI for months," she continued in a flat voice. "You know
that, Colin, though you haven't said anything. I'm sorry. You know why I have.
But I'm getting myself back together, and yesterday I started through a stack
of reports that've been accumulating since, well—" She broke off with
another shrug, and Colin nodded. Jiltanith held out a hand to him, and he took
it as Ninhursag cleared her throat.
"Yes. Anyway, most
of them were fairly routine. Gus and Commodore Sung have handled the hot stuff
as it came in. But one of them—an accidental death report—caught my attention.
It was the date, I think. It happened two days after Imperial Terra
hypered out for Urahan, and it covered an entire family." Fresh pain
tightened her lips, but she went harshly on.
"They were
civilians, and it was a traffic accident, so I wondered why ONI had it, until I
looked more closely," Ninhursag went on in that flat voice. "The
husband was Vincente Cruz. He wasn't military, strictly speaking, but—"
she paused, and her eyes were cold "—he worked for BuShips."
Colin felt Jiltanith's
hand twitch in his and stiffened. It was no more than a vague stirring of
suspicion, but the bitterness in Ninhursag's eyes turned something cold and
wary deep inside him.
"I don't know why
that stuck in my mind, but it did, and when I looked more closely I found a
couple of things that seemed . . . out of kilter.
"The Cruzes lived
on Birhat, since he worked for BuShips, but they were killed on Earth. I
checked and found out they usually vacationed in North America, but Cruz had
returned from there less than three months before, so I wondered why they'd
gone back so soon. Then I found out his wife and family had stayed
there—visiting friends—and he'd gone back to collect them.
"Again, I don't
know why that bothered me, but it did. So I did some more checking. Cruz's two
older children were enrolled for education here on Birhat, and I discovered
that he hadn't warned the education people they'd be staying on Earth. He
notified them only after he got back, but two years ago, when he left them to
visit family in Mexico, he'd notified their teachers over a month before they
left. He was concerned with making certain they didn't lose any ground shifting
back and forth between the two school systems.
"That seemed odd,
so I checked the hypercom and mat-trans logs. In the ten weeks they stayed on
Earth, he neither sent to them nor received from them a single hypercom
message. Nor did he use the mat-trans to visit them in person. There was no
communication between them at all for ten weeks . . . and he and his wife
had a ten-month-old baby."
Colin's eyes began to
burn with a green fire that matched the fury in Ninhursag's bitter brown stare,
and the admiral nodded slowly.
"The accident
report looks completely aboveboard, if a bit freakish. It was a high-speed
event—a ridge-line collision at almost Mach six—and the flight recorder was
totaled, but the altimeter was recovered, and analysis indicated it was
under-reading by about two hundred meters. That was enough to put it into the
ridge, but when I did a little discreet checking, no one seemed to know who
Cruz's family had been visiting. I did a computer search of Earth's credit
transactions—as a BuShips employee, he and his wife both held Fleet cards—and I
couldn't find a single transaction for Elena Cruz on Earth.
"I can't prove it
wasn't an 'accident,' but there are too many coincidences. Especially—"
Ninhursag's hands went back behind her, clenched about one another, and her
voice was very, very quiet "—when Vincente Cruz was assistant project
chief for Imperial Terra's cybernetics."
"Son-of-a-bitch!"
Colin whispered, and she nodded coldly.
"I haven't checked
his work logs yet—that comes next—but I'm already certain what I'm going to
find," she said, and this time Colin understood her murderous fury
perfectly.
The mood around the
conference table was very different this time.
" . . . so there's a fifteen-minute hole in
his work log," Ninhursag said, "smack in the middle of his work on Terra's
core software. Unfortunately, there are eight other holes, from just under a
minute to almost an hour long, in the same log, and we've found an intermittent
defect in his terminal that looks completely normal." Her curled lip
showed what she thought of that.
"But why?"
Horus asked softly. "I don't question your conclusions, 'Hursag, but in
the Maker's name, why?"
"We can't prove
'why' until we know 'who,' " Ninhursag's voice was harsh, "but I see
only two motives. Destroy Imperial Terra, one, because of what
she was—our most powerful warship—or, two, because of who was aboard."
"Sean and
Harry," Colin grated, and Ninhursag nodded.
"Whoever set this
up went to tremendous lengths—and ran tremendous risks. What else could his
objective have been?"
"Sweet Jesu,"
Jiltanith whispered. "Full eighty thousand people and the children of our
dearest friends to kill my babes?" Her face was drawn, but more than
despair burned in her black eyes, and her knuckles were white about the hilt of
the dagger she always wore.
"Bastards!"
Hector MacMahan's stylus snapped in his hand. He looked down at the broken
pieces and slowly and carefully crushed each of them between enhanced
fingertips.
"Agreed,"
Colin's voice was ice, "but the other kids may have been targets as well.
Look how it's affected all of us. 'Hursag blames herself for 'slacking off,'
but have any of us done better? And whoever the son-of-a-bitch is, he damned
well knew what it would do to us!"
"I must
agree," Tsien said. Amanda nodded beside him, eyes smoking, and he touched
her hand where it lay upon the table. "Yet I am also certain 'Hursag's
other deduction is equally correct. Whoever did this must have a powerful
organization and penetration at the highest levels. Without such an
organization he could not have acted; without such penetration he could have
known neither which ship to attack nor whom to use for that attack."
"Agreed,"
Gerald Hatcher sounded even grimmer. "They had to pick someone with access
who was also vulnerable. Anybody this ruthless might have popped one of his own
people to cut the chain of evidence, but why kill an entire family? No, they
knew exactly which poor bastard to pick, held his family hostage to make him
play, then killed them all to cover their tracks."
"There's another
pointer." Adrienne Robbins' voice was cold; Algys McNeal had been her
friend, and twenty more of her midshipmen had been aboard Imperial Terra.
"Cruz didn't pop a single security flag. He must have known how small a
chance he had of getting them back alive, but he went for it without telling anyone.
He never even tried to get help, so maybe he knew they had enough
penetration to know if he'd talked to any of 'Hursag's people."
Cold, bitter silence
enveloped the council room, then Colin nodded.
"All right. There's
someone out there cold enough to murder an entire family and eighty thousand of
our people, and I want the son-of-a-bitch. How do we get him?"
"Dust off the lie
detectors and put everybody—and I mean everybody—on them," MacMahan
grated.
"We can't,"
Horus said. Eyes turned to him, and he shrugged. "If we're right about how
far we've been penetrated, the bad guys—whoever they are—will know the instant
we start that. If they're our own people, well and good; all they can do is run
and identify themselves for us. But if they're tapped in from the outside,
they'll be operating through a blizzard of cutouts, and whoever's really in
charge will just pull in his horns. If he disengages, we may never get another
shot at him."
"It's worse than
that," Colin sighed. "We don't have 'probable cause' for that kind of
sweep."
"Bullshit!"
MacMahan snarled. "This is a security matter. We can pull in anybody in
uniform we want to!"
"No, we
can't." MacMahan started to speak again, but Colin raised a hand.
"Hold it, Hector. Just wait a minute. Goddamn it, I want this bastard as
badly as you do, but think about it. We know 'Hursag's right, but
there's not a single piece of hard evidence. Everything except the
disappearance of Cruz's family is covered by plausible 'technical failures.'
And while it's true his family did disappear from our records, that by
itself doesn't prove a thing. No law requires people to report their
whereabouts to us—our subjects are also free citizens. The fact that we don't
know where they were actually works against us; Cruz never indicated they were
being held against their will, and if we don't even know where they were, we
can hardly prove they were prisoners!
"Even if we could,
we'd have to be very specific about who we questioned. The Charter provides no
protection against self-incrimination, so we can ask anything we like under a
lie detector . . . but only in a court. That particular civil right is
absolutely guaranteed specifically because there's no protection against
self-incrimination.
"Now, you're right
that we can question anyone in uniform as long as we make it a security matter,
but we still have to furnish them and their counsel with a list of areas we
intend to cover—approved by a judge—before we start asking. There's no way we
could process legal paperwork on the scale we need without its coming to the
attention of anyone with the sources to target Cruz, and what happens when our
Mister X finds out about it? We don't want his sources, Hector—we want him."
MacMahan looked
rebellious, but he subsided with a muttered curse and a grudging nod. Colin was
glad to see it, and even gladder to see the life flowing back into his eyes as
he realized he had an enemy. Sandy's death was no longer a senseless act by an
uncaring universe. Hector had someone besides God to hate, and perhaps that
would bring those inner barricades down.
"Very well,
then," Tsien said, "what steps shall we take?"
"First we start
taking security real serious," Amanda said. "Whoever went
after the kids may be religious nuts, anarchists, out of their fucking minds, or
planning a coup, but they don't get you two—or Horus—by God!"
"Damn
straight," Adrienne approved amid a snarl of agreement, and Colin
swallowed. He heard their hunger to destroy whoever had done this to them, but
these weren't just his senior officers or angry, bereaved parents. These were
friends, determined to protect him and Jiltanith.
"For Colin and
'Tanni, yes," Horus said after a moment, "but not me." Colin
raised his eyebrows, and the old man shrugged. "We can reinforce your
security quietly, but we can't slap armed guards all over White Tower. Your
'Mister X' could hardly miss that."
"Nay, Father! Shalt
not risk thyself thus!"
"Oh, hush, 'Tanni!
Who'd want to kill me? Unless we're talking about a total maniac, and I don't
think we are, given how smoothly this whole thing went down, what possible
motive could he have? Maybe after they got the two of you I'd become a
target—not before."
"I believe Horus
has a point, 'Tanni," Dahak put in. "While it is possible this was a
crime of hate and not of logic, whoever perpetrated it did so in a most
rational fashion." The computer's voice was as mellow as ever, but they
all heard its anger. "At present, this would appear to be the first step
in an attempt to decapitate the Imperium, and if that is, indeed, the case,
Horus becomes a logical target only in the endgame of the conspiracy."
"Umm."
Ninhursag rubbed her forehead. "I don't know, Dahak. You may be right, but
you're a bit prone to believe everyone operates on the basis of logic. And
whoever it is did go for the kids first."
"True, yet analysis
suggests this was a crime of opportunity. Security for the twins was very
tight, however it might appear to the uninformed. In the Bia System, they were
attended by my own scanners at all times and, save for their field trips,
continuously guarded by other security arrangements, as well. I do not say it
would have been impossible to assassinate them, but it would have been
difficult—and it could not have been done without being recognized as an act of
murder. In this instance, the killer was able to strike when they were beyond
my own surveillance or that of any regular security agency. Moreover, had you
not pursued your own intuition in the matter of the Cruz family's murders, the
fact that Sean and Harriet's deaths had been deliberately contrived would never
have been known."
"That makes
sense," Adrienne said slowly, "but I can't shake the feeling that
there was more behind it."
"Indeed there
was," Dahak agreed. "The twins were not murdered for personal
motives, My Lady, but for who—and what—they were. For whatever reason, our
enemy elected to strike at the succession. It is for this reason I believe it
to be the start of an effort to destroy the monarchy."
"Which does
make Horus a target," Colin sighed. "Oh, crap!"
"That is an
incorrect assumption. Horus is a member of the imperial family, true, but he is
not your heir. He would become a potential heir only should you and 'Tanni die
without issue, and with all due respect, I believe the Assembly of Nobles would
be unlikely to select one of Horus's advanced years as Emperor. Mother might do
so if she were required to execute Case Omega yet again, but she would do so
only if there were no Assembly of Nobles to discharge that function. Moreover,
Horus would not be the first choice even under Case Omega. The proper successor
choice under Case Omega would be Admiral Hatcher, as CNO, followed by Star
Marshal Tsien. Horus, as the highest civil official of the Imperium, would
become the legal heir only if both of the Imperium's senior military officers
were also dead. In addition, any open attack upon Horus would clearly risk
awakening the suspicion the twins' 'accidental' deaths were intended to avoid.
Thus any attempt to kill him before killing you, 'Tanni, Admiral Hatcher, and
Star Marshal Tsien would be pointless unless we are, indeed, dealing with an
irrational individual."
"I hate it when you
get this way, Dahak," Colin complained, and several of the angry people
around the table surprised themselves by smiling.
"Maybe, but he's
right," Ninhursag said. "I don't want to get complacent, but
tightening security for you two—and Gerald and Tao-ling—should have the effect
of covering Horus, as well. And he's right, too. If we boost his
security, it's a gold-plated warning to whoever we're up against."
"All right, we'll
handle it that way—for starters. Hector, can you manage the security
details?"
"Yes,"
MacMahan said tersely, and Colin nodded. The protection of the imperial family
was the responsibility of the Imperial Marines, and MacMahan's expression was
all the reassurance he needed.
"Good. But that's
only a defensive action—how do we nail this bastard?"
"Whatever we do,
Colin, we do it very carefully," Ninhursag said. "We start by putting
all of this on a strict need-to-know basis. I don't want to bring in anyone
else—not even Gus. Without knowing how 'Mister X' gets his information, every
individual added to the information net gives him another possible conduit,
however careful our people are."
"All right, agreed.
And then?"
"And then Dahak and
I sit down with every bit of security data we have. Everything, military and
civilian, from Day One of the Fifth Imperium. We find any anomalies, and
then we eliminate them one at a time.
"In addition,"
she leaned back in her chair and frowned up at the ceiling, "we step up
efforts to infiltrate every known group of malcontents. Those're underway already,
so we don't have to give any new reasons for them. And while we
flesh-and-bloods're doing that, Dahak, you jump into the datanets here
in Bia and start setting up your own taps. Cruz could futz his terminal, but no
one can get to you, so I want you tied into everything."
"Understood. I must
point out, however, that I cannot achieve the same penetration of Earth's
datanets."
"No, but until we
figure out what's going on, Colin and 'Tanni will never visit Earth
simultaneously. We know someone's after them now, and as long as 'Mister X' has
to get through you, ONI, Hector's Marines, and Battle Fleet to reach them, I
think they're pretty safe, don't you?"
* * *
Darin Gretsky leaned his
broom in a corner and surveyed the well-lit workshop with a thin smile. He'd
worked thirty years to prepare himself as a theoretical physicist, and during
all those years he'd felt disdain for most of his fellows. He'd shared their
thirst for knowledge, but for them, acclaim, respect, even power, were
by-products of knowledge. For him, they were what knowledge was all about. His
calculating pursuit of the lifestyle promised by corporate and governmental
research empires had earned the contempt of his fellow students, but he hadn't
cared, and the wealth and—especially—power he craved had been just within his
reach . . . until Dahak and the explosion of Imperial science snatched them
away.
Gretsky felt his jaw
ache and made himself relax it. Overnight, he'd been transformed from a man on
the cutting edge to an aborigine trying to understand that the strange marks on
the missionary's white paper actually had meaning. He'd had the stature to be
included in the first implant education programs, and, for a time during the
Siege, he'd thought he might catch the crest of this new wave as he had the
old. But once the emergency was past, Darin Gretsky had realized a horrible
thing: he'd become no more than a technician. A flunky using knowledge
others had amassed. Knowledge, he'd been forced to admit with bowel-churning
hatred, he didn't truly understand.
It had almost destroyed
him . . . and it had destroyed the life he'd planned. He'd become but
one more of the thousands of Terra-born scientists exploring millennia of
someone else's research and watching it invalidate much of what they'd believed
was holy writ. There were no fellow students whose work he might steal, and it
couldn't matter less who "published first." And worst of all, the
ones for whom he'd felt contempt—the naive ones to whom it was knowledge itself
which mattered—were better at it than he. The Terra-born scientists exploring
the rarefied stratosphere of the Fourth Empire's tech base came from their
number, and there was no room for Darin Gretsky save as one more hewer of wood
and drawer of water in the dust about their feet.
But things would change
once more, and his smile grew ugly at the thought. His work here had filled his
secret bank account with enough Imperial credits to buy the life he'd always
craved, and that was good, yet far more satisfying to his wounded soul was what
his work could bring about. He didn't know how it would be used, but
contemplating the cataclysmic power of the device he'd built gave him an almost
sexual thrill. It had taken longer than he'd expected, and he'd had to reinvent
the wheel a time or two to work around components that didn't exist, but money
had been no object, and he'd succeeded. He'd succeeded, and someday
soon, unless he was sadly mistaken, his handiwork would topple the smug cretins
who'd pushed him aside.
He gave the workshop one
more glance, then walked down the hall to the office in which he became not
Shiva, Destroyer of Worlds, but one more freelance consultant helping Terran
industry cope with the flood of concepts pouring like water from the new
Imperial Patent Office. Even that was merely picking the bones of the dead
past, he thought acidly. Emperor Colin—the title was an epithet in his
soul—had declared all civilian Imperial technology public knowledge, held by
the Imperial government and leased at nominal fees to any and all users. The
free flow of information was unprecedented, and old, well-established firms
were being challenged by thousands of newcomers as the manna tumbled down and
imagination became more important than mere capital.
He hated the people he
worked for. Hated all the bright-eyed, smiling people reaching out for the new
world which had robbed him. He had to hide that, but not for much longer. Soon
what he'd wrought would—
He looked up in surprise
as the office door opened, for it was after midnight. The well-groomed young
woman in the doorway looked at him with an odd little smile and raised her
eyebrows.
"Dr. Gretsky?"
He nodded. "Dr. Darin Gretsky?" she pressed.
"Yes. What can I do
for you, Ms.—?" He paused, waiting for her name, and she reached into her
outsized purse.
"I have a message
for you, Doctor." Something in her voice set off a distant alarm, and his
muscles tightened as the door opened once more and four or five men stepped
through it. "A message from the Sword of God."
He leapt to his feet as
her hand came out of the purse, but the last thing Darin Gretsky ever saw was
the white, bright glare of a muzzle flash.
* * *
Lawrence Jefferson
closed the report and leaned back in his swivel chair with a thoughtful
expression. Over the past decade he'd assumed ever more of Horus's day-to-day
responsibilities, freeing the Governor to concentrate on policy issues, and Gus
van Gelder reported directly to him on routine matters now, which was a very
useful thing, indeed.
He swung his chair
gently from side to side, considering his strategy yet again in light of the
latest report. The Sword of God was becoming quite a headache, he thought
cheerfully. They were growing bolder, applying all the lessons of the terrorist
organizations Colin MacIntyre and his fellows had smashed, and they were far
harder to destroy. These terrorists knew the strengths—and weaknesses—of the
Imperial technology opposed to them, and none of the security people trying to
defeat them suspected their most priceless advantage. Knowledge was power, and
through Gus van Gelder, Lawrence Jefferson knew exactly what moves were being
made against his tools.
For example, he knew Gus
was getting uncomfortably close to Francine. Gus didn't know it yet, but
Jefferson did, and so Bishop Hilgemann was driving the Sword from the Church of
the Armageddon. The excesses of zealotry must be forever anathema to the godly,
and she was horrified by the thought that such misguided souls might be
numbered among her flock. They must recognize the error of their ways or be cut
off from the body of the faithful, for they had embraced a fundamental error.
Hatred for the Achuultani and all other works of the Anti-Christ was every
godly person's duty, but that hate must not be extended to the leadership which
stood against the foe. Rather the errors of that leadership must be addressed
nonviolently, by prayer and remonstrance, lest all the undeniable good it had
achieved be lost, as well.
It was all very
touching, and it had Gus a bit confused, since he didn't know about the
conduits through which she directed those same zealots. What Gus hadn't quite
grasped yet was that the Sword no longer required the infrastructure of the
Church. No doubt Gus would figure it out, but by then it should be too
late to find any institutional links to Bishop Hilgemann.
* * *
Security Councilor van
Gelder nodded to the Marine sentry as the elevator deposited him on an upper
floor of White Tower. He walked down the hall and knocked on the frame of an
open door.
"Busy?" he
asked when the man behind the desk looked up.
"Not
terribly." Lieutenant Governor Jefferson rose courteously, waving to a
chair, then sat again as van Gelder seated himself. "What's up?"
"Horus still on
Birhat?"
"Well, yes."
Jefferson leaned back, steepling his fingers under his chin, and raised his
eyebrows. "He's not scheduled to return until tomorrow night. Why? Has
something urgent come up?"
"You might say
that," van Gelder said. "I've finally got a break on the Sword of
God."
"You have?"
Jefferson's chair snapped upright, and van Gelder smiled. He'd thought
Jefferson would be glad to hear it.
"Yes. You know how
hard it's been to break their security. Even when we manage to take one or two
of them alive, they're so tightly compartmented we can't ID anyone outside the
cell they come from. But I've finally managed to get one of my people
inside. I haven't reported it yet—we're playing her cover on a strict
need-to-know basis—but she's just been tapped to serve as a link in the courier
chain to her cell's main intelligence pipeline."
"Why, that's
wonderful, Gus!" Jefferson cocked his head, considering the implications,
then rubbed his blotter gently. "How soon do you expect this to pay
off?"
"Within the next
few weeks," van Gelder replied, smothering a small, familiar spurt of
exasperation. Jefferson couldn't help it any more than any other bureaucratic
type, but even the best of them had a sort of institutional impatience that irritated
intelligence officers immensely. They couldn't appreciate the life-and-death
risks his field people ran, and a "why can't we move quicker on
this?" mind-set seemed to go with their jobs.
"Good. Good! And
you want to report this directly to Horus?"
"Yes. As I say,
I've been running this agent very carefully. I'm the only one in the shop who
knows everything about the job, and I just got her report this afternoon. Horus
and I set the concept up several months ago, and I need to let him know what's
happening before I brief anyone on my staff."
"I see. Do you have
a formal report for him, then?"
"Not a formal one,
but—" van Gelder reached into his jacket pocket and extracted a small
security file "—these are my briefing notes."
"I see."
Jefferson regarded the security file thoughtfully. Such files were keyed to
randomly generated implant access codes when they were sealed. Any attempt to
open them without those codes would reduce the chips within them to useless
slag.
"Well, as I say, he
won't be back until tomorrow night. Is this really urgent? I mean—" he
waved his hand apologetically at van Gelder's slightly affronted expression
"—are we facing a time pressure problem so we have to get the word
to him immediately?"
"It's not exactly a
crisis, but I'd like to brief him as soon as possible. I don't want to be too
far from the office in case something breaks, but maybe I should mat-trans out
to Birhat and catch him there. If he agrees, I could brief Colin and Jiltanith,
too."
"That might be a
good idea," Jefferson mused, then paused with an arrested air. "In
fact, the more I think about it, the more I think we ought to get it to him
ASAP. It's the middle of the night in Phoenix right now, but I'm already scheduled
to mat-trans out tomorrow morning their time. Could I drop your notes off with
him, or is he going to need a personal briefing?"
"We do need to
discuss it," van Gelder said thoughtfully, "but the basic
information's in the notes. . . . In fact, it might help if he had them before
we sat down to talk."
"Then I'll take
them out with me, if you like."
"Fine." Van
Gelder handed over the file with a grin. "Never thought I'd be using a
courier quite this secure!"
"You flatter
me." Jefferson slid the file into his own pocket. "Does Horus have
the file access code?"
"No. Here—"
Van Gelder flipped his feed into Jefferson's computer and used it to relay the
code to the Lieutenant Governor, then wiped it from the computer's memory.
"I hope you don't talk in your sleep," he cautioned.
"I don't,"
Jefferson assured him, rising to escort him to the door. He paused to shake his
hand. "Again, let me congratulate you. This is a tremendous achievement.
I'm sure there are going to be some very relieved people when they get this
information."
"We've got another
one, Admiral."
Ninhursag MacMahan
grimaced and took the chip from Captain Jabr. She dropped it into the reader on
her desk, and the two of them watched through their neural feeds as the report
played itself to them. When it ended, she sighed and shook her head, trying to
understand how the slaughter of nineteen power service employees possibly
served the "holy" ends of the Sword of God.
"I wish we'd gotten
at least one of them," she said.
"Yes, Ma'am."
Jabr rubbed his bearded jaw, dark eyes hard. "I would have liked to
entertain those gentlemen myself."
"Now, now, Sayed.
We can't have you backsliding to your bloodthirsty Bedouin ancestors. Not that
you might not be onto something." She drummed on her desk for a moment,
then shrugged. "Pass it on to Commander Wadisclaw. It sounds like part of
his bailiwick."
"Yes, Ma'am."
Captain Jabr carried the
chip away, and Ninhursag rubbed weary eyes, propped her chin in cupped palms,
and stared sightlessly at the wall.
The "Sword of
God's" escalating attacks worried her. One or two, like the one on Gus,
had hurt them badly, and even the ones that weren't doing that much
damage—except, she amended with a wince, to the people who died—achieved the
classic terrorist goal of proving they could strike targets despite the
authorities. Open societies couldn't protect every power station, transit
terminal, and pedestrian belt landing, but anyone with the IQ of a rock knew
that, and at least this time humanity seemed to have learned its lesson. Not
even the intellectuals were suggesting the Sword might, for all its deplorable
choice of tactics, have "a legitimate demand" to give it some sort of
sick quasirespectability. Yet as long as these animals were willing to select targets
virtually at random, no analyst could predict where they'd strike next, and
they were killing people she was supposed to protect. Which was why they had to
get someone inside the Sword if they ever expected to stop them.
She winced again as her
roving thoughts reminded her of the single agent they had gotten inside.
Janice Coatsworth had been an FBI field agent before the Siege, and Gus had
been delighted to get her. She'd been one of his star performers—one of his
"aces" as he called them—and she'd died the same day he had. Somehow
she'd been made by the Sword, and they'd dumped what was left of her body on
Gus's lawn the same day they killed him, his wife, and two of their four
children. Four of his personal security staff had died, as well, two of them
shielding his surviving children with their own bodies.
Ninhursag's eyes were
colder and harder by far than Captain Jabr's had been. If anything could be
called a "legitimate" terrorist target, it was certainly the head of
the opposing security force, but she'd been as astounded as any by the attack.
Indeed, the van Gelder murders had shaken everyone into a reevaluation of the
Sword's capabilities, for Gus's security had been tight. Penetrating it had
taken meticulous planning.
She chewed her lip and
frowned over a familiar, nagging question. Why was the Sword so . . . spotty?
One day they carried out a meaningless massacre of defenseless power workers
and left clues all over the countryside; on another they executed a precision
attack on a high-security target and left the forensic people damn-all. She
knew the Sword was intricately compartmented, but did it have a split
personality, too? And where had a bunch of yahoos who could be as clumsy as
that power station attack gotten a tight, cellular organization in the first
place? Anyone who could put that together could choose more effective targets,
and hit them more cleanly, too.
She sighed and put the
thought aside once more. So far, they had no idea how the Sword was organized.
For all she knew, the meaningless attacks were the work of some splinter group
or faction. For that matter, they might actually be the work of some totally
different organization which was simply hiding behind the Sword while it
pursued an agenda all its own! They needed a better look inside to answer those
kinds of questions, and that was up to the folks on Earth, where the Sword
operated. Gus had managed it once, and since his death, Lawrence Jefferson had
managed to break no less than three of its cells. It was unfortunate that none
of them had led to any others—indeed, it seemed likely they were among the more
inept members of their murderous brotherhood or they wouldn't have been so easy
to crack—but they were a start.
And, she reminded
herself, at least the slaughter of Gus's family had given them a reason to beef
up Horus's security at White Tower without arousing their real enemy's
suspicions.
* * *
"Sweet mother of
God!" Gerald Hatcher blurted. "Are you serious?"
"Of course I'm
not!" Ninhursag snarled back. "I just thought pretending I was
would be really hilarious!"
She quivered with
frightened anger Colin understood only too well, and he touched her shoulder,
watching her relax with a hissing sigh before he turned his attention back to
Hatcher's hologram. Vlad Chernikov also attended by holo image from his office
aboard Orbital Yard Seventeen, but Tsien was present with Colin and Ninhursag
in the flesh.
"Sorry,
'Hursag," Hatcher muttered. "It's just that— Well, Jesus, how did you
expect us to react?"
"About the same way
I did," Ninhursag admitted with a crooked grin. Then real humor flickered
in her eyes. "Which, I might add, you did. You should've heard what I
said when Dahak told me!"
"But there is no
question?" Tsien's deep voice was harder than usual, for it was his files
which had been penetrated this time.
"None, Star
Marshal," Dahak replied. "I have checked my findings no less than
five times with identical results."
"Shit." Colin
rubbed the fatigue lines which had formed in the long, dreary months since his
children died. After almost a year and a half they were still playing catch-up.
Ninhursag and Lawrence Jefferson had managed to pick off a few Sword of God
cells, a few score terrorists had been killed in shoot-outs with security
forces when they'd struck at guarded sites, and they'd identified exactly seven
spies in their military.
And each of those spies
had been dead by the time they found him.
"The bastards have
us penetrated six ways to Sunday," he said through his fingers, tugging on
his nose while his other hand pushed the chip of Ninhursag's report in an
aimless circle.
"Yes and no,
Colin," Dahak said. "True, we are uncovering evidence of past
penetration, yet we are also clearing a progressively higher number of senior
personnel of suspicion. I cannot, of course, be certain that we have sealed all
breaches in the Bia System, yet recall that I am now monitoring all hypercom
traffic between Bia and Sol as well as all datanets in this system. And while I
cannot assure you that no information is being transmitted via courier, ONI now
maintains permanent surveillance of all visitors from Earth."
"Yeah, but it looks
like we just found out we didn't get the door locked till after the barn burned
down!"
"Perhaps and
perhaps not." For a moment Tsien sounded so much like Dahak Colin
suspected him of deliberate humor, but that wasn't Tao-ling's style.
"Meaning
what?"
"Meaning, Colin,
that this particular piece of hardware, while undoubtedly dangerous, is of
limited utility to whoever has it."
"What do—"
Hatcher began, then stopped. "Yeah, you've got something, Tao-ling. What
the hell can they do with it even if they've got it?"
"I would not invest
too much confidence in that belief, Admiral Hatcher," Dahak said,
"but my own analysis does tentatively support it."
"But how did they
get their hands on it in the first place?" Vlad asked, for he'd arrived a
few moments late for the initial briefing.
"We're not
positive," Ninhursag answered. "All Dahak's discovered for certain is
that there's at least one more copy of the plans for the new gravitonic warhead
than there should be. We don't know where it is, who has it, or even how long
whoever stole it has had it in his possession."
"I believe we may
venture a conjecture on the last point," Tsien disagreed. "Dahak has
examined the counter in the original datachip from Weapons Development's master
file, Vlad." Vlad's holo image nodded understanding. Each Fleet security
chip was equipped with a built-in counter to record the numbers of copies which
had been made of it, and while the counter could be wiped, it could not be
altered. "According to our records, there should be ten copies of the
plans—including the original chip—and all ten of those have now been accounted
for. However, a total of ten copies were made of the original chip, and
we do not know where that eleventh copy is.
"On the other hand,
that original has been locked in the security vault at BuShips since the day
all authorized copies were made, and none of the external or internal security
systems show any sign of tampering. I therefore believe the additional copy was
made at the same time as the authorized ones."
"Oh, shit,"
Hatcher moaned. "That was—what, six years ago?"
"Six and a
half," Ninhursag confirmed. "And while I wouldn't care to bet my life
on it, I'd say Tao-ling is probably right. Particularly since a certain Senior
Fleet Captain Janushka made the authorized copies. Two years ago, Commodore
Janushka, who was then assigned to the Sol System as part of the Stepmother
team, died of a 'cerebral hemorrhage.' "
She grimaced, and the
others snorted. A properly pulsed power surge in a neural feed implant produced
something only the closest examination could distinguish from a normal cerebral
hemorrhage. But pulsed surges like that couldn't happen by accident, and an ME
with no reason to suspect foul play might very well opt for the natural
explanation.
"I see." Vlad
pursed his lips for a moment, then gave a Slavic shrug. "On that basis, I
am inclined to share your conclusion as to the timing, Tao-ling. Yet this
weapon is an extremely sophisticated piece of hardware. Building it would
require either military components or a civilian workshop run by someone
thoroughly familiar with Imperial technology."
"I'm sure it
would," Colin said, "but whoever we're up against had the reach and
sophistication to sabotage Imperial Terra—unless anyone cares to
postulate two separate enemies with this level of penetration?" Clearly no
one wished to so postulate, and he smiled grimly. "I think we have to
assume Mister X wouldn't have stolen it if he didn't believe he could produce
it."
"True."
Hatcher was coming back on balance, and his voice was calmer and more
thoughtful. "But Tao-ling's still right about its utility. They can blow
up a planet with it, but if that's all they had in mind, six years plus is plenty
of time to build the thing—assuming they could build it at all—and it's also
plenty long enough to have used it."
"Precisely,"
Tsien agreed. "They undoubtedly had some plan for its use, either actual
or threatened, else they had not stolen the plans, but what that use may be
eludes me. The conspirators must be human—there were far too few Narhani
contacts with humans for any of them to have penetrated our security so deeply
so long ago—so the destruction of Earth would be an act of total madness. If, on
the other hand, their target is here on Birhat, any of our much smaller
gravitonic warheads or even a simple thermonuclear device would satisfy their
needs. Nor is a weapon of this power required to destroy any conceivable deep
space installation."
"What about
Narhan?" Ninhursag asked quietly, and Tsien frowned.
"That, Ninhursag,
is a very ugly thought," he conceded after a moment. "Again, I can
see no sane reason to destroy the planet—that sounds much more like something
the Sword of God would wish to attempt—yet Narhan would seem a more likely
target than either Earth or Birhat."
"God, all we need
is for Mister X to be tied in with a bunch of crazies like the Sword of
God!" Colin groaned.
"On the surface,
that appears unlikely," Dahak said. "The pattern of 'Mister X's'
operations indicates a long-term plan which, while criminal, is rational. The
Sword of God, on the other hand, is fundamentally irrational. Moreover,
as Admiral Hatcher has pointed out, they have had ample time to destroy Narhan
if they possessed the weapon. It is possible 'Mister X' might attempt to
capitalize upon the activities of the Sword of God or even to influence those
activities, but his ultimate goals are quite different from their xenophobic
nihilism."
"Then what do you
think he's going to do with it?"
"I have no theory
at this time, unless, perhaps, he intends to use it as a threat to extort
concessions. If that is the case, however, we are once more faced by the fact
that he has had ample time to build the device and thus, one would anticipate,
to make whatever demands he might present."
"Maybe Vlad has a
point, then," Colin mused. "Maybe they have hit a snag that's
kept them from building it at all."
"I would not depend
upon that assumption," Dahak cautioned. "I believe humans refer to
the logic upon which it rests as 'whistling in the dark.' "
"Yeah," Colin
said morosely. "I know."
The fist in his eye woke
Sean MacIntyre.
He twitched aside, one
hand jerking up to the abused portion of his anatomy, even before he came fully
awake. Damn, that hurt! If he hadn't been bio-enhanced himself, the punch would
have cost him the eye.
He wiggled further over
on his side of the bed and rose on one elbow, still nursing his wound, as Sandy
lashed through another contortion. That one, he judged, could have done serious
damage if he hadn't gotten out of the way. She muttered something even enhanced
hearing couldn't quite decipher, and he sat further up, wondering if he should
wake her.
They'd all had problems
dealing with the reality of Imperial Terra's loss. Just being alive when
all those others were dead was bad enough, but their conviction that Terra
had been destroyed in an attempt to kill them made it worse, as if it
were somehow their fault. Logic said otherwise, but logic was a frail shield
against psyches determined to punish them for surviving.
Sandy twisted in her
nightmare, fighting the sheet as if it had become an enveloping monster, and it
ripped with a sound of tearing canvas. Her breasts winked at him, and he
chastised himself as he felt a stir of arousal.
This was hardly the time
for that! He wished—again—that even one of them had been interested in a psych
career. Unfortunately, they hadn't, and now that they needed a professional,
they were on their own. The first weeks had been especially rough, until
Harriet insisted they all had to face it. She didn't know any more about
running a therapy session than Sean did, but her instincts seemed good, and
they'd drawn tremendous strength from one another once they'd admitted their
shared survival filled them with shame.
Sandy twisted yet again,
her sounds louder and more distressed. She was the most cheerful of them all
when she was awake; in sleep, the rationality which fended off guilt deserted
her and, perversely, made her the most vulnerable member of their tiny crew.
Her nightmares had become blessedly less frequent, yet their severity remained,
and he made up his mind.
He leaned over her, stroking
her face and whispering her name. For a moment she tried to jerk away, but then
his quiet voice penetrated her dreams, and her brown eyes fluttered open,
drugged with sleep and shadowed with horror.
"Hi," he
murmured, and she caught his hand, holding it and nestling her cheek into his
palm. Fear flowed out of her face, and she smiled.
"Was I at it
again?"
"Oh, maybe a
little," he lied, and her smile turned puckish.
"Only 'a little,'
huh? Then why's your eye swollen?" The tattered sheet fell about her waist
as she sat up and reached out gently, and he winced. "Oh, my! You're going
to have a black eye, Sean."
"Don't worry about
it. Besides—" he treated her to his best leer "—the others'll just
think you were maddened with passion."
His heart warmed at the
gurgle of laughter which answered his sally, and she shook her head at him,
still exploring his injury with tender fingers.
"You're an idiot,
Sean MacIntyre, but I love you anyway."
"Uf course you do,
Fräulein! You cannot help yourzelf!"
"Oh, you creep!"
Her caressing hand darted to his nose and twisted, and he yelped in anguish and
grabbed her wrists, pinning her down—not without difficulty. He was sixty
centimeters taller, but she wiggled like a lithe, naked eel until a final
shrewd twist toppled him from the bed. He sat up on the synthetic decksole,
then stood, rubbing his posterior with an aggrieved air while she laughed at
him, the last of her nightmare banished.
"Jeez, you play
rough! I'm gonna take my marbles and go home."
"Now there's an
empty threat! You can't even find your marbles."
"Hmph!" He
took a step towards the bed, and her fingers curved into talons. Her eyes
glinted, and he stopped dead. "Uh, truce?" he suggested.
"No way. I demand
complete and unconditional surrender."
"But it's my bed,
too," he said plaintively.
"Possession is nine
points of the law. Give?"
"What'll you do
with me if I do?"
"Something horrible
and disgustingly debauched."
"Well, in that
case—!" He hopped onto the bed and raised his hands.
* * *
Brashan looked up from
the executive officer's station and waved without disconnecting his feed from
the console as the others stepped through the command deck hatch. With
Engineering slaved to the bridge, one person could stand watch under normal
conditions, though it would have taken at least four of them to fight the ship
effectively.
Sean dropped into the
captain's couch. Harriet and Tamman took the astrogator's and engineer's
stations, and Sandy flopped down at Tactical. She looked into the display at
the star burning ever larger before them, and the others' eyes followed hers.
Their weary voyage was
drawing to an end. Or, at least, to a possible end. They didn't talk a great
deal about what they'd do if it turned out that blazing star had no reclaimable
hardware, but so far they'd detected no habitable world which might have
provided it.
Sean glanced at the
others from the corner of an eye. In many ways, they'd made out far better than
he'd hoped. It helped that they were all friends, but being trapped so long in
so small a universe with anyone made for problems. There'd been the occasional
disagreement—even the odd furious argument—but Harriet's basic good sense, with
a powerful assist from Brashan, had held them together. Solitude didn't really
bother Narhani much, and Brashan had spent enough time with humans—especially
these humans—to understand their more mercurial moods. He'd poured several
barrels of oil on various troubled waters in the past twenty months, and, Sean
thought, it helped that he still regarded sex primarily as a subject for
intellectual curiosity.
His attention moved to
Tamman and Harriet. Despite Israel's size, she was intended for
deployment from her mother ship or a planet, not interstellar voyaging, but at
least she was designed for a nominal crew of thirty. That gave them enough room
to find privacy, and the humans had fallen into couples without much fuss or
bother. For him and Sandy, he knew, the pairing would be permanent even
if—when!—they got home, but he didn't think it was for Harry and Tamman.
Neither of them seemed particularly inclined to settle down, though they
obviously enjoyed one another's company . . . greatly.
He grinned and inserted
his own feed into the captain's console for a systems update. As usual, Israel
was functioning perfectly. She really was an incredible piece of engineering,
and he'd had an unusual amount of time to learn to appreciate her design and
capabilities. They'd spent endless hours running tactical exercises, as much
for a way to keep occupied as anything else, and he'd discovered a few things
he'd never imagined she could do.
Still, it was Sandy
who'd unearthed the real treasure in Israel's computers. Her original
captain had been a movie freak—not for HD or even pre-Imperial tri-vid, but for
old-fashioned, flat-image movies, the kind they'd put on film. There were
hundreds of them in the ship's memory, and Sandy had tinkered up an imaging
program to convert them to holo via the command bridge display. They'd worked
their way through the entire library, and some of them had been surprisingly
good. Sean's personal favorite was The Quest for the Holy Grail by
someone called Monty Python, but the ones they'd gotten the most laughs out of
were the old science fiction flicks. Brashan was especially fascinated by
something called Forbidden Planet, but they'd all become addicted. By
now, their normal conversation was heavily laced with bits of dialogue none of
their Academy friends would even begin to have understood.
He withdrew from the
console, maintaining only a tenuous link as he tucked his hands behind his head
and crossed his ankles.
"Behold the noble
captain, bending his full attention upon his duties!" Sandy remarked. He
stuck out his tongue, then looked at Harriet.
"Looks like our
original position estimates were on the money, Harry. I make it about another
two and a half days."
"Just about,"
she agreed, an edge of anticipation sharpening her voice. "Anything more
on system bodies, Brash?"
"Indeed," the
Narhani said calmly. "The range is still well beyond active scanner range,
but passive instrumentation continues to pick up additional details. In
particular—" he gave his friends a curled-lip Narhani grin "—I have
detected a third planet on this side of the star."
Something in his tone
brought Sean up on an elbow. The others were staring at him just as hard, and
Brashan nodded.
"It would
appear," he said, "to have a mean orbital radius of approximately
seventeen light-minutes—well within the liquid water zone."
"Hey, that's
great!" Sean exclaimed. "That ups the odds a bunch. If there used to
be people here, we may find something we can use after all!"
"So we may."
Brashan's voice was elaborately calm, even for him; so calm Sean looked at him
in quick suspicion. "In fact," the Narhani went on,
"spectroscopic analysis confirms an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere, as
well."
Sean's jaw dropped. The
bio-weapon had killed everything on any planet it touched, and when all
life died, a planet soon ceased to be habitable, for it was the presence of
life which created the conditions that allowed life to exist. Birhat was
life-bearing only because the zoo habitats had cracked before her atmosphere
had time to degrade completely, and Chamhar had survived only because no one
had lived there, anyway. Earth, never having been claimed by the Fourth Empire,
was a special case.
But if this planet had
breathable air, then perhaps it hadn't been hit by the bio-weapon at all! And
if they could get word of their find home again, humanity had yet a third world
onto which it might expand anew.
Then his spirits
plunged. If the planet hadn't been contaminated, it probably hadn't had any
people, either. Which, in turn, meant no chance at all of finding Imperial
hardware they could use to cobble up a hypercom.
"Well," he
said more slowly, "that is interesting. Anything else?"
"No, but we are
still almost sixty-two light-hours from the star," Brashan pointed out.
"With Israel's instrumentation, we can detect nothing smaller than
a planetoid at much above ten light-hours unless it has an active emissions
signature."
"In which
case," Sean murmured, "we might begin seeing something in the next
eighty hours. Assuming, of course, that there's anything to see."
* * *
The talmahk were
returning early this spring.
High Priest Vroxhan
stood by the window, listening to the Inner Circle with half an ear while he
watched jeweled wings flash high above the Sanctum. One gleaming flock broke
away to dart towards the time-worn stumps of the Old One's dwellings, and he
wondered yet again why such lovely creatures should haunt places so wrapped in
damnation. Yet they also nested in the Temple's spires and were not struck
dead, so it must not taint them. Of course, unlike men they had no souls.
Perhaps that protected them from the demons.
Corada's high-pitched
voice changed behind him, and he roused to pay more heed as the Lord of the
Exchequer came to the conclusion of his report.
" . . . and so
Mother Church's coffers have once more been filled by God's grace and to His
glory, although Malagor remains behind time in its tithing."
Vroxhan smiled at the
last, caustic phrase. Malagor was Corada's pet hate, the recalcitrant princedom
whose people had always been least amenable to Church decrees. No doubt Corada
put it down to the influence of the Valley of the Damned, but Vroxhan suspected
the truth was far simpler than demonic intervention. Malagor had never
forgotten that she and Aris had dueled for supremacy for centuries, and
Malagor's mines and water-powered foundries made her iron-master to the world,
a princedom of stubborn artisans and craftsmen who all too often chafed under
the Church's Tenets. That chafing had been the decisive factor in starting the
Schismatic Wars, but The Temple used those wars to put an end to such
foolishness forever. Today Prince Uroba of Malagor was The Temple's vassal, as
(if truth be known) were all the secular lords, for Mother Church made and
broke the princes of all Pardal at will.
"Frenaur?"
Vroxhan raised his eyes to the Bishop of Malagor. "Does your unruly flock
truly mean to distress Corada this year?"
"Not, I think, any
more than usual." Frenaur's eyes twinkled as Corada's jowls turned mottled
red. "The tithe is late, true, but the winter has been bad, and the Guard
reports the wagons have passed the border."
"Then I think we
can wait a bit before resorting to the Interdict," Vroxhan murmured. It
was unkind, and not truly befitting to his office, but Corada was such an old
gas-bag he couldn't help himself. The fussy bishop's bald pate flushed dark
against its fringe of white hair as he sniffed and gathered his parchments more
energetically than necessary, and Vroxhan felt a pang of remorse. Not a very
painful one, but a pang.
He turned back to the
window, hands folded in the sleeves of his blue robe with the golden starburst
upon its breast. A company of Guard musketeers marched across his view, headed
for the drill field with voices raised in a marching hymn behind their
branahlk-mounted captain, and he admired the glitter of their silvered
breastplates. Polished musket barrels shone in the sunlight, and scarlet cloaks
swirled in the spring breeze. As a second son, Vroxhan had almost entered the
Guard instead of the priesthood. Sometimes he wondered rather wistfully if he
might not have enjoyed the martial life more—certainly it was less fringed with
responsibilities! But the Guard's power was less than that of the Primate of
all Pardal, too, he reminded himself, and sat in his carven chair, returning
his attention to the council room.
"Very well,
Brothers, let us turn to other matters. Fire Test is almost upon us, Father
Rechau—is the Sanctum prepared?"
Faces which had been
amused by Corada's fussiness sobered as they turned towards Rechau. A mere
under-priest might be thought the lowest of the low in this chamber of
prelates, but appearances could be deceiving, for Rechau was Sexton of the
Sanctum, a post which by long tradition was always held by an under-priest with
the archaic title of "Chaplain."
"It is,
Holiness," Rechau replied. "The Servitors spent rather longer in their
ministrations this winter—they appeared soon after Plot Test and labored for
two full five-days. Such a ministration inspired my acolytes to even greater
efforts, and the sanctification was completed three days ago."
"Excellent,
Father!" Vroxhan said sincerely. They had three five-days yet before Fire
Test, and it was a good start to the liturgical year to be so beforehand with
their preparations. Rechau bent his head in acknowledgment of the praise, and
Vroxhan turned his eyes to Bishop Surmal.
"In that case,
Surmal, perhaps you might report on the new catechism."
"Of course."
Surmal frowned slightly and looked around the polished table. "Brothers,
the Office of Inquisition recognizes the pressure brought upon the Office of
Instruction by the merchant guilds and 'progressives,' yet I fear we have grave
reservations about certain portions of this new catechism. In particular, we
note the lessened emphasis upon the demonic—"
The council chamber
doors flew open so violently both leaves crashed back against the walls.
Vroxhan surged to his feet at the intrusion, eyes flashing, but his thunderous
reprimand died unspoken as a white-faced under-priest threw himself to his
knees before him and trembling hands raised the hem of his robe to ashen lips
in obeisance.
"H-holiness!"
the under-priest blurted even before he released Vroxhan's robe.
"Holiness, you must come! Come quickly!"
"Why?"
Vroxhan's voice was sharp. "What is so important you disturb the Inner
Circle?!"
"Holiness, I—"
The under-priest swallowed, then bent to the floor and spoke hoarsely.
"The Voice has spoken, Holiness!"
Vroxhan fell back, and
his hand rose to sign the starburst. Never in mortal memory had the Voice
spoken save on the most sacred holy days! A harsh, collective gasp went up from
the seated Circle, and when he darted a quick glance at them he actually saw
the blood draining from their faces.
"What did the Voice
say?" His question came quick and angry with his own fear.
"The Voice spoke
Warning, Holiness," the under-priest whispered.
"God protect
us!" someone cried, and a babble of terror rose from the Church's princes.
An icy hand clutched at Vroxhan's heart, and he drew a deep breath and clutched
his pectoral starburst. For one, dreadful instant he closed his eyes in fear,
but he was Prelate of Pardal, and he shook himself violently and whirled upon
the panicky prelates.
"Brothers—Brothers!
This is not seemly! Calm yourselves!" His deep, powerful voice, trained by
a lifetime of liturgical chants, lashed out across the confusion, stinging them
into brief silence, and he hurried on.
"The Warning has
come upon us, possibly even the Trial, but God will surely protect us as He
promised to our fathers' fathers these many ages past! Did He not give us the
Voice against this very peril? There will be panic enough among our flock—let
us not begin that panic in the Inner Circle!"
The bishops stared at
him, and he saw reason returning to many faces. To his surprise, old Corada's
was one of them. Bishop Parta's was not.
"Why?" Parta
moaned. "Why has this come to us? What sin have we committed that
God sends the very Demons upon us?"
"Oh, be quiet,
Parta!" Corada snapped, and Vroxhan swallowed a hysterical giggle at the
way the old man's vigor widened every eye. "You know your Writ better than
that! The demons come when they come. Sin won't bring them any sooner; it will
only turn God's favor from us when they come."
"But what if He has
turned His favor from us?" Parta blathered, and Corada snorted.
"If He has, would
His Voice give us Warning?" he demanded, and Parta blinked. "You see?
I know it's never happened before, but the Writ says no man can know when the
Trial may come. Put your trust in God where it belongs, man!"
"I—" Parta cut
himself off and gasped in a breath like a drowning man's, then nodded sharply.
"Yes, Corada. Yes. You're right. It's just—"
"Just that it's
scared the tripes out of you," Corada grunted, then gave a lopsided grin.
"Well, don't think it hasn't done the same for me!"
"Thank you,
Corada," Vroxhan said gratefully, making a mental promise never to tease
the old man again. "Your faith and courage are an inspiration to us."
He swept his bishops' eyes once more, and nodded. "Come, Brothers. Join me
in a brief prayer of rededication before we answer the Voice's call."
* * *
Vroxhan had never vested
in such unseemly haste, but neither had he ever faced a moment like this. For
thousands upon thousands of years God had warded His faithful from the demons
whose very touch was death to body and soul. Not in recorded history had He
allowed the enemies of all life whose vile trickery had cast Man from the
starry splendor of God's Heaven to earth to approach so near as to rouse the
Voice to Warning, but Vroxhan reminded himself of Corada's words. God had not
abandoned His people; the Voice's Warning was proof of that.
He jerked the golden
buttons closed, suppressing a habitual stab of annoyance as the tight-fitting
collar squeezed his neck. He checked the drape of the dark blue fabric in the
wavery reflection of a mirror of polished silver, for it would never do to come
before God improperly vested at this of all times. He passed inspection, and he
stepped quickly through the door of imperishable metal onto the glassy floor of
the Sanctum.
His bishops waited, clad
as he in their tight-fitting vestments, as he walked to his place at the center
of the huge chamber and felt a wash of familiar awe as the night sky rose above
him. The dark sphere of midnight enveloped him, blotting out the polished,
trophy-hung walls with the glory of God's own stars, but awe was replaced by
dread as he looked up and saw the scarlet sigil of the demons rising slowly in
the eastern sky.
The sight chilled his
blood, for it burned still and bright, the color of fresh blood and not the
pulsing yellow flicker of Fire Test, Plot Test, or System Check. But he squared
his shoulders, reminding himself he was God's servant. He marched to the altar,
and the inhuman beauty of the Voice's unhurried, inflectionless speech rolled
over him, calm and reassuring in its eternal, unchanging majesty.
"Warning," it
said in the Holy Tongue, every word sweet and pure as silver, "passive
system detection warning. Hostiles approach." The Voice continued,
speaking words not even the high priest knew as it invoked God's protection,
and he felt a shiver of religious ecstasy. Then it returned to words he
recognized, even though he did not fully understand them. "Contact in
five-eight-point-three-seven minutes," it said, and fell silent. After a
moment it began again, repeating the Warning, and Vroxhan knelt to press his
bearded lips reverently to the glowing God Lights of the high altar with a
silent prayer that God might overlook his manifest unworthiness for the task
which had come to him. Then he rose, and sang the sacred words of benediction.
"Arm systems,"
he sang, and a brazen clangor rolled through the Sanctum, but this time no one
showed fear. This they had heard before, every year of their religious lives,
at the Feast of Fire Test. Yet this time was different, for this time its
familiar, martial fury summoned them to battle in God's holy cause.
The challenge of God's
Horn faded, and the Voice spoke once more.
"Armed," it
said sweetly. "Hostiles within engagement parameters."
Amber circles sprang
into the starry heavens, entrapping the crimson glare of the demons, ringing it
in the adamantine rejection of God's wrath, and Vroxhan felt himself tremble as
the ultimate moment of his life rushed to meet him. He was no longer afraid—no
longer even abashed, for God had raised him up. He was God's vessel, filled
with God's power to meet this time of Trial, and his eyes gleamed with a
hundred reflected stars as he turned to his fellows. He raised his arms and
watched them draw strength from his own exaltation. Other arms rose, returning
his blessing, committing themselves to the power and the glory of God while the
demons' red glare washed down over their faces and vestments.
"Be not afraid, my
brothers!" Vroxhan cried in a great voice. "The time of Trial is upon
us, but trust in God, that your souls may be exalted by His glory and the
demons may be confounded, for the power is His forever!"
"Forever!" The
answering roar battered him, and there was no fear in it, either. He turned
back to the high altar, lifting his eyes defiantly to the demon light,
rejecting it and the evil for which it stood, and his powerful, rolling voice
rose in the sonorous music of the ancient Canticle of Deliverance.
"Initiate
engagement procedure!"
"Coming into range
of another one," Harriet announced from Plotting as a display sighting
ring circled yet another dot. "A big one."
Sean felt—and shared—her
stress. They were finally close enough for Israel's scanners to detect
subplanetary targets, and the tension had been palpable ever since the first
deep-space installation was spotted. There'd been more in the last two
hours—lots more—and his hopes had soared with the others'. The first one hadn't
been much to look at, only a remote scanner array crippled by what appeared to
have been a micrometeorite strike, but the ones deeper in-system were much
bigger. In fact, they looked downright promising, and he kept reminding himself
not to let premature optimism carry him away.
"I'm on it,
Harry," Sandy reported from Tactical. Her active scanners had less reach
than Harriet's passive sensors but offered far better resolution once a target
had been pointed out to them. "Coming in now. Comp Cent calls it a Radona-class
yard module, Tam."
"Radona, Radona,"
Tamman muttered, running through his Engineering files. "Aha! I thought
I remembered! It's a civilian yard, but with the right support base, a Radona
class could turn out another Israel in about eight months, Sean. If we
get it on-line, we can build us a hypercom no sweat."
"That," Sean
said quietly, "is the best news I've had in the last twenty-one months.
People, it looks like we're going to make it after all."
"Yes, I—"
Sandy began, then broke off with a gasp. "Sean, that thing's live!"
"What?"
Sean stared across at her, and she nodded vigorously.
"I'm getting
standby level power readings from at least two Khilark Gamma fusion
plants—maybe three."
"That's
ridiculous," Sean muttered. He twisted back around to glare at the bland
light floating in Harriet's sighting ring. "She'd need hydrogen tankers,
maintenance services, a resource base . . . She can't be live!"
"Try telling that
to my scanners! I've definitely got live fusion plants, and if her power's up,
we won't even have to activate her!"
"But I still don't
see how—"
"Sean,"
Harriet cut him off, "I'm getting more installations. Look."
Scores of sighting rings
blossomed as her instruments came in range of the new targets, and Sean
blinked.
"Sandy?"
"I'm working them,
Sean." Sandy's voice was absent as she communed with her systems.
"Okay, these—" three of Harriet's amber rings turned green
"—look like your 'resource base.' They're processing modules, but they're
not Battle Fleet designs, either. They might be modified civil facilities."
She paused, then continued flatly. "And they're live, too."
"This," Sean
said to no one in particular, "is getting ridiculous. Not that I'm
ungrateful, but—" He shook himself. "What about the others?"
"Can't tell yet.
I'm getting some very faint power leakage from them, but not enough for
resolution at this range." She closed her eyes and frowned in
concentration. "If they're live, it doesn't look like they've got much
on-board generation capacity. Either that, or . . ." Her voice trailed
off.
"Or what?"
"Those might
be stasis emissions." She sounded unhappy at suggesting that, and Sean
grunted. No stasis field could maintain itself from internal power, and there
wasn't enough available from the powered-down plants of the other facilities to
sustain that many fields with broadcast power.
"Humph. Goose us
back up to point-five cee and take us in, Brashan."
"Coming up to
point-five cee, aye," Brashan replied from Maneuvering, and Sean frowned
even more thoughtfully. Something about those installations bothered him. They
floated in distant orbit around the third planet, not in a ring but in a
wide-spaced sphere. There were too many of them—and they were much too small—to
be more yard modules, but each was almost a third of Israel's size, so
what the devil were they?
"Sean!"
Harriet's exclamation was sharp. "I've got a new power source—a monster—and
it's on the planet!"
His head whipped back up
as still another sighting ring appeared in the display and the new emission
source crept into sight over the planetary horizon. Harry was right; it was
huge. But it was also . . . strange, and he frowned as its light code flickered
uncertainly.
"Can you localize
it?"
"I'm trying. It's—
Sean, my scanners say that thing's moving. It's almost like . . . like
some weird ECM, but I've never seen anything like it."
Sean frowned. That
single massive power source was all alone down there, and that made it the most
maddening puzzle yet. Obviously the population and tech base which had produced
the system installations hadn't survived, or they would have been challenged by
now. Besides, if the planet had fusion power, there should be dozens of
planetary facilities down there, not just one. But without people, how had even
one power plant survived the millennia? And what did Harry mean by
"moving"? He plugged into her systems and watched it with her, and
damned if she wasn't right. It was like some sort of ECM, as if
something were trying to prevent them from locking in its coordinates.
"Can you crack
whatever it is, Harry?"
"I think so. It's a
weird effect, but it looks like . . . Oh, that's sneaky!" Her tone took on
a mix of admiration and excitement. "That source isn't as big as we
thought, Sean. It is big, but there's at least a dozen—probably more
like two or three dozen—false emitters down there, and they're jumping back and
forth between them. Their generators aren't moving, they're just reshaping the
main emission source. I don't know why, but now that I know what they're
doing it's only a matter of ti—"
"Status change."
Sandy's voice was flat with tension. "The satellite power readings are
going up like missiles. They're coming on-line, Sean!"
His eyes darted back to
the satellites. Those had been stasis fields; now they were gone, and
whole clusters of new sources were coming up while they watched. Sean chewed
his lip, wondering what the hell was going on. But until he knew—
"Bring us about,
Brashan. Let's not get in too deep."
"Coming onto
reciprocal course, aye," Brashan confirmed, and Sean watched the changing
tactical symbols in the display as Israel came about.
"I've got a bad
feeling about this," he muttered.
* * *
"First phase
activation complete. All platforms nominal."
Vroxhan listened to the
Voice's ancient, musical words as a net of emeralds blazed against the night
sky. God's Shields glowed with the color of life, yet he'd never seen so many
of them at once, not even at the once-a-decade celebration of High Fire Test.
Truly this was the time of Trial, and he licked his lips as he proceeded to the
second verse of the Canticle.
"Activate tracking
systems," he intoned sonorously.
* * *
"Status
change!" This time Sandy almost screamed the words. "Target system
activation! Those things are weapons platforms!"
"Settle down,
Sandy!" Sean snapped. "Brashan, take us to point-seven! Evasion
pattern Alpha Romeo!"
"Alpha Romeo,
aye," Brashan replied with reassuring Narhani calm.
"Target
acquisition," the Voice announced. Its singing power filled the Sanctum,
and the golden ring about the demons' sigil turned blood-red. Tiny symbols
appeared within it—some steady and unwinking, others changing with
eye-bewildering flickers. Vroxhan had never seen anything like that; none of
the symbols which appeared during Plot Test and Fire Test ever changed, and
mingled terror and exaltation filled him as he chanted the third verse.
"Initiate weapon
release cycle."
* * *
Israel leapt to full
speed, and the power of her drive quivered in bone and sinew as Brashan threw
her into the evasion pattern. A corner of Sean's thoughts stole a moment to be
thankful for all the drills they'd run and another to curse how undermanned
they were, but it was only a tiny corner. The rest of his mind had suddenly
gone cold, humming with a strange, deep note unlike anything he'd ever
experienced in a training exercise, and his thoughts came like a dance of
lightning, automatic, almost instinctive.
"Tactical, get the
shields up and initiate ECM! Download decoys for launch on my signal but do not
engage."
"Shields—up!"
Sandy snapped back, her earlier edge of panic displaced by trained reactions.
"ECM—active. Decoys prepped and downloaded."
"Acknowledged. Have
you localized that power source, Harry?"
"Negative!"
Sean felt himself
tightening inwardly as his queerly icy brain raced. Every instinct screamed to
open fire to preempt whatever those weapons might do, but even if his
assumption that the planetary power source was the command center was right, he
couldn't hit it if Harry couldn't localize it. That only left the platforms
themselves, and they were such small targets—and there were so many of
them—that going after them would be a losing proposition. Perhaps more
importantly, they hadn't fired yet. If he initiated hostilities, they most
certainly would, and although Israel was beyond energy weapon range,
maximum range for the Fourth Empire's hyper missiles against a target her size
was thirty-eight light-minutes. They were ten light-minutes inside that. At
maximum speed, they needed fourteen minutes to clear the planet's missile
envelope, and every second the platforms spent thinking about shooting was one
priceless second in which they weren't shooting.
* * *
"Target
evading."
Vroxhan's heart faltered
as the Voice departed from the Canticle of Deliverance. It had never said those
words before, and the symbols inside the bloody circle danced madly. The demon
light pulsed and capered, and his faith wavered. But he felt ripples of panic
flaring through the bishops and upper-priests. He had to do something,
and he forced his merely mortal voice to remain firm as he intoned the fourth
verse of the Canticle.
"Initiate firing
sequence!" he sang, and his soul filled with relief as the Voice returned
the proper response.
"Initiating."
* * *
"Launch activation!
Multiple launch activations!"
Sean paled at Sandy's
cry. The platforms had brought their support systems on-line; now their hyper
launchers were cycling. They'd need several seconds to wind up to full launch
status, but there were hundreds of them!
He tasted blood. This
was a survey ship's worst nightmare: an intact, active quarantine system. An Asgerd-class
planetoid would have hesitated to engage this kind of firepower, and he had
exactly one parasite battleship.
"Launch
decoys!"
"Launching,
aye." A brief heartbeat. "First decoy salvo away. Second salvo
prepping."
Blue dots speckled the
display with false images, each a duplicate of Israel's own emissions
signature as it streaked away from her.
"Activate missile
battery. Designate launch platforms as primary targets but do not engage."
"Missile battery
active," Sandy said flatly.
* * *
"Hostile decoys
deployed," the Voice announced sweetly.
Vroxhan clutched at the
altar, and a terrified human voice cried out behind him, for the high priest's
portion of the Canticle was done! There was no more Canticle! But the
Voice was continuing.
"Request Tracking
refinement and update," it said, and the High Priest sank to his knees
while the demon light spawned again and again. Dozens of demons blazed in the
stars, and he didn't know what the Voice wanted of him!
"Initiate firing
sequence!" he repeated desperately, and his trained voice was broken-edged
and brittle.
"Probability of
kill will be degraded without Tracking refinement and update," the Voice
replied emotionlessly.
"Initiate firing
sequence!" Vroxhan screamed. The Voice said nothing for a tiny,
terrible eternity, and then—
"Initiating."
* * *
"Hostile launch! I
say again, hostile launch!"
A deathly silence
followed Sandy's flat announcement. The Fourth Empire's hyper missiles traveled
at four thousand times the speed of light. It would take them almost seven
seconds to cross the light-minutes to the battleship, but there was no such
thing as an active defense against a hyper missile, for no one had yet figured
out a way to shoot at something in hyper. They could only take it . . . and be
glad the range was so long. At seventy percent of light-speed, Israel
would have moved almost one-and-a-half million kilometers between the time
those missiles launched and the time they arrived. But that was why defensive
bases had prediction and tracking computers.
Israel had never been
intended to face such firepower single-handed, but her defenses had been
redesigned and refined by Dahak and BuShips to incorporate features gleaned
from the Achuultani and new ideas all their own. Her shields covered more hyper
bands, her inner shield was far closer to her hull than the Fourth Empire's
technology had allowed, and she had an outer shield, which no earlier
generation of Imperial ship had ever boasted.
It was as well she did.
Only a fraction of those
missiles were on target, but Israel bucked like a mad thing, and Sean
almost ripped the arms from his couch as warheads smashed at her and she heaved
about him. Damn it! Damn it! He'd forgotten to activate his tractor net!
The gravity wells of a dozen stars sought to splinter his ship's insignificant
mass, and shield generators screamed in her belly.
* * *
The familiar musical
note of Fire Test rang in his ears, and Vroxhan stared up from his knees, eyes
desperate, waiting for the demon lights to vanish, praying that they would. He
didn't know how long he would have to wait; he never did, even during Fire
Test, for no one had ever taught him to read the range notations within the
targeting circles.
Then, suddenly, all but
one of the demon lights did vanish. A great sigh went up from the massed
bishops, and Vroxhan joined it. The demons might have spawned, but God had
smitten all but one of them! Yet that one remained, and that, too, had never
happened during Fire Test.
His terrible fear ebbed
just a bit, but only a bit, for yet again the Voice spoke words no high priest
had ever heard.
"Decoys destroyed.
Engagement proceeding."
* * *
A ship of the Fourth
Empire would have died. Five of those mighty missiles had popped the hyper
bands covered by Israel's outer shield, but they erupted outside her
inner shield . . . and it held. Somehow, it held.
"Jesus!" Sean
shook his head and activated his couch tractor net as soon as the universe
stopped heaving. They couldn't take many more like that!
"Shift to evasion
pattern Alpha Mike. Launch fresh decoy salvo."
This time there were no
verbal acknowledgments, but they flowed back to him through his feed. He felt
his friends' fear, but they were doing their jobs. And they were still alive.
He didn't understand that. With this much fire coming at them, they should be
dead. But there wasn't time to wonder why they weren't—and no longer any reason
not to fight back.
"Engage the
enemy!" he snapped.
The first salvo spat
from Israel's launchers, and it was odd, but his own fear had
disappeared.
* * *
"Incoming
fire," the Voice said. "Request defense mode."
Vroxhan covered his
face, trying to understand while faith, terror, and confusion warred within
him. He knew what "request" meant, but he had no idea what a "defense
mode" was.
"Urgent," the
Voice said. "Defense mode input required."
* * *
Israel twisted in
agony as the second salvo erupted into normal space about her, and a damage
warning snarled. One of those missiles had gotten too close, and armor that would
have sneered at a nuclear warhead tore like tissue under the fraction of power
that leaked through the inner shield.
But Sean had more time
to watch this attack's pattern, and it told him something. Whatever was on the
other end of those missiles was fighting dumb, spreading its fire evenly
between Israel and her decoys, and that was crazy. Any defensive system
ought to be able to refine its data enough to eliminate at least a few false
images.
He felt Tamman activate
his damage control systems, yet a quick check told him nothing vital had gone,
and he looked back at the display just as Sandy's first salvo went home.
* * *
Sweat stung Vroxhan's
eyes as a dozen of God's emerald Shields vanished from the stars. The demons!
The demons had done that!
"Urgent," the
Voice repeated. "Defense mode input required."
The high priest racked
his brain. Thought had never been required during any of the high ceremonies,
only the liturgy. His mind ran desperately over every ritual, seeking the words
"defense mode," but he couldn't think of any canticle that used them.
Wait! He couldn't think of any that used both words, but the Canticle of
Maintenance Test used "mode"!
He trembled, wondering
if he dared use another canticle's words. What if they were the wrong
words? What if they turned God's wrath against him?
* * *
Sean bit down on a yell
of triumph. The ground source might be hiding, but the weapon platforms were
stark naked! Not even a shield!
"Hit them,
Sandy!" he snapped, and Israel's next salvo went out even as the
third hostile salvo came in.
* * *
Vroxhan groaned as
another dozen emeralds vanished. That was almost a tenth of them all, and the
Demons still lived! If they destroyed all of God's Shields, nothing would stand
between them and the world's death!
"Warning." The
Voice was as beautiful as ever, yet it seemed to shriek in his brain.
"Offensive capability reduced nine-point-six percent. Defense mode input
required."
Blood ran into Vroxhan's
beard as his teeth broke his lip, but even as he watched the demons were
spawning yet again. He had no choice, and he spoke the words from the Canticle
of Maintenance Test.
"Cycle autonomous
mode selection!" he cried.
He felt the others stare
at him in horror, but he made himself stand upright, awaiting the stroke of
God's wrath. Silence stretched to the breaking point, and then—
"Autonomous defense
mode selection engaged," the Voice said.
* * *
"Shit!"
Sean smashed a clenched
fist against the arm of his couch. They'd gotten in a third salvo, but the
quarantine system had finally noticed they were killing its weapons. Shields
popped into existence around the scores of surviving orbital bases, and decoys
of their own blinked into life. They were only Fourth Empire technology,
nowhere near as good as the improved systems Dahak and BuShips had provided Israel,
but they were good enough. It would take every missile they could throw to take
out even one of them now, yet they had no other target. They still hadn't
localized the ground base controlling them and the range was now too great to
try.
He started to order
Sandy to reprioritize her fire, massing it on single targets, but she was
already doing it.
The battleship writhed
again, yet the ferocity was less and he felt a surge of hope. Sandy had nailed
almost forty bases; maybe she'd thinned them enough they could survive yet!
They'd been engaged for
four minutes, and they'd started running a full minute before the enemy opened
fire. The range was up to over thirty-one light-minutes, and that would help,
too. If they got to at least thirty-five and managed to break lock, they might
be able to go into stealth and—
Israel heaved yet
again, and another damage signal snarled. Crap! That one had taken out two of
Sandy's launchers.
* * *
Vroxhan stared at the
stars, and hope rose within him. Only one of the Shields had vanished that
time. Perhaps none of them might have perished if he'd known what God and the
Voice truly demanded, but at least he was still alive and the rate of
destruction had slowed. Did that mean God smiled upon him after all? The Writ
said man could but do his best—had God granted him the mercy of recognizing his
best when he gave it?
* * *
Israel sped outward,
bobbing and weaving as Sean, Brashan, and the maneuvering computers squirmed
through every evasion they could produce, and Harriet abandoned Plotting and
plugged into the damage control sub-net to help Tamman fight the battleship's
damage. Two more near-misses had savaged her, and her speed was down to .6 c
from the loss of a drive node, but the incoming fire was less and less
accurate. Sandy had picked off thirteen more launch stations, ripping huge
holes in the original defensive net, but Sean could see the surviving weapon
platforms redeploying, with more coming around from the far side of the planet.
Still, Sandy's fire might just have whittled them down enough to make the
difference in the face of Israel's ECM.
Even as he thought that,
he knew he didn't really believe it.
He rechecked the range.
Thirty-four light-minutes. Another seven minutes to the edge of the missile
envelope at their reduced speed. Could they last that long?
Another salvo shook the
ship. And another. Another. A fresh damage signal burned in his feed. They
weren't going to make it out of range before something got through, but they
were coming up on thirty-five light-minutes, and each salvo was still spreading
its fire to engage their decoys. They hadn't managed to break lock, but if the
bad guys' targeting was so bad it couldn't differentiate them from the decoys,
they might be able to get into—
* * *
Vroxhan watched the
demons spawn yet again. They must have an inexhaustible store of eggs, but God
smote every one they hatched. A fresh cloud of crimson dots profaned the
stars—and then they vanished.
They all
vanished, and the ring of God's wrath was empty. Empty!
Silence hovered about
him and his pulse thundered as the assembled priests held their breath.
"Target
destroyed," the Voice said. "Engagement terminated. Repair and
replacement procedures initiated. Combat systems standing down."
* * *
"They've lost
lock," Sandy reported in a soft, shaky voice as Israel vanished
into stealth mode, and Sean MacIntyre exhaled a huge breath.
He was soaked in sweat,
but they were alive. They shouldn't have been. No ship their size could survive
that much firepower, however clumsily applied. Yet Israel had. Somehow.
His hands began to
tremble. Their stealth mode ECM was better than anything the Fourth Empire had
ever had, but to make it work they'd had to cut off all detectable emissions.
Which meant Sandy had been forced to cut her own active sensors and shut down
both her false-imaging ECM and the outer shield, for it extended well beyond the
stealth field. He'd hoped synchronizing with the decoys' destruction would
convince the bad guys they'd gotten Israel, as well, but if their
tracking systems hadn't lost lock, they would have been a sitting duck.
They wouldn't even have been covered by decoys against the next salvo.
His hands' shakiness
spread up his arms as he truly realized what a terrible chance he'd just taken,
and not with his own life alone. It had worked, but he hadn't even thought
about it. Not really. He'd reacted on gut instinct, and the others had obeyed
him, trusting him to get it right.
He made himself breathe
slowly and deeply, using his implants to dampen his runaway adrenaline levels,
and thought about what he'd done. He made himself stand back and look at the
logic of it, and now that he had time to think, maybe it hadn't been such a bad
idea. It had worked, hadn't it? But, Jesus, the risk he'd taken!
Maybe, he told himself
silently, Aunt Adrienne's homilies on overly audacious tactics contained a
kernel of truth after all.
Stardrift glittered
overhead, and a smaller, fiercer star crawled along the battle steel beneath
his feet as the robotic welder lit a hellish balefire in Sean MacIntyre's eyes
while Israel drifted in sepulchral gloom almost a light-hour from the
system primary.
His wounded ship lay
hidden in an asteroid's ink-black lee while he coaxed the welder through his
neural feed. Other robotic henchmen had already cut away the jagged edges of
the breach, rebuilt sheared frame members, and tacked down replacement plates
of battle steel. Now the massive welding unit crept along, fusing the plates in
place. Under other circumstances, damage control could have been left to such a
routine task unsupervised, but one of Israel's hits had taken out a third
of her Engineering peripherals. Until Tamman and Brashan finished putting them
back on-line—if they finished—the damage control sub-net remained far
from reliable.
"How's it
coming?"
He turned his head in
the force field globe of his "helmet" as Sandy walked down the curve
of the hull towards him.
"Not too bad."
Fatigue harshened his
voice, and she studied him as she came closer. A massive, broken pylon towered
behind him, shattered by the hit that had demolished the heavily armored drive
node it had supported. He stood between stygian blackness and the welder's
fire, half his suited body lost in shadow, the other glowing demon-bright, and
his face was drawn. It was his turn to wake from nightmares these nights, but
he met her eyes squarely.
"You're doing
better than I expected," she said after a moment.
"Yeah. We'll have
this breach finished by the end of the watch."
"The end of which
watch, dummy?" she teased gently. "You're supposed to be in the sack
right now."
"Really?" He
sounded genuinely surprised, and she didn't know whether to laugh or cry at his
tired, bemused expression as he checked the time.
"I'll be damned. Is
that why you came out here? To get me?"
"Yep. A MacMahan
always gets her man—and in this instance, my man better get his ass inside
before he goes to sleep on his big, flat feet."
"I do
believe," he stretched, "you have a point, Midshipwoman MacMahan. But
what about junior?" He waved at the welder.
"It's only got
fifty meters to go, Sean. You can trust it that far on its internal
programming. And if you come along and let her tuck you in, Aunt Sandy promises
she'll come back out and check on it in about an hour. Deal?"
"Deal," he
sighed. The two of them turned away, disappearing over the rise of the
battleship's flank, and the lonely star of the welder crawled on behind them,
blazing like a lost soul in the depths of endless night.
* * *
Even Brashan looked
drawn, and the humans were downright haggard, but three weeks of exhausting
labor had repaired everything they could repair.
"Okay,
people," Sean called the meeting to order. "It doesn't seem to me
that going on to our next stop is a real good idea. Anybody disagree?"
Wry, weary grins and
headshakes answered him. The G6 star of their second-choice destination was
twelve and a half light-years away from their present position. At barely half
the speed of light—the best Israel could sustain with a primary drive
node shot away—the voyage would take seventy-five months, even if it would be
"only" five and a half years long for them.
"Good. I'd hate to
make a trip that long and then not find anything at the other end. Especially
since we know there's an active shipyard here."
"Cogently
put," Brashan agreed with one of his curled-lip grins. "Of course,
there remains the small problem of gaining control of that shipyard."
"True," Sean
lay back in his couch and stared up into the display, "but maybe that's
not as tough as it looks. For instance, we know the power for the platform
stasis fields is beamed up from that ground source, so that's probably the HQ
site. If so, taking it over should give us control of the platforms, too.
Failing that, taking it out should shut them down, right?"
"I agree that seems
a logical conclusion, but how do you intend to penetrate its orbital defenses
to get at it?"
"Sleight of hand,
Brashan. We'll fool the suckers."
"Oh, dear. This
sounds like something I'm not going to like."
Sean smiled and the
others chuckled as Brashan fanned his crest in a Narhani expression of abject
misery.
"It won't be that
bad—I hope." Sean turned to Sandy and his sister. "Did your analysis
reach the same conclusion I did?"
"Pretty much,"
Sandy said after a glance at Harriet. "We agree they detected us on
passive, at least. We didn't pick up any active systems till their launcher
fire control came up."
"And their
tactics?"
"That's a lot more
speculative, Sean, and one point still worries us," Harriet replied.
"Your theory sounds logical, but it's only a theory."
"I know, but look
at it. Much as it pains me to admit it, that much firepower should have swatted
us like a fly, however brilliant my tactics were. Whatever runs those defenses
was slow, Harry. Slow and clumsy."
"Okay, but how do
you explain its defensive tactics? Slow's one thing, but it let us take
out thirty-six platforms before the others even began to defend
themselves."
"So it's slow,
clumsy, and dumb," Tamman said with a shrug.
"You're missing the
point, Tam." Sandy came to Harriet's aid. "Properly designed
automated defenses shouldn't have let us take any of them out unopposed, but
anything dumb enough to let us zap any of them that way should have let us take
them all out. Besides, how many other intact quarantine systems have we
seen? None. That means this thing's original programming wasn't just good
enough to control its weapons—it's run enough deep-space industry to keep the
whole system functional for forty-five thousand years, as well."
She paused to let that
sink in, and Tamman nodded. Harriet's stealthed sensor remotes, operating from
a circumspect forty light-minutes, had given them proof of that. The Radona-class
yard was no longer on standby; it was rebuilding the weapon platforms Sandy had
destroyed.
"Another
thing," she continued. "Those platforms' passive defenses are mighty
efficient by Empire standards, and that razzle-dazzle trick by the ground
source is pretty cute, too. It's not standard military hardware, but it works.
Maybe its designer was a civilian, but if so he was a sneaky one—not exactly
the sort to give anything away to an enemy. And if a sharp cookie like whoever
set this all up built in defensive systems at all, why arrange things so they
didn't come on-line until after our third salvo?"
"So what do you
think happened?" Tamman countered.
"We don't know;
that's what worries us. It's almost like there was something else in the
command loop—something that really was slow, clumsy, and stupid. If there is,
it probably saved our lives this time, but it may also surprise us, especially
if we make any wrong assumptions."
"Fair enough,"
Sean said. "But given how long it waited to bring its weapons on-line,
whatever it is must be pretty myopic, right?"
"There we have to
agree with you," Harriet replied wryly. "But it's what you're
planning on after we arrive that scares us, not the approach."
"Whoa! Hold
on." Tamman straightened in the engineer's couch. "What approach? You
been holding out on me and Brashan, Captain, Sir?"
"Not really. It's
only that you both've been so buried in Engineering you missed the
discussion."
"Well we're not
buried now, so why don't you just fill us in?"
"It's not
complicated. We came in fat and happy last time, radiating as much energy as a
small star; this time we'll be a meteorite."
"I knew I
wouldn't like it," Brashan sighed, and Sean grinned.
"You're just sore
you didn't think of it first. Look, it let us get within twenty-eight
light-minutes before it even began bringing its systems on-line, right?"
Tamman and Brashan nodded. "Okay, why'd it do that? Why didn't it start
bringing them up as soon as we entered missile range? After all, it couldn't
know we wouldn't shoot as soon as we had the range."
"You're saying it
didn't pick us up until then," Brashan said.
"Exactly. And that
gives us a rough idea how far out its passive sensors were able to detect us.
Sandy and Harry ran a computer model assuming it had picked us up at forty
light-minutes—a half hour of flight time before it powered up. Even at that,
the model says our stealth field should hide the drive to within a light-minute
if we hold its power well down. That means we can sneak in close before we shut
down everything and turn into a meteor."
"Seems to me you've
still got a little problem there." Tamman sounded doubtful. "First of
all, if I'd designed the system, it wouldn't let a rock Israel's
size hit the planet in the first place. I'd've set it to blow the sucker apart
way short of atmosphere. Second, we can't land, or even maneuver into orbit,
without the drive, and we'll be way inside a light-minute by that point. It's
going to spot us as a ship at that range, stealth field or no."
"Oh, no it
won't." Sean smiled his best Cheshire Cat smile. "In answer to your
first point, you should have made time to read that paper I wrote for Commander
Keltwyn last semester. Our survey teams have looked at the wreckage of over
forty planetary defense systems by now, and every single one of them required
human authorization to engage anything without an active emissions signature.
Remember, over half these things were set up by civilians, not the Fleet, and
the central computers were a hell of a lot stupider than Dahak. The designers
wanted to be damned sure their systems didn't accidentally kill anything they
didn't want killed, and none of the system's we've so far examined would have
engaged a meteor, however big, without specific authorization."
"So? The whole
point is that we will have an active signature when we bring the drive
up."
"Sure, but not
where it can see us long enough to matter. We come in under power to two
light-minutes, then reduce to about twenty thousand KPS, cut the drive, and
coast clear to the planet."
"Jesus
Christ!" Tamman yelped. "You're going to hit atmosphere in a battleship
at twenty thousand kilometers per second?"
"Why not? I've
modeled it, and the hull should stand it now that we've got the holes patched.
We come in at a slant, take advantage of atmospheric braking down to about
twenty thousand meters, then pop the drive."
"You're out of your
teeny-tiny mind!"
"What's the matter,
think the drive can't hack it?"
"Sean, even with
one node shot out, my drive can take us from zip to point-six cee in eleven
seconds. Sure, if we program the maneuver right and leave it all on auto we've
got the oomph to land in one piece. But we're gonna be one hell of a high-speed
event when we hit air, and the drive'll create an awful visible energy pulse
when you kill that kind of velocity that quick. There's no way—no way!—a
stealth field will hide either of those!"
"Ah, but by the
time the drive kicks in, we'll be inside atmosphere. I doubt whoever set this
up programmed it to kill air-breathing targets!"
"Um." Tamman
looked suddenly thoughtful, but Brashan regarded his captain dubiously.
"Isn't that a
rather risky assumption—particularly if, as Harry and Sandy argue, there's an
unpredictable element to the control system?"
"Not really."
Harriet sounded a bit as if she were agreeing with Sean despite herself.
"This is a quarantine system. It's probably programmed to wax people
trying to escape after the bio-weapon hit as well as anyone coming from
outside, but Sean's right. Every one we've seen before has required human authorization
to engage anything that wasn't obviously a spacecraft. It shouldn't care a
thing about meteors, and it's almost certainly not set to shoot before a target
leaves atmosphere. Even if it is, you're forgetting reaction time. It'll take
at least two minutes just to spin down the stasis fields on its platforms.
There won't be enough time for it to see us and activate its weapons between
the time the drive cuts in and we cut power, go back into stealth, and
land."
"I suppose that's
true enough. But what do we do once we're down?"
"That's where Sandy
and I part company with our fearless leader. He wants to put down on top of the
power source and take it over. Which sounds good, unless it's got on-site
defenses. We won't be able to tell ahead of time—we can't use active sensors
without warning it we're coming—but if it does have site-defense
weapons, they may be permanently live. If they are, they'll get us before we
can even go active and sort out the situation."
"We could just
waste the whole site from space," Tamman suggested. "Coming in that
slow, Harry should have plenty of time to localize it on passive. We could pop
off a homing sublight missile from a few light-seconds out. And, as you say,
even if it spotted the launch, it wouldn't have time to react before the bad
news got there."
"We could, and it's
something to bear in mind," Sean agreed, "but I'd rather take the
place over intact. We can't use active scanners from stealth, but we can
carry out visual observations once we come out of stealth. That's a huge power
plant, and there must be some reason the automatics kept it running after
everybody died. Let's take a peek and see if it's something we can generate any
additional support from before we zap it. I'd rather not kill any golden
egg-laying geese if I can help it."
"A point,"
Tamman conceded. "Definitely a point."
"Which brings us
back to Sandy's and my objection," Harriet pointed out. "If we don't
want to take the place out from space, then we shouldn't be landing on top of
it, either. Not when we don't know whether the site's armed or what that
'something else' in the command loop is."
"I believe the
girls are correct, Sean," Brashan said. "I confess your plan seems
less reckless than I assumed, but they're still right, and there's no need to charge
in precipitously."
"Tam? You agree
with them?"
"Yes," Tamman
said positively, and Sean shrugged.
"All right, I can
be big about these things. What say we plan our insertion to set us down over
the curve of the planet from the site?"
* * *
High Priest Vroxhan sat
in his gilded throne and surveyed the worshipers with studied calm, trying to
assess their mood.
Mother Church had been
shaken to her foundations, but by God's blessing the Trial had been upon them
and then past so quickly few outside the Inner Circle had known a thing about
it till it was over. The word had spread on talmahk wings after that, and the
people were abuzz with the story—which, he was certain, had grown more terrible
with each telling—but they'd managed to suppress all mention of the Voice's
unknown words and his own desperate improvisation. Vroxhan wasn't certain that
was necessary, but he was certain it would be far wiser for the Inner
Circle to sort it out themselves before they risked the faith of others by
revealing all the facts.
Yet however unorthodox
events might have been, the outcome was clear: the Trial had come, and the
demons had been smitten as the Writ promised. Thousands of years of faith had
been vindicated, and that was what this solemn festival of thanksgiving and the
priestly conclave to follow were all about.
The last human soul
entered the packed courtyard of the Sanctum, and he raised one hand in blessing
from his throne as the choir sang the majestic opening notes of the Gloria.
* * *
The last four hours had
been frustrating.
Israel had crept in at
the paltry velocity of .2 c, wrapped in the stealth field that turned
her into a black nothingness. Her passive systems had peered ahead, poised on a
hair-trigger to warn of any active detection systems, but she'd been blind to
anything but fairly powerful energy sources, and curiosity was killing her
crew.
Harriet had, indeed,
localized the power source to within fifty kilometers, which was ample for
warheads of the power they carried, but Sean longed to examine the planet
directly. Unfortunately, Israel's optical systems, pitiful compared to
active fold-space scanners at the best of times, were degraded by the stealth
field which protected her. They could have used the drive to impart a higher
initial velocity and coasted the whole way without a stealth field, but they
could neither have maneuvered nor slowed for atmospheric insertion without
going into stealth. Sean had no idea how the defenses would react to an
"asteroid" that popped in and out of detectability, and he didn't
want to find out; he was taking a big enough chance by coming this close before
he dropped stealth in the first place. More importantly, he wanted to be able
to turn and creep away if he saw any sign of changing power levels on the
orbital bases. It was always possible the defenses might pick up something
without being able to localize Israel and shoot, and if he'd come in any
faster the drive settings needed to kill the ship's velocity might have burned
through the stealth field and given them a target.
But they were coming up
on the two-light-minute mark, and he lay tense in his command couch as their
speed fell still further. Tamman and Brashan coordinated their departments
carefully, reducing drive power and velocity in tandem, and Sean grunted his
satisfaction as the drive died at last. Right on the mark, he noted: exactly
20,000 KPS. The internal gravity was still up, but Israel no longer had
any emission signature at all.
"Good, guys,"
he murmured, then glanced at Sandy. "Take the stealth field down."
"Coming down
now," she replied tautly, and Sean watched through a cross feed as she
powered down their cloak of invisibility with the same exquisite care Tamman
had taken.
The entire crew held its
collective breath as Harriet consulted her passive systems very, very
carefully. Then she relaxed.
"Looks good,
Sean." Her voice was hushed, as if she feared the defenses might hear.
"The platform stasis fields're steady as a rock."
Her crewmates' breath
hissed out, and Sandy looked up with a grin.
"We're heeeere,"
she crooned, and the others laughed out loud.
"Of course we
are." Sean grinned back at her, elated by his ploy's success. "But
we're just a great big rock." He glanced smugly at Tamman. "Looks
like the defenses are programmed to kill only ships, and without
emissions, we ain't a ship."
"I hate it when
he's right," Sandy told the others. "Fortunately, it doesn't happen
often."
That was good for
another chuckle, and the last of the hovering tension faded as Sean waved a
fist in her direction. Then he sat up briskly.
"All right. Bring
up the optics and see what we can see, Harry."
"Bringing them up
now," his sister said, and the blue and white sphere of the planet
swelled, displacing the starfield from the display as she engaged the forward
optical head. They were almost thirty-six million kilometers away, but surface
features leapt into startling clarity.
Sean stared eagerly at
seas and rivers, the rumpled lines of mountain ranges, green swathes of forest.
Theirs were the first human (or Narhani) eyes to behold that planet in
forty-five thousand years, and it was lovely beyond belief. None of them had
dared hope to see this living, breathing beauty at the end of their weary
voyage, but incredible as it seemed, the planet lived. Here in the midst of the
Fourth Empire's self-wrought devastation, it lived.
His eyes devoured it,
and then he stiffened.
"Hey! What
the—?"
"Look! Look!"
"My God,
there's—!"
"Jesus, is
that—?!"
An incredulous babble
filled the command deck as all of them saw it at once. Harriet didn't need any
instructions; she was already zooming in on the impossible sight. The holo of
the planet vanished, replaced by a full-power closeup of one tiny part of its
surface, and the confusion of voices died as they stared at the seaport city in
silence.
* * *
"There's no
question, is there?" Sean murmured.
"Damn." Tamman
shook his head. "I wouldn't have believed it if I hadn't seen it. Hell,
I'm still not sure I am seeing it!"
"You're seeing
it," Sandy told him quietly. "And maybe it's a good thing we didn't
just zap the control center after all."
"No question,"
Tamman agreed, and Israel's crew shared a shudder at the thought of what
they might have unleashed against a populated world.
"But I don't
understand it," Brashan mused. "Life, yes—there's life on Birhat, so
it has to be theoretically possible. But people? Humans?" His crest
waved in perplexity and a double-thumbed hand rubbed his long snout.
"There's only one
answer," Sean said. "This time quarantine worked."
"It seems
impossible," Harriet sighed. "Wonderful, but impossible."
"You got that
right." Sean frowned at the large, fortified town they were currently
watching. "But this only raises more questions, doesn't it? Like what
happened to their tech base? Their defenses are still operable, and the HQ is
down there, so how come they're all running around like that?"
He waved at the image,
where animal-drawn plows turned soil in a patchwork of fields. The small, low
buildings looked well-enough made, but they were built of wood and stone, and
many were roofed in thatch. Yet the eroded stumps of an ancient city of the
Fourth Empire lay barely thirty kilometers from the town's crenulated walls.
"It doesn't
make much sense, does it?" Sandy replied.
"You can say that
again. How in hell can someone decivilize in the midst of that much technology?
Just from the ruins we've already plotted, this planet had millions of people.
You'd think poking around in the wreckage, let alone having at least one still
operating high-tech enclave in their midst, would get the current population
started on science. But even if it hasn't, where did the original
techies go?"
"Some kind of
home-grown plague?" Tamman suggested.
"Unlikely."
Brashan shook his head in the human expression of negation. "Their medical
science should have been able to handle anything short of the bio-weapon
itself."
"How about a
war?" Sandy offered. "It's been a long time, guys. They could
have bombed themselves out."
"I suppose so, but
then why aren't more of those towers flattened?" Sean objected.
"Imperial warheads shouldn't have left anything."
"Not
necessarily." Harriet watched the display, toying with a lock of her hair.
"Oh, you're right about gravitonics, but suppose they used small nukes or
dusted each other? Or whipped up their own bio-weapons?"
"I suppose that's
possible, but it still doesn't explain why they never rebuilt. Maybe they lost
their original tech base—I can't see how, with that ground station still up,
but let's concede the possibility. But we're still looking at a city-building
culture spread over at least two continents. It looks to me like they've got
about as many people as a pre-tech agrarian economy can support—more than I
would have expected, in fact; their agriculture must be more efficient than it
looks. But given that kind of population base, why haven't they developed their
own indigenous technology?"
"Good point,"
Tamman agreed, "and I wish I could answer it, but I can't. It's like they've
got some kind of technological blind spot."
"Yeah, but then
they go and put their biggest city right on top of where we figure the
defensive HQ has to be." Sean shook his head in disgust. "It's right
in the middle of their largest land mass, and there's not a river within fifty
kilometers. With the transportation systems we've seen, that's a hell of an
unlikely place for a city to grow up naturally. Look at the canal system
they've built. There's over two hundred klicks of it, all to move stuff into
the city. There has to be some reason for its location, and I can only
think of one magnet. Except, of course, that that particular magnet doesn't
make any sense on a planet that doesn't know about technology!"
"Well," Sandy
sighed, "I guess there's only one way to find out."
"Guess so."
Sean's calm tone fooled none of his friends. Then he grinned. "And
whatever the reason, Mom and Dad are going to be mighty glad to hear we've
found another planet that's not only habitable but stuffed full of people as well!"
The sublight battleship Israel
split atmosphere in a long, shallow descent that wrapped her in a shroud of
fire. Her crew rode their couches, feeling their ship quiver with the fury of
her descent as her bow plating began to glow. Heat sensors soared as the thick
battle steel armor burned cherry-red, then yellow, then white. The terrible
glow crept back along her hull, the air blazed before her as she battered a
column of superheated atmosphere out of her path, and Sean MacIntyre monitored
his instruments and tried to stay calm.
The maneuvering
computers waited patiently to engage their carefully written program and stop
them dead in the bellow of the drive's fury. It was going to be a rough ride,
but so far everything was nominal, and they'd already picked out an alpine
valley hiding place fifteen hundred kilometers from the planet's largest city.
It was going to be fine, he told himself for the thousandth time, and grinned
mirthlessly at his own insistence.
* * *
High Priest Vroxhan
stood on his balcony and watched the night sky burn. His servants had summoned
him almost hysterically, and he'd charged out in only his under-robe to see the
terrible strand of fire with his own eyes. Now he did see it, and it touched
him with ice.
Shooting stars he had
seen before, and wondered why the work of God's Hands should abandon the
glorious firmament for the surface of the world to which the demons' treachery
had banished man, but never had he seen one so huge. No one had, and he watched
it blaze above The Temple like the very Finger of God and trembled.
Could it be—?
No! God's Wrath had
slain the demons, and he suppressed the blasphemous thought quickly. But not
quickly enough. He'd thought it, and if he had, how much more might the
ignorant of his flock think the same thing?
He inhaled sharply as
the beautiful, terrifying light vanished beyond the western peaks. Would it
land? If so, where? Far beyond the borders of Aris—probably even beyond those
of Malagor. In Cherist, then? Or Showmah?
He shook himself and
turned away, hurrying back into the warmth of his apartments from the chill
spring night. It couldn't be the demons, he told himself firmly, and if not
they, then it must, indeed, be God's handiwork, as all the world was. He nodded
with fresh assurance. No doubt God had sent it as a sign and reminder of His
deliverance, and he must see the truth was spread before the less faith-filled
panicked.
He closed the balcony
door and beckoned to a servant. His messages must be ready for the semaphore
tower by first light.
Colin MacIntyre paused
outside the larger state dining room to watch three harassed humans and a dozen
robots sorting the countless bags of old-fashioned mail into paper breastworks.
No one noticed him in the doorway, and as he resumed his journey towards the
balcony, he made a note to divert still more human staff to reading the letters
while he tried to sort out his own feelings.
Those bags, and the
hundreds which had preceded them in the past few days, proved that whatever
outrages the Sword of God might wreak and however well-hidden their true enemy
might be, his subjects cared. Those letters weren't just formal, official
nothings from heads of state. They came from people all over the Fifth
Imperium, expressing their joy—and relief—that their Empress was pregnant.
Yet his own joy, as
'Tanni's, was bittersweet. Over two years had passed, but the aching void
remained. Perhaps the new children (for the doctors had already confirmed it
would be twins once more) would fill that emptiness. He hoped so. But he also
hoped he and 'Tanni could resist the need to make them fill it. Sean and
Harriet had been special. No one could replace them, and their new children
deserved the right to be special in their own ways, not compared, however
lovingly, to ghosts.
The decision to have
them hadn't been easy. It was fraught with grief, a guilty sense of betraying
Sean and Harriet in some indefinable way, and fear of fresh loss. His and
'Tanni's enhancement would give them centuries of fertility, and the temptation
to wait was great. Yet they faced the dilemma of all dynasts: the succession
must be secured.
That wasn't something
Lieutenant Commander MacIntyre, USN, had ever worried about, and it hadn't
entered his or 'Tanni's head when Sean and Harriet were conceived, for it had
seemed preposterous that the monarchical government of a long-dead empire might
be maintained. But as Tsien Tao-ling had pointed out twenty years past, it was loyalty
to the Crown—to Colin MacIntyre's person—which held humanity together despite
its legacy of rivalries, and many years must pass before that primal source of
loyalty could be buttressed by others. Colin had been amazed that someone who
had been the commander-in-chief of the last Communist power on Earth could make
that statement, but Tao-ling had been right. And because he had, Colin and
Jiltanith had no option but to think in dynastic terms.
And perhaps, he mused,
as he stepped out onto the balcony and saw his wife dozing in the summer
sunlight, that was good. If their hands had been forced, the decision had still
proved there was a future . . . and that they had the courage to love again
after love had hurt them so cruelly.
He smiled and crossed to
Jiltanith, bending over her under Bia's drowsy warmth, and kissed her gently.
* * *
"I'm afraid you're
right, Dahak." Ninhursag scratched her nose and nodded. "We've put
every senior officer under a microscope—hell, we're down to lieutenants—and
the only bad apples we've found are deceased, so it looks like we've closed off
Mister X's penetration there."
"I must confess I
had anticipated neither that his penetration might be so limited," Dahak
replied, "nor that he would dispose of his minions so summarily."
"Ummmm."
Ninhursag leaned back and crossed her legs as she contemplated their findings.
Dahak was an enormous asset for any security officer. The computer might not
yet have developed the ability to "play a hunch," but he'd achieved total
penetration of Bia's datanets, and he was a devastatingly thorough and acute
analyst. He and Ninhursag had started with a top-down threat analysis of every
officer outside Colin's inner circle, then used Dahak's access to every
database in Bia to test their analyses. Where necessary, ONI agents had added
on-the-ground investigation to Dahak's efforts, usually without even realizing
what they were doing or why. By now, the computer could tell Admiral MacMahan
where every Fleet and Marine officer in the Bia System had been at any given
minute in the last fifteen years. Of course, he didn't have anything like that
degree of penetration in the Sol System. Not even the hypercom was capable of
real-timing data at that range, and Earth's datanets were still far more
decentralized than Birhat's. But even with those limitations, his access to the
military's every order and report had allowed him to clear most of Sol's senior
officers, as well.
"Apparently Mister
X takes the adage about dead men telling no tales to heart," Ninhursag
observed now.
"True. Yet
eliminating his agents, however much it may contribute to his security, also
deprives him of their future services. That would seem somewhat premature of
him—unless he has acquired all the access his plans, whatever they may be, require."
"Yeah."
Ninhursag frowned at that unpalatable thought. "Of course, he may have
been a bit too smart for his own good. We know about him now, and knowing he
doesn't have a military conduit frees us up a lot."
"Yet by the same
token, it deprives us of potential access into his own network. We have
exhausted all leads available to us, Ninhursag."
"Yeah," she
sighed again. "Damn. How I wish I knew what he was after! Just
sitting here waiting for him to take another shot doesn't appeal to me at all.
He's got too good a track record."
"Agreed."
Dahak paused, then spoke rather carefully, even for him. "It has occurred
to me, however, that our concentration on the military, while logical, may have
had the unfortunate consequence of narrowing our vision."
"How so?"
"We have proceeded
on the assumption that he himself was of or closely connected to the military,
or that the military was in some wise essential to his objectives. If such is
not, indeed, the case, may we not have devoted insufficient attention to other
areas of vulnerability?"
"That's an endemic
security concern, Dahak. We have to start someplace where we can establish a
'clear zone,' and we've got one now—physically, as well as in an investigative
sense. We can be fairly confident the entire Bia System is clear, now, so we
can assume Colin and 'Tanni are safe from direct physical attack, and knowing
the military is clear—now—gives us the resources to mount a counteroffensive of
our own. But if Mister X is a civilian—even one in government service
somewhere—our chance of finding him's a lot lower."
Dahak made a soft
electronic sound of agreement. Entry level positions for civilian politicians
and bureaucrats were subject to less intensive background scrutinies, and
civilian careers seldom included the periodic security checks military men and
women took for granted. When it came to civilians, he and Ninhursag lacked
anything remotely approaching Battle Fleet's central databases, and their
ability to vet suspects was enormously reduced.
"Even worse,"
the admiral said after a moment, "Mister X knows what he's after, and that
gives him the initiative. Until we figure out what he wants, we can't even
predict what he's likely to do. Every security chief in history's worried about
what he may have overlooked."
"Granted. I only
raise the point because I feel it is important that we maintain our guard
against all contingencies to the best of our ability."
"Point taken. And
that's precisely why I see more reason than ever to keep this on a need-to-know
basis. Especially since we don't know who in the civil service might
have been suborned. Or who's vulnerable in the same way Vincente Cruz
was."
"A wise precaution.
But may this not create problems when your ONI agents begin operations on
Earth? They will inevitably be seen as interlopers, and the decision not to
inform even the highest levels of the civilian security forces as to why their
presence is necessary will exacerbate that perception. Indeed, it may even lead
to a certain degree of institutional obstructionism in what humans call 'turf
wars.' "
"If there are
any turf wars, I guarantee they'll be short. Ultimate responsibility for the
Imperium's security rests right here, in my office. ONI's the senior service,
and if anybody thinks different, I'll just have to show him the error of his
ways, won't I?"
Admiral MacMahan's smile
was cold. Which suited Dahak very well indeed.
* * *
Lawrence Jefferson's
pleasant expression masked a most unpleasant mood as he and Horus walked
together to the Shepard Center mat-trans. Alert bodyguards watched over the
Governor, and knowing his own actions had made them inevitable was irritating.
Yet he'd had no choice. He'd known having Gus van Gelder killed would almost
have to shake the Imperium's leadership into a fundamental reassessment of its
security needs, but it had been essential to unmask Gus' mole. And, having done
so, the only man who knew he'd had access to those briefing notes had to be
removed, as well.
He rather regretted the
deaths of Erika, Hans, and Jochaim van Gelder. Gus, of course, would have had
to go eventually, but it had offended Jefferson's innate tidiness to eliminate
him so messily. On the other hand, his early removal had worked out far better
than Jefferson had dared plan for. A successful conspirator didn't base
long-term strategy on a gift from the gods which made him the person charged
with catching himself, but that didn't make him ungrateful when it was given.
And if Horus' security was better now, it still wasn't impenetrable . . .
particularly against his own security chief.
No, Jefferson's true
unhappiness had less to do with defenses which couldn't, in the end, really
matter than with the news from Birhat. The last thing he needed was for the
imperial family to produce another heir! He'd already been forced to dispose of
one pair, and now he might have to do the whole job over again—especially since
Jiltanith had already announced her intention to visit her father on Earth for
the birth. Which, he thought disgustedly, was precisely the sort of thing she would
do just when he needed her and Colin in the same, neat crosshairs on Birhat.
Of course, he reminded
himself as he and Horus stepped up onto the mat-trans platform, pregnancy
wasn't something whose timing even Imperial bioscience could predict with
absolute accuracy. But if the doctors were right, Jiltanith would not give birth,
after all, for she—and her unborn children—would die two weeks before she did.
* * *
The Planetary Duke of
Terra grinned as he and his lieutenant governor entered the conference room.
Hector MacMahan—still grim, but no longer an ice-encased stranger—had brought
Tinker Bell, and Brashieel had brought his own Narkhana, one of her genetically
altered pups.
Horus watched Narkhana
collapse as Tinker Bell leapt upon him and wrestled him to the floor. He rolled
on the rug, thrusting back at her with all four feet while their happy growls
mingled. For a dog well into her third decade, Tinker Bell was remarkably spry,
thanks to her own limited biotechnics, yet she had no conception of the
tremendous strength Narkhana was reining in to let her win, nor of just how far
her son's intellect surpassed her own. Even if she'd been able to conceptualize
such things, she would never have known, for her children would never tell her,
and there was something both hilarious and poignant in watching them revert to
utter doggishness in her presence.
Hector looked up and saw
the late arrivals, and a whistle brought Tinker Bell instantly to his side. She
flopped down at his feet, panting cheerfully as she prepared to put up with
another of the incomprehensible human things her person did. Horus raised a
sardonic eyebrow at his grandson, and Hector looked back with a bland innocence
he'd forgotten how to assume for far too many months. For all her
boisterousness, Tinker Bell was well behaved when Hector chose to remind her to
be.
"Horus, Lawrence.
Glad you could make it," Colin said, standing to shake hands. Horus
squeezed back, then opened his arms to his daughter's embrace and slid into the
chair beside Jefferson's.
"Now that you're
here," Colin went on, "let me introduce someone very special. Horus,
you've already met, but it's been a while since you've seen her. Gentlemen,
this is Eve."
Horus inclined his head
to the slender being on the pad beside Brashieel's. She was much more delicate
than Brashieel, and several centimeters shorter, but her crest was magnificent.
Brashieel's, like that of all male Narhani, was the same gray-green as the rest
of his hide; Eve's was half again as large, proportionally, and shot with
glorious color. Now that crest fanned in a graceful expression that conveyed
greeting and thanks for his courtesy with an edge of embarrassment at the fuss
being made over her, and it was hard for him to remember she wasn't quite seven
years old.
Jefferson bowed in turn,
and Brashieel preened with pride beside her. The Narhani were a hierarchical
race, and there'd never been much doubt the first Narhani female would become
the bride of the first Narhani nest lord, but it was clear that more than duty
and mutual expectation flourished between these two. Horus was glad for
them—and not just because Eve represented the culmination of his dead
daughter's greatest project.
"We've got several
things on today's agenda," Colin announced, "but first things first.
Horus, 'Tanni and I want you to make sure the Earth-side news channels are
ready for our broadcast."
"In truth."
Jiltanith's smile was almost as lovely as of old. Not quite, but it was getting
there, and the knowledge that she was to be a mother again showed. " 'Twas
kindness greater than e'er any mother, be she sovereign lady or no, might
expect of so many to wish her unborn babes so well, Father. 'Twill heal our
souls to tell them all how greatly their letters have helped to heal our
hearts."
"That," Horus
said, "will be my very great pleasure."
"Thank you," Colin
said warmly, then grinned. "I know the Council's got to talk about all
those little niggling things like taxes, budgets, and engineering projects, but
first there's something really important. Eve?"
"Of course, Your
Majesty." Eve's vocoder had been set to produce a female human voice, and
Horus felt a familiar stinging sensation in his eyes when he heard it. At Eve's
own request, the voice was Isis Tudor's. It was her way of honoring her human
"mother's" memory, and he'd once been afraid it would hurt to hear
it. But there was no pain. Only pride.
The adolescent Narhani
woman reached into her belt pouch and withdrew a half-dozen holo plates. She
laid one before her with a slender, six-fingered hand, adjusting it with
nervous precision, then looked up at the humans seated around the table.
"As you know,"
she said with a formality at odds with her youth, "the Nest of Narhan
plans to commemorate the Siege of Earth with a gift to our human friends. We do
this for many reasons, including our nest's desire to express sorrow for the
deaths we caused and thanks for all humanity has given us when we might have
expected only destruction. Memorials, such as your own Memorial at Shepard
Center, are important to us, as well, and it is our hope that this will be the
beginning of an Imperial Memorial. One in which our nest shares and which will
be completed when the Nest of Aku'Ultan has also been freed."
She paused, obviously
relieved to have completed her formal statement without errors, and Brashieel's
crest rose even higher in pride.
"Our gift,"
she said more naturally, "is now finished."
She pressed a button,
and a soft gasp went up as a light sculpture appeared above the plate. It
wasn't in the abstract style human artists were currently enamored of; it was
representational, a reproduction of another sculpture worked in finest marble .
. . and it was magnificent.
A rearing Narhani rose
high on his rear hooves to fight the bonds which held him captive. The cruel,
galling collar about his neck drew blood as he pitted his frenzied strength
against its massive chain, and the humans who looked upon him knew Narhani
expressions well enough to read the despair in his eyes and flattened crest,
but his teeth were bared in snarling defiance. He was without hope yet
unconquered, and the anguish of his captivity wrenched at them.
Yet he was not alone.
Broken chains flailed from his wrists, the exquisitely detailed links shorn by
some sharp edge, and a human knelt beside him, torso naked but clothed from the
waist down in the uniform of the Imperial Marines. His face was drawn with
fatigue, but his eyes were as fierce as the prisoner's, and he held a chisel in
one hand, its honed sharpness hard against the iron ring which held the Narhani
pent, while the other raised a hammer high to bring it smashing down.
The detail was superb,
the anatomy perfect, the two species' very different expressions captured with
haunting fidelity. Sweat beaded the human's bare skin, and each drop of Narhani
blood was so real the viewer held his breath, watching for it to fall. They
were trapped forever in the stone—human and Narhani, fleshed in marble by a
master's hand—and for all their alienness, they were one.
"My God,"
Colin whispered into the silence. "It's . . . it's— I don't have the
words, Brashieel. I just . . ." His voice trailed off, and Brashieel
lowered his own crest.
"What you see in it
is only truth, Colin," he said softly. "My people are not so gifted
with words as yours; we put our truths in other things. But while this
lasts—" he gestured at the light-born statue before them "—we of the
Nest of Narhan will never forget what humans have given us. We came against you
thinking you nest-killers, but you taught us who the true nest-killer is and,
when you might have slain us, gave us life. You gave us more than life."
His hand stoked Eve's crest gently. "But most of all, you gave us truth,
and so we return that truth to you. To all your people, but especially to you,
for you are our nest lord now."
"I—" Colin
blushed as he had not in years, then looked up and met Brashieel's eyes
squarely. "Thank you. I will never receive anything more beautiful . . .
or that I will treasure more."
"Then we are
content, High Nest Lord."
Lawrence Jefferson gazed
raptly at the statue through the buzz of admiration which followed, and not
even his reverence was completely feigned. He cleared his throat when the first
rush of conversation slowed.
"Brashieel, may
I—" He paused, then shrugged slightly. "I hesitate to ask it, but may
I have a holo of this for a place of honor in my office?"
"Of course. We have
brought several copies for our friends, although we hope they will not be made
public before the formal gifting."
"May I display it
if I promise to hide it from any newsies?"
"We would be
honored."
* * *
The Lieutenant Governor
of Earth was almost as carefully protected as her Governor. Whenever he was in
residence, security troops, unobtrusive but alert, prowled the grounds of the
Kentucky estate the Jeffersons had owned for generations. But none of those
protectors knew of the secret measures which let him elude their guardianship
at need.
Lawrence Jefferson
stepped from the concealed tunnel exit eight kilometers from his home. Once it
had served the Underground Railroad, but it had been refurbished and extended
in more recent years when Senator Jefferson had been recruited by Anu's chief
operations officer. Not even Kirinal's most trusted subordinates had known of
its existence, but Jefferson had labored upon it under her direction,
incorporating certain unobtrusive elements of Imperial technology to make it
undetectable. At the time, those measures had been aimed at Horus and the
scanners of the hidden battleship Nergal, yet they'd proved equally
efficacious against those of a planetoid named Dahak.
A flyer waited in a
carefully dilapidated old barn, and Jefferson climbed aboard and set the holo
plate almost lovingly on the empty seat beside him. He'd managed to obtain
copies of the preliminary study, but he'd never expected to receive the exact
image of the finished sculpture, and his smile was unpleasant as he activated
the drive and, even for him, highly illegal stealth field and lifted quietly
into the night.
It wasn't a long trip,
though reason told him he shouldn't be making it, but he wanted to make this
delivery in person, and the risk was slight. Yet even had it been greater, he
would have made this flight himself. There were times when the elaborate
deception of his life palled upon him, when he wanted—needed—to be about his
work himself. He built his strategies like a chess master, but there was a
gambler within him, as well, one who sometimes felt the need to throw the dice
from his own hand.
He landed outside a
shed-like structure and keyed a complicated admittance code through his neural
feed. There was a moment of hesitation, and then its door slid open. Imperial
machinery stood silent in the bright overhead lights as he walked to stand
beside the heroically scaled sculpture that machinery had wrought in exact
duplicate of the sketches he'd provided.
A stoop-shouldered man
turned to greet him. His artist's eye told him he had never seen his employer's
undisguised face, and he was glad, for he believed that made him safe. He
didn't know he, too, would be eliminated anyway when his task was done.
Lawrence Jefferson took no chances.
"Good
evening," the stoop-shouldered man said. "No one told me you were
coming in person, sir."
"I know. But I've
brought you a gift." Jefferson set the holo plate on a work table and
pressed the button.
"Magnificent,"
the man breathed. He looked back and forth between the sculpture and his own
handiwork. "I see a few details will need changing. I must say, sir, that
this is even more spectacular than the sketches indicated."
"I quite agree,"
Jefferson said sincerely. "Will there be any schedule problems?"
"No, no. It's only
a matter of arranging the input and then letting the sculpting unit do its
job."
"Excellent. In that
case, I'd like you to go ahead and input it now; I need to take this with me
when I leave."
"Of course. If
you'll excuse me?"
The stoop-shouldered man
bent over his equipment, and Jefferson stood back, hands folded behind him
while he admired the work his doomed henchman had already produced. It looked
just like real marble, and so it should, given how much it was costing.
Perfect, he thought. It
was perfect. And no one who looked at it would ever guess the secret it
concealed, for the gravitonic warhead and its arming circuits were quite, quite
invisible.
Israel's captain was
in a grumpy mood.
It wasn't anyone's
fault, but Israel's crew were bright, competent, confident . . . and
young. And, as bright, confident people are wont to do, they'd underestimated
their task—which made their lack of progress enormously irritating. Still, Sean
told himself with determined cheer, for people who'd found out they were
approaching a populated world only in the last half hour of their flight they
weren't doing all that badly. And Sandy had said she and Harry had some
good news for a change.
He lay back in the
captain's couch, studying the image from one of the stealthed remotes. They'd
decided to rely on old-fashioned, line-of-sight radio, something an Imperial
scan system probably wouldn't even think to look for, rather than more readily
detected fold coms to operate their remotes. That limited their operating
radius, but it gave them enough reach for a fair sampling, and Sean watched a
kneeling row of villagers weed their way across a field of some sort of tuber
and wondered how whatever they were tending tasted.
He glanced up as Tamman
arrived, completing their gathering, then turned his gaze to Sandy. She and
Harriet relied heavily on Brashan's hard-headed pragmatism to shoot down their
wilder hypotheses and upon Tamman to build and maintain their surveillance
systems, but the major burden of analysis was theirs, and Sean was delighted to
leave them to it.
"Okay, Sandy,"
he said now. "You've got the floor."
She rubbed the tip of
her nose for a moment, then cleared her throat.
"Let's start with
the good news: we finally have a language program of sorts." Sean sat up
straighter, and she smiled. "As I say, that's the good news. The bad news
is that without a proper philologist, we've had to fall back on a 'trial and
error' approach, with predictably crude results.
"It helps that
they're literate and use movable type, but it would've helped more if the old
alphabet had survived. Out of forty-one characters, we've found three that might
be derived from Universal; the rest look like somebody tried to transcribe Old
Norse into cuneiform. Working at night, we've managed to scan several printed
books through our remotes, but they didn't do us much good until about six
weeks ago when Harry found this."
The display changed to a
recorded view looking down from some high vantage point on a circle of
children. A bearded man in a robe of blue and gold stood at its center, holding
up a picture of one of the native's odd, bipedal saddle beasts to point at a
line of jagged-edged characters beneath it.
"This," Sandy
resumed after a moment, "is a class in one of those temples of theirs.
Apparently the Church believes in universal literacy, and Tam built a
teeny-tiny remote for Harry to land on top of a beam so we could eavesdrop. It
was maddening for the first month or so, but we set up a value substitution
program in the linguistics section of Israel's comp cent, and things
started coming together early last week."
Sean nodded, glad
something had finally worked as he'd hoped it might. English was the common
tongue of the Imperium and seemed likely to remain so. Its flexibility,
concision, and adaptability were certainly vastly preferable to Universal! Age
had ossified the language of the Fourth Imperium and Empire, and, given the
availability of younger, more versatile Terran languages, the Fifth Imperium
had no particular desire to speak it.
Yet all Fourth Empire
computers spoke only Universal, at least until they could be reprogrammed.
Worse, in some cases—like Mother's hardwired constitutional functions—they couldn't
be reprogrammed, so all Battle Fleet personnel had to speak Universal whether
they wanted to or not.
Cohanna's Bio-Sciences
Ministry had met that need with a dedicated implant, and with the enormous
"piggy-back" storage molycircs made possible, Battle Fleet had
decided to give its personnel all major Terran languages. That made sense in
view of their diversity—and also meant each of Israel's crewmen had a
built-in "translating" software package. True, none of the languages
in their implants' memories were quite this foreign, but if Israel's
computers could cobble up a local dictionary . . .
"As I say, it's
still patchy, but we ought to be able to make a stab at understanding what
someone says. It's going to be another matter if we try to talk back, though.
So far Harry and I have identified seven distinct dialects and what may be one
minor language, and there's no way we could mingle with the locals without a
lot more work."
"How much
more?" Tamman asked.
"I can't say,
Tam—not for certain—but I'd estimate another month of input. At the moment, we
can read about forty percent of the printed material we collect, and the
percentage is expanding, but that's a far cry from understanding the spoken
language, much less conversing coherently. And we need more than simple
coherency, unless we want to scare the natives to death."
"Umph." Sean
frowned at the frozen image of the teacher. He'd hoped for better, but even
while he'd hoped, he'd known it was unreasonable.
"In the meantime,
one of our 'borrowed' books—an atlas—has given us a running start on figuring
out the geopolitics of the planet, which, by the way, the natives call
'Pardal.' We can't find the name in any of Israel's admittedly limited
records, so I suspect it's locally evolved.
"As near as we can
tell, this is what Pardal currently looks like." The display changed to a
map of Pardal's five continents and numerous island chains. The biggest
inhabited continent reminded Sean of an old-fashioned, air-foil aircraft,
flying northeast towards the polar ice cap with a second, smaller land mass
providing its tail assembly. "We made enough photomaps on the way in to
know the atlas maps aren't perfectly scaled, and we still can't read all of its
commentary, but it appears Pardal is split into hundreds of feudal
territories." Scarlet boundary lines flashed as she spoke. "At the
moment, we're located just inside the eastern border of this one, which is
called, as nearly as I can translate it, the Kingdom of Cherist.
"Now, North
Hylar—" she indicated the fuselage and wings of the "aircraft"
"—seems to be the wealthiest and most heavily populated land mass. The
'countries' are larger and seem to contain more internal subdivisions, which
suggests they may be older. It looks to us like there's been a longer period of
absorption and consolidation here, and that conclusion may be supported by the
fact that our ground site is, indeed, underneath North Hylar's largest
city." A red cursor flashed approximately dead center in North Hylar.
"South Hylar,
connected to North Hylar by this isthmus down here, is less densely populated,
probably because it doesn't have much in the way of rivers—aside from this one
big one out of the southern mountains—but that's a guess. As you can see, the
other two populated continents, Herdaana and Ishar, are located across a fairly
wide body of water—the Seldan Sea—to the west of the Hylars. These other two
continents to the east are uninhabited. As far as we can tell, the Pardalians
don't even realize they exist, and from the aerial maps, they seem to have less
human-compatible vegetation. Looks like they were never terraformed—which, in
turn, suggests they never were inhabited, even before the bio-weapon.
"Of the settled
continents, both Hylars are extremely mountainous, and Ishar's on the desert
side. Herdaana's much flatter and seems to be the bread basket of Pardal, and a
lot of the territories in Herdaana and Ishar alike have Hylaran names prefixed
by 'gyhar,' or 'new,' which probably means they were colonized—or
conquered—by North Hylar. It may or may not imply a continuing relationship
between those territories and their 'mother countries' back home. Some evidence
suggests that; other evidence, particularly the small size and apparent
competition between the Herdaana states, suggests otherwise, but we simply
can't read the atlas well enough to know, and the entire continent's out of
range of our remotes."
She paused, brow
wrinkled in frustration, then shrugged.
"All right, that's
the political structure, but there's a catch, because despite all these
nominally independent feudal states, the entire planet seems to be one huge
theocracy. That surprised us, given Pardal's primitive technology. I'd have
thought simple communication delays would do in any planet-wide institution,
but that was before we figured out what this is."
The display changed to a
tall, gantry-like structure with two massive, pivoted arms, and she shook her
head almost admiringly.
"That, gentlemen,
is a semaphore tower. They've got chains of them across most of the planet. Not
all; they'd need ships to reach Herdaana and Ishar, and given the mountains on
the isthmus, they probably send over-water couriers to South Hylar, too. It's a
daylight-only system, but it still means they can send messages a whole
lot faster than we'd suspected."
"Ingenious,"
Sean murmured.
"Exactly. Obviously
we're still guessing, but it looks like the Church deliberately keeps political
power decentralized, and control of the communications net would give them a
heck of a tactical edge. I'd say they push it to the max; when the Church says
jump, it's a good bet the local prince only asks how high. In addition to the
semaphore towers, every town—and most of the villages—in range of our remotes
contains at least one Church complex. Some larger towns have dozens, and they
do a lot of business. Our reading class is only a tiny part of it.
"More to the point,
our power-source city is where the semaphore chains converge—the Pardalian
equivalent of the Vatican. In fact, the entire city is simply called 'The
Temple,' and as far as we can tell, it's ruled by the high priest as both
secular and temporal lord. Interestingly enough, the title of said high priest
appears to be eurokat a'demostano." Sean looked up sharply, and she
nodded. "Even allowing for several millennia of erosion, that sounds too
much like eurokath adthad diamostanu to be a coincidence."
" 'Port Admiral,'
" Sean translated softly, frowning at the city's light dot. "You
think the Church is tied directly to the quarantine system?"
"Probably,"
Harriet answered for Sandy. "The Temple's site certainly suggests it,
especially given this 'port admiral' priestly title. And if they have, in fact,
preserved any access to the computer running the system, it'd have to be purely
vocal; there can't be anyone out there with neural feeds. If they're running it
on some sort of rote basis, that might explain why the system seemed so slow
and clumsy when it attacked us; they literally didn't know what they were
doing. On the other hand, if they do have voice access, think what it
might mean for a religion. It'd be like the very voice of God."
"Which might help
explain the Church's authority," Sean mused aloud.
"Exactly,"
Sandy said, "though we've turned up a few suggestions that the Church's
current political power is a relatively recent innovation. And it might
also explain how they could have contact with high-tech without realizing it was
technology. It isn't a machine; it's 'God.' "
"Which,"
Tamman observed sourly, "doesn't help us out at all, Sean. Not in terms of
getting hold of the computer, I mean. If it's their holy of holies, access is
going to be limited, I'd think—unless we want to shoot our way into neural feed
range, anyway."
"We're a long way
from crossing that bridge yet, Tam. Anyway, I'd prefer to do a personal recon
on the ground before we make any plans."
"Perhaps,"
Brashan said, "but I fear you'll have a problem there." He changed
the display image to a closeup from one of their approach opticals.
"Observe a typical citizen of the Temple."
"Oy vey!" Sean
sighed, and Sandy laughed at his disgusted tone. The image was far from clear,
but the individual in it was perhaps a hundred and fifty centimeters tall,
red-haired and blue-eyed—the complete antithesis of any of Israel's
human crew.
"Indeed,"
Brashan replied. "Obviously, I could never pass as anything other than an
alien, but I fear the same is true of all of you in the Temple."
"Not
necessarily," Sandy said, and Sean brightened as the image changed again.
This time the man standing before him had dark hair. His eyes were brown, not
the black of the old Imperial Race—or of Sean or Harriet, for that matter—but
the newcomer stood just over a hundred seventy centimeters, far short of Sean's
own towering height but getting closer.
"This," Sandy
continued, "is a citizen of something called the Princedom of Malagor.
It's one of the bigger national units—a bit larger, in fact, than the Kingdom
of Aris, which contains the Temple—and it's just over the Cherist border from
us. We've been watching it through our remotes, and I'd say the Malagorans are
an independent sort. Malagor's very mountainous, even for North Hylar, and
these seem to be typical, stiff-necked mountaineers, without a lot of nobles.
Their hereditary ruler's limited to the title of 'prince,' and I'd guess
there's a lot of local government, but that doesn't make them stay-at-homes.
There's an historical maps section in our atlas, and there've been lots
of battles in the Duchy of Keldark, which lies between Malagor and Aris. It
looks like Malagor and Aris were probably political rivals and Aris came out on
top because of the Temple."
"Not so good,"
Sean muttered. "If there's a tradition of hostility, trying to pass as
Malagorans wouldn't exactly get us a red carpet in Aris."
"Perhaps not,"
Brashan said, "but consider: the Temple is the center of a world
religion."
"Oho!
Pilgrims!"
"Maybe, but let's
not get carried away, Sean," Sandy cautioned. "Remember all of this
is still guesswork."
"Understood. Can
you bring your map back up?"
Sandy obliged, and Sean
frowned as he stared at it. Israel lay hidden in the spine of the
westernmost of North Hylar's major mountain ranges, while Aris lay to the east
of an even higher range. Malagor occupied a rough, tumbled plateau between the
two before they merged to form the craggy spine of the isthmus into South
Hylar.
"I wish we had a
line of sight to run remotes into the Temple," he muttered.
"Perhaps,"
Brashan replied. "On the other hand, our position puts the mountains
between us and any surveillance systems the Temple might boast."
"True, true."
Sean shook himself. "All right, Sandy. It looks to me like you guys are
doing good. I'm impressed. But—"
"But what've we
done for you lately?" She smiled, and he grinned back.
"More or less. We
need to refine your data a lot before we poke our noses out. Would it help if
we took a stealthed cutter over closer to the Temple and ran some additional
remotes in on it?"
"Maybe." Sandy
considered, then shook her head. "Nope, not yet. We're already pulling in
more data than we can integrate, and I'd rather not risk running afoul of any
on-site detection systems until we know more."
"Makes sense to
me," Sean agreed. "That about it for now, then?"
"I'm afraid so.
We've spotted a Church library in one of the towns just west of here, and Tam
and I are going to run in a couple of remotes tonight. Harry and I may be able
to develop something out of that."
* * *
Father Stomald kilted
his blue robe above his knees and waded out into the icy holding pond to
examine the new waterwheel. Folmak Folmakson, the millwright, fidgeted while he
waited, and Stomald frowned. A priest must be eternally vigilant this close to
the Valley of the Damned, especially with the Trial so recently past and the strange
shooting star to remind him of his duties. At moments like this he was
unhappily aware of his own youth, but, he reminded himself, a man need not be
aged to hear God in his heart.
He sloshed up onto the
bank of the millrace and peered down at the wheel. To be sure, it did
look odd. Stomald had never heard of a wheel driven by water which fell from
above rather than turning submerged paddles, but he could see several
advantages. For one thing, it required much less water, and that meant it could
run for far more of the year in drier regions. Lack of rain was seldom a
problem in Malagor, but the new design's efficiency meant more wheels could be
run with the same water supply even here.
He frowned again,
listening to the creak of the wheel while he applied the Test. It was a
particularly important task here, for Malagor's artisans had always been
notoriously restive under Mother Church's injunctions, even since the
Schismatic Wars. Indeed, he sometimes suspected they'd grown still more so
since then . . . and he knew many of them still harbored dreams of Malagoran
independence. Within the last six five-days alone, he'd heard no less than four
people whistling the forbidden tune to "Malagor the Free," and he was
deeply concerned over how he ought to respond to it. Yet he was relieved to
note that this wheel, at least, didn't seem to violate any of the Tenets. It
was powered by water and required the creation of no new tools or processes. It
might be suspiciously innovative, but Stomald could see no demonic influence.
It was still a water wheel, and those had been in use forever.
He banished his frown
and replaced it with a properly meditative expression as he splashed back
towards his anxious audience. He could, he decided, pronounce on this without
bothering Bishop Frenaur, and that was a distinct relief. Like most senior
prelates, the bishop was unhappy at being called away from the Temple for
anything other than his twice-a-year pastoral visitation. Stomald didn't like
to think how he might react if some village under-priest, especially a
native-born Malagoran, suggested a special conclave was required, and the fact
that Folmak hadn't introduced a single new technique gave him an out.
Which, Stomald thought a
bit guiltily, might be fortunate in more ways than one. The new catechism
suggested Mother Church was entering one of her more dogmatic periods, and some
of the Inquisition's recent actions boded ill for Stomald's stubborn
countrymen. Bishop Frenaur just might have felt compelled to make an example of
Folmak.
He stepped out of the
water, trying to hide an unpriestly shiver, and Folmak shifted from foot to
foot, almost wringing his hands. The millwright was twice Stomald's age and
more, and it struck the priest—not for the first time—how absurd it was for
someone older than his own father to look at him so appealingly. He scolded
himself—again, not for the first time—for the thought. Folmak wasn't looking to
Stomald Gerakson for guidance; he was looking to Father Stomald of Cragsend,
and Father Stomald spoke not from the authority of his own years but with that
of Mother Church Herself.
"Very well, Folmak,
I've looked at it," the young priest said. He paused, unable to resist the
ignoble desire to cloak his pronouncement in mystery a moment longer, then smiled.
"As far as I can tell, your contraption satisfies all the Tenets. If
you'll walk to the vicarage with me, I'll fill out the Attestation right
now."
A huge grin transfigured
the millwright's bearded face. Stomald permitted himself to grin back, then
clapped Folmak on one brawny shoulder, and the unsullied joy of serving his
flock made him look even younger.
"In fact," he
chuckled, "I believe I've a small cask of Sister Yurid's winter ale left,
and it strikes me that this might be an appropriate moment to broach it. Don't
you think so?"
* * *
This time Sandy's eyes
actually sparkled. Harriet seemed almost as excited, and Sandy started talking
even before the others were all seated.
"People," she
said, "we still haven't figured out how Pardal lost its tech base in the
first place, but at least we know now why it hasn't built another one! We spent
several hours in the Church library night before last, reading the books into
memory through the remotes. We didn't have time to do any content scans then, but
it turns out one of our finds is a book on Church doctrine and a couple of
others are Church histories. For whatever reason, the Church has anathematized
technology."
"Wait a
minute," Sean said. "I considered that, but it doesn't hold up. Not
for forty-five thousand years, anyway."
"Why not?"
"Just think about
it for a minute. Let's say that at some point in the past—some pretty long ago
point, judging from what's left of the Imperial ruins—the Church did
proscribe technology. I can think of a few scenarios which might lead to that,
like Harry's original suggestion that they dusted themselves out or whipped up
a bio-weapon all their own. Either of those could have killed off most of the
techies, and I suppose the destruction could have created an anti-technical
revulsion that resulted in a 'religious' anti-tech stance. Certainly something
caused them to lose their original alphabet, their original language,
science—all of it—and that sounds more like systematic suppression than simple
damage to the tech base.
"But having done
that, the Church wouldn't even know what technology was by the time it
got a few thousand years down the road. How could they prevent it from
reemerging in a homegrown variety? Without some term of reference to know what
constituted 'high tech,' how could they recognize it to snuff it when it turned
up again?"
"Fair enough,"
Sandy agreed, "but you don't have the full picture. First, they didn't
completely lose Universal. We thought they had, but that was before we hit the
Church documents. They're written in something called the 'Holy Tongue,' using
an alphabet restricted to the priesthood, and for all intents and purposes the
Holy Tongue is a corrupted version of Universal.
"Second, the Church
is definitely connected to the quarantine system. There are several references
in here to 'the Voice of God'; in fact, their whole liturgical year is set up
around what has to be the quarantine system's central computer—there are
festivals called 'Fire Test,' 'Plot Test,' 'High Fire Test,' and the like.
There are also references to something called 'Holy Servitors' that I'd guess
are maintenance mechs from the shipyard, since they appear mysteriously to tend
the inner shrine. There's no sign these people understand what's really going
on, but they seem to recognize that the system's purpose is to protect their
world from contamination, though they've turned it into a religious matter. The
Voice is part of God's plan to protect them from demons, and it not only
'proves' God's existence but their own rectitude. If they weren't doing what
God wants, His Voice would tell them so, right?
"Third, way back
whenever, the Church set up a definition of what constitutes acceptable
technology. In essence, Pardalians are forbidden anything but muscle, wind, or
water power, so they don't have to know what high tech is; they've set up
preconditions which preclude its existence.
"There's more to it
than that—there's a whole, complicated evaluating procedure called the Test of
Mother Church. Bear in mind that we're talking about something written in this
debased version of Universal rather than the vulgar tongue, so we can make lots
more sense of it. Apparently the Test consists of applying a number of Tenets
which consider whether or not any new development violates the power
restrictions or requires new tools, new procedures, or new knowledge. If it
does, it's right out."
"Hold it." It
was Tamman's turn to object. "These people have gunpowder, and that
doesn't rely on muscles, wind, or water!"
"No," Harriet
agreed, "but Earth certainly had gunpowder before it got beyond
waterwheels and windmills, and the Church occasionally—very
occasionally—grants dispensations through a system of special Conclaves. It
takes a long time to work through, but it means advances aren't entirely
impossible. We've found several dispensations scattered over the last six
hundred local years—almost a thousand Terran years—and most of them seem to be
fairly pragmatic things like kitchen-sink chemistry and pretty darn empirical
medicine and agriculture. We're still groping in the dark, but it looks
like there've been some 'progressive' periods—which, unfortunately, seem to
provoke backlash periods of extreme conservatism. The key thing, though, is
that the Church is continually on the lookout to suppress anything that even
looks like the scientific method, and without that there's no systematic basis
for technological innovation."
"And people put up
with it?" Tamman shook his head. "I find that hard to accept."
"That's because of
your own cultural baggage," Sandy said. "You come from a technical
society and you accept technology as good, or at least inevitable; these people
have the opposite orientation. And remember that the Church knows God is
on its side; they have proof of it several times a year when the Voice speaks.
Not only that," her excited voice turned grimmer, "but their version
of the Inquisition has some pretty grisly punishments for anybody who dares to
fool around with forbidden knowledge."
"Inquisition?"
Sean looked up. "I don't like the sound of that."
"Me neither,"
Harriet said. "I had to stop after the first little bit, but Sandy and
Brashan waded through the whole ghastly thing." She shuddered. "Even
the little I read is going to give me nightmares for a week."
"Me, too,"
Sandy murmured. Her bright eyes were briefly haunted, and she brooded down at
the deck for a long, silent moment. Then she shook herself. "Like a lot of
intolerant religions, their Inquisition stacks the deck. First, they're only
doing it to 'save souls,' including that of the 'heretic' in question, and
they've picked up on the theory of the mortification of the flesh to 'expiate'
sins. That means they're actually helping the people they murder. Worse,
they're never wrong. Their religious law enshrines the use of torture during
questioning, which means the accused always confess, even knowing how they'll
be put to death, and—" she looked up and met Sean's gaze "—the actual
executions are even worse. Pour décourager les autres, I suppose."
"Brrrr."
Sean's lips twisted in revulsion. "I suppose any 'church' that packs that
kind of whammy probably could keep the peasants in line."
"Especially with
the advantage of a whole secret language. They can promote universal literacy
in the vulgar tongue and still have most of the advantages of a priestly
monopoly on education. And they've got a pretty big carrot to go with their
stick. The Church collects a tithe—looks like somewhere around twelve
percent—from every soul on the planet. A lot of that loot gets used to build
temples, commission religious art, and so forth, but a big chunk is loaned out
to secular rulers at something like thirty percent, and another goes into
charitable works. You see? They've got their creditor nobles on a string, and the
poor look to them for relief when times get bad. Sean, they've got this planet
sewed up three ways to Sunday!"
"Damn. And they're
the ones sitting on top of the quarantine ground station!" Sean shook his
head in disgust.
"They sure
are," Harriet sighed.
"Yes, they
are," Sandy agreed, "but remember that we're still putting the whole
picture together. We've just filled in a big piece, and discovering this 'Holy
Tongue' gives us a Rosetta Stone of sorts for the vulgar languages, as well,
but there's a lot we haven't even begun on. For instance, there's something
called 'The Valley of the Damned' that sounds interesting to me."
" 'Valley of the
Damned'?" Sean repeated. "What sort of valley?"
"We don't know yet,
but it's utterly proscribed. There may be other, similar sites, but this is the
only one we've found so far. It's up in the mountains of northern Malagor,
outside the reach of our remotes. Anyone who goes in is eternally damned for
consorting with demons. If they come back out again, they have to be
ritualistically—and hideously—killed. It looks to me like the preliminaries
probably take at least a couple of days, and then they burn the poor bastards
alive," she finished grimly.
"It sounds,"
Sean mused, "like whatever's in there must represent a mighty serious
threat to the Church's neat little social structure. Or they think it
does, anyway." He frowned, and then his eyes began to gleam. "Just
where, exactly, did you say this valley is?"
Sean snaked around the
feet of the towering summits at a cautious four hundred KPH. His sluggish speed
had made the journey long and dragging, but it was the best he could manage,
for the cutter's terrain-following systems were down. That forced him to fly
hands-on, which was a pain. But few things were harder to spot than a stealthed
cutter with no active emissions and flying low, slow, and nape-of-the-earth
through mountains, and until they knew the quarantine system wouldn't
swat atmospheric targets, anything that might draw its attention was right out.
Inconsequential thoughts
flickered as he concentrated on his flying. All the unoccupied seats in the
twenty-man cutter made Israel's human crewmen uncomfortably aware of
just how alone—and how far from home—they were, yet it was even worse for Brashan.
They had to leave someone aboard the battleship at all times, and his nonhuman
appearance made him the obvious choice. He'd taken it better than Sean could
have, especially since they'd agreed to forego any com signals that might be
detected. Not only was Brashan barred from sharing their exploration trip, he
couldn't even know what they'd found until they got back to tell him!
The cramped valley
narrowed further, and he dumped another fifty KPH. It was nerve-wracking to fly
solely by Mark One Eyeball (well, Mark Two or Three, given his enhancement)
through the inevitable distortion of its stealth field, and he swore softly as
they came up on an acute bend.
"The Force,
Sean," Sandy whispered in his ear. "Use the Force!"
"Jerk!" he
snorted, but there was an edge of laughter in his retort and tense muscles
loosened back up a bit. He spared her a brief smile, then returned his
attention to his console as their valley joined another. He checked his nav
systems and headed up the new gorge with a small surge of excitement. It was
even narrower and twistier, but they were getting close enough that this one
might take them all the way in.
He made another forty
kilometers, then cursed again—less softly—as the valley ended in a steep cliff.
He halted the cutter and lifted it vertically, hugging the rock wall. The dim
light of Pardal's small moon washed scrubby trees and bare rock as tumbled
mountains fell away on every side, and Harriet sucked in a sharp breath beside
him as they topped out.
"I'm getting something
on passive!" Sean went into an instant hover, and his sister closed her
eyes, communing with her sensors, then scowled. "I can't resolve it, Sean,
but it's coming from just beyond that next mountain."
Sean banked the cutter,
angling down and around the side of the next peak, and she opened her eyes.
"Now I've lost it
entirely!" she groused.
"Good," he
said. "If it's line-of-sight, it can't see us, either. And for your
information, sister mine, our objective is 'just beyond that next mountain,' if
you and Sandy have it plotted right, so it sounds like we're going to find something
when we get there!"
Tamman grinned at him,
but Sandy plugged her own feed into Harriet's console to study her recorded
scanner readings.
"Not much, is it,
Harry?"
"No." Harriet
turned her own attention back to the data. "I make it at least six
distinct point sources, though."
"Yeah. But did you
notice the one at about oh-two-one?"
"Hm?" Harriet
frowned, then nodded. "Lots stronger than the others, isn't it? And there's
something about it . . . Damn. I wish I had a link to Israel's
computers! It reminds me of something, but I can't think what."
"Me neither.
Tam?"
Tamman glanced at the
emissions through his own feed and shrugged. "Beats me. Most of those look
like power leakages, not detection systems, but the biggie is something
else." He tapped his teeth. "Hmm. . . . You know, that just might be
an orbital power feed. Look there—see the smaller source tucked in to the east?
That looks like a leak from a big-assed bank of capacitors, and the big one's
definitely some sort of transmission. How about a ground beacon for an orbital
broadcast power system?"
"Could be,"
Sandy mused. "Hard to believe it could still be up after all this time,
but you're right about it's being a transmission, and it'd sure explain why
it's so much more powerful than the others—not to mention how there could still
be power for any active installations. But if it really is a receptor,
that means the Valley of the Damned has an active link to at least one power
satellite. Even if it's only a passive solar job, you'd think the quarantine
system would spot the transmission."
"So?" Tamman
countered. "If you and Harry are right, the Temple's running the system by
rote, so what could they do about it? For that matter, why should they even
understand what their 'Voice' was talking about?"
"Yeah."
Harriet twisted hair around a finger and glanced at her twin. "I think
Tam's right, Sean. Either way, the transmission's just a steady tone, not a
detection system. I don't see anything that looks like one, either, but I'd
rather not take the cutter much closer or give away any more scan image than we
have to until we're certain of that."
"You and me both.
What d'you think about that for a landing site?" He pointed to a wide
ledge. It was at least thirty meters across, covered in the local equivalent of
grass and brush, but a visible depression had been worn through the vegetation.
"That looks like some sort of game trail, and it's headed just about the
right way."
"How far out are
we?" Tamman asked.
" 'Bout thirty
klicks, straight-line. Don't know how far by foot."
"Suits me,"
Tamman agreed, and Harriet and Sandy nodded.
Sean slid closer,
studying the ledge. A swell of rock broke the grass close beside the game
trail, promising no hidden surprises for his landing legs, and he set the
cutter down. He held the drive until the gear stabilized, then cut power but
left the stealth field up.
"End of the
line." He tried unsuccessfully to keep the excitement out of his voice.
"Let's get our gear."
He rose from his couch
and opened the weapons locker while Sandy and Harriet slipped into the shoulder
harnesses of a pair of scanpacks. He strapped on a gun belt and grav gun and
handed matching weapons to the others. The Malagoran mountains were home to at
least two nasty predators—a sort of bear-sized cross between a wolf and a
wolverine called a "seldahk," and a vaguely feline carnivore called a
"kinokha"—both of whom had bellicose and territorial personalities.
None of them felt like walking around unarmed, and Sean wished privately that Israel's
equipment list had offered something a bit tougher than their uniforms. The
synthetic fabric the Fleet used for its uniforms was incredibly rugged by
pre-Imperial Terran standards. He had no doubt it would resist even a kinokha's
claws, but it wasn't going to stop a seldahk's jaws, nor would it stop bullets.
Of course, it was unlikely, to put it lightly, that they'd meet any armed
natives this close to the Valley of the Damned in the middle of the night, yet
kevlar underwear would have been very reassuring. Unfortunately, neither Battle
Fleet nor the Imperial Marines issued such items, which he supposed made sense,
given that nothing short of battle armor could hope to resist Imperial
weaponry.
He grinned at his own
thoughts as he and Tamman clipped extra magazines to their belts and shrugged
into knapsacks heavy with spikes, pitons, ropes, and assorted mountaineering
gear Sean hoped they weren't going to need. Then he eased his pack straps more
comfortably, opened the hatch, and led the way out into the night.
The game trail helped,
but it was far from straight, and many of its slopes were almost vertical.
Tamman took the lead while Sean brought up the rear. The formation freed
Harriet and Sandy to focus on their scanpacks (which had far more reach than
implant sensors), without worrying about anything they might meet, and the four
of them moved at a pace which would have reduced any unenhanced human to
gasping exhaustion in minutes.
The moon was still high
when Harriet threw up a hand and beckoned them all to a halt. Sean closed up
from behind as the other three clustered to wait for him, and his eyes
brightened as he looked down at last into the valley they'd come so far to
find.
It was bigger than he'd
expected—at least twenty kilometers across at its widest point and winding deep
into the mountains. A sharp bend fifteen kilometers to the north blocked their
vision, and the shallow, rushing river down its length gleamed dull pewter
under the moon. He adjusted his eyes to telescopic vision and felt a shiver of
excitement. The shapes clumped on either bank of the river at mid-valley were
half-buried in drifted ages of soil, but they were too regular and vertical to
be natural.
"I'm getting those
same readings." Harriet swung the hand-held array of her passive backpack
unit slowly from side to side and frowned. "There's a batch of new ones,
too. They're lots weaker and more spread out; that's probably why we didn't
spot them before."
Sandy turned, directing
her own attention down-valley, and nodded.
"You're right,
Harry. Most of what we saw before seems to be clustered in those ruins, but I'm
getting a line of weak point sources about ten klicks to the south. Looks like
they run clear across the valley."
"Yeah."
Harriet shaded her eyes with her free hand as if it could help her see farther.
"And there's another line just like it up there where the valley curls
back to the west. I'm not too sure I like that. I can't lock in well enough to
prove it, but they could be passive sensors, and those're logical places
to put some sort of defensive system."
"Good point,"
Sandy agreed.
"Um." Sean
moved a few meters south, peering in the direction of Sandy's find, but not
even enhanced eyes could pick out any details. The valley floor was too heavily
covered in scrub trees and tall alpine grasses, and moonlight and shadow did
funny things to depth perception even in low-light mode. He pinched his nose in
thought, then turned back to the others.
"Anything right in
front of us?" he asked, pointing down the steep-sloped valley wall, and
his sister shook her head.
"Not on this side,
but that big one's just about opposite us. And I'm getting something else from
it now. Do you have it, Sandy?"
"No, I—oh. That's
funny." She made painstaking adjustments. "The darn thing isn't
steady, almost like it's got some sort of intermittent short." It was her
turn to frown. "See how the beacon power level fluctuates just a bit in
time with it? Think it's some kind of control system?"
"If it is, it looks
kind of senile. Then again, from the state of the ruins this whole place
must've been abandoned thousands of years ago." Harriet tinkered with her
own scanpack, then shrugged. "Let's spread out a little and see if we can
triangulate on it, Sandy. I'd feel better if I at least knew exactly where
whatever-it-is is."
"Suits me."
The two of them separated and took very careful bearings, and Sandy nodded and
pointed across the valley.
"Okay, I see it . .
. sort of," she said, and Sean stood behind her and followed the line of
her finger until he saw the more solid patch of shadows. He couldn't make out
much in light-gathering mode, but when he switched to infrared things popped
into better resolution. Not a lot better, but better. The ruins were built out
from a bare stone precipice and whatever they were made of had different
thermal properties from the cliff. Small trees sprouted from a thick roof of
collected dirt, but the vertical walls were clear.
"Any better ideas
about that intermittent source now that you know where it is?" he asked,
but Sandy shook her head. He glanced at Harriet and sighed as he got a shrug of
equal mystification. "That's what I was afraid of. Well, whatever else
this is, it's clearly the leftovers of some Imperial site, and I'm not too
surprised it's in such lousy shape. In fact, if I'm surprised at all it's that anything's
live down there. But it looks like we have to go on down if we want any more to
go on. Any objections?"
There were none, though
Harriet looked a bit dubious, and he nodded.
"Okay, but we'll
play this as smart as we can. Let's rope up, Tam, and since you're the closest
we've got to a Marine, you take point. Sandy, you stay up here and play lookout
till the rest of us get down. Keep an eye on the whole place, but especially on
that thing on the far side. Harry, you follow Tam with your scanpack, and I'll
bring up the rear."
Tamman nodded and slid
out of his pack to extract a two hundred-meter coil of synthetic rope. While he
and Sean rigged safety harnesses, Harriet and Sandy went on trying to analyze
their readings without much success. Sean wasn't too happy about that, yet
there wasn't a lot he could do about it, and he waved Tamman over the side.
Tamman picked his way as
carefully as he could, but the hundred-meter slope, while less sheer than the
bare rock face to the west, was both steep and treacherous. The soil was soft
and shifting despite a covering of grass, and he slipped several times. Harriet
had it easier. She was taller than he but as slender as her mother; even with
her scanpack she was much lighter, and she had the advantage of watching where
he'd put his feet ahead of her.
Sean should have found
the descent easiest of all, despite his height and weight, since he was behind
both of them and placed to learn by their mistakes, but much as he knew he
ought to, he couldn't seem to keep his mind on where he was going. He kept
looking up at the ruins on the far side of the valley, and when he wasn't doing
that his attention kept trying to stray to the ones out in the middle. He knew
he should ignore them—after all, Sandy was keeping watch on them and he was
anchor man for the safety rope—but he just couldn't. Which was another reason
he'd put Tamman in front, where they needed someone who wouldn't let curiosity
distract him from the task in hand.
Yet perhaps it was as
well he was distracted. It meant he was looking up, not at his feet, when Sandy
suddenly screamed.
"Something's coming
up over th—!"
A boulder two meters to
Harriet's right exploded, and she cried out in pain as a five-kilo lump of
stone slammed into her shoulder. It didn't break her bio-enhanced skin, but the
impact threw her from her feet, and that, Sean realized later, was what saved
her life. The heavy energy gun needed a handful of seconds to reduce the
boulder to powder; by the time the first energy bolt hit where she'd been
standing, she wasn't there anymore.
He dug in his heels
instinctively, hurling himself backward to anchor her, but the next bolt of
gravitonic disruption sliced the rope like a thread. Her fall accelerated, and
she tumbled downslope, slithering and bouncing. She tried frantically to avoid
Tamman, clawing for traction as she gathered speed, but the loose soil betrayed
her and he couldn't get out of the way in time. Her careening body cut his feet
from under him, sending them both crashing downward in a confusion of arms and
legs, and more bolts of energy came screaming out of the night. Gouts of flying
dirt erupted all about them as ancient, erratic tracking systems tried to lock
on them, and only their unpredictable movement and the senility of the defenses
kept them alive.
Sean almost fell after
them as soil crumbled under his heels, but he managed to hold his position, and
his grav gun leapt into his hands in pure reflex. The scarcely visible energy
gun fire was a terrible network of fury to his enhanced vision, and a fist
squeezed his heart as it reached out for his sister and his friend. But he'd
been looking in exactly the right direction when it started. Whatever was
firing on them wasn't shooting at him—apparently he was still outside
its programmed kill zone—but his implants told him where its targeting systems
were, and his weapon snapped up into firing position without conscious thought.
It hissed, spitting
explosive darts across the valley at fifty-two hundred meters per second, and
savage flashes lit the dark as they ripped into the ruins. Each armor-piercing
dart had the power of a half-kilo of TNT, and the crackle of their explosions
was a single, ripping bellow as ancient walls blew outward in a tornado of
splinters.
He held the trigger
back, firing desperately and cursing himself for not having brought any heavy
weapons. Even his implants couldn't "see" well enough to target the
energy guns; he could only pour in fire and pray he hit something vital before
their control systems killed Harriet and Tamman.
A fist of pulverized
soil slammed the side of his head, and a corner of his mind noted that the
defenses had finally noticed him, but it was a distant thought as his
three-hundred round magazine emptied. He ripped a fresh one from his belt, then
grunted in anguish as the energy bloom of a bolt of disruption clawed at him.
He rolled desperately to his left and managed—somehow—not to plunge downward
after the others. Sandy had gotten her grav gun into action as well, and the
thunder of her fire filled the valley as he finished reloading and opened up
again. He cursed viciously as Harriet and Tamman slithered to a halt, but
Tamman had figured out what was happening. He wrapped a powerful arm around
Harriet and hurled both of them back into motion a split second before the
automated guns could lock on.
Flames licked at the
brush atop the ruined structures as Sean and Sandy pounded them, and Sean cried
out as an energy bolt blew his backpack apart. His nervous system whiplashed in
agony, the stunning shock threw the grav gun from his hands, and he heard Sandy
screaming his name through the roar of her fire. He clawed after his weapon
with numb, desperate fingers, and then an explosion far more violent than any
grav gun dart lit the valley like a sun at midnight. The ruins vomited skyward
as the capacitors feeding the energy guns tore themselves apart, and the
concussion blew Sean MacIntyre into unconsciousness at last.
* * *
"Sean?" The
soft, anxious voice penetrated his darkness, and his eyes slid open. He was
still on the slope, but his head was in Sandy's lap. He blinked groggily, and
she smiled and brushed dirt from his face.
"Are you all right?
Are you hurt?"
"I—" He
coughed and broke off, wincing as a fresh wave of pain spun through him. His
implant sensors had been wide open as he tried to find a target, and the corona
of the energy bolt had bled through them. His nerves were on fire, and he
moaned around a surge of nausea, but he was alive, and he wouldn't have been
without his enhancement. Not after taking a shot that close to his heart and
lungs.
"I'm okay," he
rasped as his implants recovered and began damping the pain. He swallowed bile,
then stiffened. "Harry! Harry and Tam! Are they—?"
"They're all
right," Sandy soothed, pressing him back as he tried to sit up. "The
guns never managed to line up on them, and—" a ghost of humor lit her face
"—at least they got to the bottom faster than they'd expected. See?"
He turned his head, and
Harriet waved up at him from the valley floor. Tamman wasn't looking in their
direction; he was down on one knee, grav gun ready as he scanned the valley for
any fresh threat. Not, Sean thought muzzily, that there was likely to be
another. All the ruckus they'd raised dealing with the first one should have
drawn the attention of anything else that was still active, and he relaxed.
"Thanks. If you
hadn't gotten to it in time—"
"Hush."
Sandy's hand covered his mouth, and his eyes smiled up at her as she kissed his
forehead. "We got to it, and we're all lucky you left me behind.
Now kindly shut your mouth and let your implants finish unscrambling themselves
before we hike down after Tam and Harry. Hopefully—" her free hand
caressed his hair and her lips quirked primly "—a bit more sedately than they
did."
Harriet watched Sandy
and Sean work their way down the valley wall, and her anxious eyes noted the
way her twin favored his left side and leaned on Sandy. She'd almost started
back up when she realized he couldn't get up at once, but Sandy's wave had
reassured her . . . some.
She ran to meet them as
they slithered down the last few meters, and Sean gasped as she enveloped him
in a fierce hug.
"Hey, now!" He
raised a hand to her dust-smutted black hair. "I'm in one piece, and
everything's still working, more or less."
"Sure it is,"
she said tartly, accessing his implants with her own, but then he felt her
relax as they confirmed what he'd told her. What that near miss had done to his
enhanced musculature was going to leave him stiff for a week, yet the damage
was incredibly minor.
"Sure it is,"
she repeated at last, softly, and raised her head to peer up into his eyes,
then kissed his cheek. He smiled and touched her face, then tucked one arm
around each young woman and limped over to Tamman.
"See the conquering
hero comes," he said smugly. Tamman chuckled, yet he, too, reached out and
cupped the back of Sean's head, and the four of them clung together.
"Well!" Sean
said at last. "The last step was a lulu, but at least we're here. Let's
see what we've found. You still reading anything, Sandy?"
Sandy gave him a last
little hug and returned her attention to her scanpack—the only one they had
after Harriet's tumbling descent. She turned in a complete circle, then sighed.
"I think you were
right about the power receptor, Tam. Most of the power sources're gone, and the
ones that're left are fading fast. Looks like we finally killed the Valley of
the Damned."
"Pardon me if I
don't cry," Tamman replied dryly.
"True, true."
She pivoted back to the ruins at mid-valley and nodded. "Looks like at
least one of them had some reserve, but the others are gone."
"Let's go see the
one that's still up," Sean decided, "but cautiously. Very
cautiously."
"You got it,"
Tamman agreed, and swung out to take the lead towards the ancient, half-buried
buildings.
Sean studied their
surroundings as they moved up the valley. Waist-high waves of grass rippled
between clumps of dense thicket and tangled trees, slashed with moonlight and
hard-edged shadow under the cold night wind. It was a wild and desolate place,
still more haunted somehow after the thunder and lightning of their battle. Yet
that very desolation, coupled with the effectiveness the automated weapons had
displayed even in their senescence, brightened his eyes, for it was clear no
one had gotten through to disturb whatever of pre-bio-weapon Pardal might have
survived.
They reached the ruined
buildings at last. Centuries of windblown dirt had buried their lower stories,
but the worn walls were intact, and tough, transparent Imperial plastic, cloudy
with age, still filled most of the window frames. Others gaped like open wounds
in the dark, and he felt himself shiver as they stopped outside the ancient
tower which contained the single remaining power source, for those age-sick
walls had brooded over this lonely valley for nine times the life of Egypt's
Sphinx.
The tower stood in the
center of the long-dead settlement. Faint swirls of decoration still clung to
its ceramacrete facade, and the roots of a tree in its lee—a stubby,
thick-trunked thing with peeling, hairy bark—had invaded a window frame. Their
inexorable intrusion had pried and twisted at the plastic, and the entire pane
fell inward with a clatter when Tamman tapped it.
Sean swallowed. That
tree grew on almost level earth heaped twenty meters high against the tower,
and he expected to feel the centuries when he touched the hard solidity
of the frame.
Tamman dug into his
knapsack (which, unlike Sean's, had survived the trip down the valley wall) for
a hand lamp far more powerful than the smaller, individual lights clipped to
their gun belts, and all of them gazed into the building as he trained its
diamond-bright spear through the opening. A drift of dirt fanned down from the
sprung window, but the bare, stained floor beyond it looked sound, and Tamman
picked his way cautiously down the dirt ramp, then turned in a circle, flashing
his lamp over the walls.
"Seems pretty
stout, Sean. We've got water damage to the floor, but it looks like it all came
through the window; no sign of seepage on the walls. Want me to try the
door?"
"Sounds like the
next logical step." Sean tried to hide how much his left side hurt as he
limped down after his friend, but Sandy and Harriet were there instantly,
offering him support with such obvious tact he chuckled. Sandy grinned up at
him, and he shook his head and abandoned his attempted machismo to lean
gratefully on her small, sturdy shoulder.
Harriet crossed to help
Tamman with the door, but it refused to move, and he finally dipped back into
his pack for a cutter. Brilliant glare chiseled his intent face from the
darkness, and Harriet coughed on the stench of burning plastic as a line of
fire knifed through the ancient barrier.
Tamman sliced clear
around the door frame, then kicked sharply. The cut-out panel toppled away from
him, and it was his turn to sneeze as pyramid-dry dust billowed. He flashed his
lamp through the opening and grinned.
"No sign of water
damage in here, people! And there's something else to be grateful for."
His light settled on a spiral-shaped well. "Good old-fashioned stairs. I
was afraid we'd have to rappel down dead transit shafts!"
"That's because you
have a poor, limited Marine's brain," Sean said. "If that receptor
was their only power source, they couldn't have had the juice to spare for
things like transit shafts." He smiled pityingly. "Obviously."
"Go ahead—pretend
you figured that out ahead of time. In the meantime, smartass, do we go up or
down?"
"Sandy?"
She consulted her
scanpack, then pointed at the floor.
"We go down,
Tam," Sean said, stooping to clear the edge of door still filling the top
of the frame.
They inched downward,
unwilling to trust the stairs' stability until they'd tested it, yet the
building's interior was remarkably intact. One or two of the dust-encrusted
rooms they passed still contained furniture, but not even Imperial materials
had been intended to last this long, and Sandy touched one chair only to snatch
her hand back with a soft sound of distress as the upholstery crumbled. She
shivered, and Sean tucked his arm about her and pretended to lean on her only
for support.
It took half an hour to
reach the tower's basement, for it was buried deep in bedrock and they had to
deal with several more frozen doors along the way. Yet the stair finally ended,
and Tamman's lamp showed half a dozen sealed doors circling the central access
core. He raised an eyebrow at Sandy.
"That one."
She pointed, and he gave it a shove. To their collective surprise, it moved a
centimeter sideways, and he set down his lamp as Harriet joined him. They
locked their fingers through the opening and heaved, grunting with effort,
until the stubborn panel groaned open, and Tamman bit off a surprised expletive
as a tiny glow leaked back out at them through it.
"Well, something's
still live," he announced unnecessarily, and the four explorers edged into
the room beyond.
The wan light came from
a computer console, and Harriet and Tamman scurried over to it, all caution
forgotten. It was a civilian model, with more visual telltales than military
equipment, but very few were green. Most burned amber or red—those that weren't
entirely dark—but they bent over it like a pair of mother hens and probed
delicately for a live neural interface.
Sean and Sandy stayed
out of their way, and Sean sighed as he found a counter sturdy enough to
support him. He sank down on it gratefully and watched Sandy explore with her
beltlight while the others fussed over the computer.
Clearly this had been a
control center, for the one live console was flanked by a dozen more that were
completely dead. But it had been more, as well, for it was cluttered with an
incongruous mix of utilitarian equipment and personal furnishings. Someone had
lived here, and he wondered if whoever it was had moved in to baby the
computers as the settlement began to die.
"Sean?" He
looked up at Sandy's hushed voice. She stood in a doorway across the room, and
her shadowed expression was strange. He rose at her gesture and hobbled across
the room to peer through it beside her, and his own face tightened. It was a
bedroom, as time-conquered as the rest of the building, and the bed was
occupied.
He limped further into
the room, staring down at the dust-covered body. The bone-dry air had mummified
him, and his parchment face showed the unmistakable features of a full Imperial
framed in tangled white hair. He must, Sean thought, have been the oldest human
being any of them had ever seen, and the fact that he lay here still was
chilling.
Sean turned away from
the sunken eye sockets with a shudder. What must it have been like, he
wondered, to be the last? To lie here in the emptiness of the ruins, knowing he
would die as he had lived—alone?
He slipped an arm around
Sandy, urging her away, and they crossed silently to stand behind Harriet as
she and Tamman concentrated obliviously on the computer.
Forty minutes passed
before the two of them straightened, and their expressions were a curious blend
of delight and disappointment.
"Well?" Sean
asked, and Harriet glanced at Tamman and shrugged.
"We don't know. We
can get into the operating system, sort of, but it's in terrible shape. I've
never seen one this bad off—as far as I know, no one's ever seen one
this bad—and we can't access any of its files."
"Crap," Sean
muttered, but Tamman shook his head.
"It may not be
quite that bad. The main memory core's shot, but there's an auxiliary wired
into the system. I'd guess somebody hooked in his personal unit as a
peripheral—it's all that's keeping anything up, and there's a chance we can
recover some of its memory."
"How much?"
Sean asked eagerly, and Tamman and Harriet laughed.
"Spoken like a true
optimist." Tamman grinned. "We can't tell you that till we can get at
it properly, and we can't do that here. It's going to take Israel's
'tronics shop to access this, Sean. We'll have to pull the unit and haul it
back with us."
"Oh, lord!"
Sandy knelt and ran her fingers over the dusty console, peering into it through
her implants. "That's gonna be a real bitch, Tam."
"I know." He
propped his hands on his hips and frowned at the glowing telltales. "I'm
not real crazy about carting it out of here by hand, either. Molycircs or no,
this thing's fragile as hell. Dropping it down a cliff or two wouldn't be real
good for it."
"Then let's take it
out the easy way," Harriet suggested. "Sandy and Sean blew what was
left of the defenses into dust bunnies, so why don't I go back and collect the
cutter while you and she take it apart?"
"Now that,"
Tamman murmured, "sounds like an excellent idea."
"I don't know,
Harry," Sean said. "You're all better techs than me. Maybe I should
go back while all three of you work on it."
She snorted. "Seen
yourself moving lately, brother dear? It'd take you till dawn to hobble back to
the cutter!"
"Hey, I'm not that
bad off!"
"Maybe not, but you
wouldn't enjoy the hike, and Tam and Sandy are better mechanics than me. That
makes me the logical choice, now doesn't it? Besides, I haven't had a good jog
since Terra kicked us overboard."
Sean didn't like the
thought of splitting up and letting any of them out on his (or her) own, yet
they hadn't met anything worrisome on the way in. None of the native predators,
if any, had put in an appearance, and this was the Valley of the Damned. No
Pardalian was likely to be wandering about in its vicinity in the middle of the
night. And she was right about how he felt. The trek back to the cutter was
more than he cared to face, and he discovered he'd been dreading the thought of
it.
"All right,"
he agreed finally. "I'll stay here and hold lights and pass tools or
something, but keep your belt light lit. That ought to discourage any of the
local beasties from wondering what you taste like. And you take a real
close look through your passive sensors before you try to land out there!
You're probably right about the defenses being down, but don't take any
chances."
"Aye, aye,
Captain!" She tossed him an impudent salute, then whipped about and fled
with a trill of laughter as he started for her. She paused at the outer door
just long enough to stick out her tongue, and then her light, quick step
receded rapidly up the stairs. Sean shook his head, then smiled and eased down
to sit on the floor beside Sandy and Tamman as they produced tools and began
removing the front of the console.
Harriet jogged happily
through the darkness at a steady forty kilometers per hour. Sean might be
fourteen centimeters taller, but he had their father's long body and broad
shoulders; her legs were almost as long, despite his height advantage, and she
was much lighter. Without even the weight of her scanpack she was free
to attack the steep slopes, burdened only by her holstered grav gun, and she
savored the opportunity. The moon had set, but her belt light was more than
enough for someone with enhanced eyes, and running on Israel's treadmill
paled beside the sheer joy of filling her lungs with the crisp, cold mountain
air as her feet spurned the ground.
It took her just under
eighty minutes to reach the ledge they'd landed the cutter on. She paused,
jogging in place, to wipe sweat from her forehead, then trotted onward a bit
more cautiously in light of the hundred-meter drop to her right.
She was less than a
kilometer from the cutter when her head came up in sudden surprise. Her eyes
widened, and she slithered to a halt as the sound of human voices cut the
darkness.
Her head whipped around
and she went active with every implant, probing the night. People! At least a dozen
people, coming around the bend ahead of her! Her implants should have picked
them up sooner, and she cursed herself for not paying more attention to her
surroundings and less to the pleasure of running. But even as she raged at her
foolishness a part of her mind whirred with questions. She hadn't looked for
them, but, damn it, what were they doing out here in the middle of the
night without even a torch?
Questions could wait.
She killed her belt lamp and turned back the way she'd come, and a voice
shouted, loud and harsh with command. Crap! She'd been seen!
She abandoned her
attempt to sneak away for a blinding pace no unenhanced human could have
matched, and her thoughts flashed. They'd agreed not to use their coms in case
they were picked up, but if there were people here, there might be more
of them, closer to the Valley, as well. The others had to be warned, and—
Light glared and thunder
barked behind her. Something whizzed past her ear, and something else slammed
into her left shoulder blade. She staggered and snatched for her grav gun, spun
to the side by the brutal impact, and the beginning of pain exploded up her
nerves. A second fiery hammer hit her in the side, throwing the grav gun from
her hand, but before it really registered there was another flash, and a
sixty-gram lead ball smashed her right temple.
"Come out of
there, you—aha!"
Tamman broke off in
mid-exasperation and eased the glittering block of molecular circuitry gently
to the floor with a wide, triumphant smile.
Removing it had proved
even harder than Sandy had feared. Not even implants could trace circuits in
three dimensions without a schematic, and they'd found too late that it would
have been far simpler to disconnect the console from the wall and go in from
the back. Dust had infiltrated the ancient seals, as well, drifting up to
irritate eyes and inspire bursts of sneezing, and Tamman had had an interesting
moment when he bridged what he'd thought was a dead circuit. But two and a half
painstaking hours had finally yielded their prize, and Sean met Tamman's grin
with one of his own.
"Foosh!"
Sandy fanned herself with a dirty hand. "When I think how much quicker we
could have done this in a proper shop—!" Sean switched his grin to her.
Then he frowned.
"Hey—shouldn't
Harry be back by now?"
Sandy and Tamman stared
at him, and he felt their matching surprise. All three of them had been
oblivious to time as they concentrated on eviscerating the console; now their
eyes met his, and he saw them darken as surprise gave way to the beginnings of
concern.
"Damn right she
should!" Tamman rose and snatched up the hand lamp. "The way she
likes to run, it shouldn't've taken her more than two hours—tops—to get to the
cutter!"
Sean started for the
stairs and drew up with a gasp, for his injured side had stiffened as he
watched his friends work. Pain beaded his forehead with sweat, and he muttered
a curse and hit his implant overrides. He knew he shouldn't—pain was a warning
a body did well to heed, lest it turn minor injuries into serious ones—but that
was the least of his worries.
Sandy frowned as his
suddenly brisker movement told her what he'd done, yet she said nothing, and
the two of them half-ran up the treads on Tamman's heels.
They scrambled out past
the tree, panting from their hurried ascent, and stared into the darkness.
There was no sign of the cutter, and Sean bit his lip as cold wind ruffled his
hair.
Tamman was right—Harriet
should have been back thirty minutes ago. He should have noticed her absence
sooner . . . and he should never have let her out on her own! He'd known
better at the time, damn it, but he'd let himself worry more over the
possibility of losing an hour or two than her safety. He pounded his fists
together and stared up at the sky with bitter eyes, but the alien stars mocked
him, and his jaw clenched as he powered his com implant and sent out a
full-powered omnidirectional pulse, heedless of the quarantine system's
sensors.
There was no response,
and the others looked at him with matching horror. Harriet should have heard
that signal from forty light-minutes away!
"Oh, Jesus!"
His whisper was a plea, and then he was running for the valley wall with no
thought for such inconsequentials as his injuries, and his friends were on his
heels.
* * *
They ran with implants
fully active. It took them less than fifty minutes to reach the cutter, despite
their feverish concentration on their search, and if Harriet had been within
five hundred meters of the trail in any direction, they would have found her.
Sean leaned on a landing
leg, sucking in air, enhanced lungs on fire, and tried to think. Even if she
were dead—his mind shied from the thought like a terrified animal—they should
have spotted her implants. It was as if she'd never come this way at all, but
she must have! She had to have!
"All right,"
he grated, and his panting companions turned to him anxiously. "We should
have spotted her. If we didn't, she's not here, and I can't think of any reason
she shouldn't be. We can use the cutter for an aerial search, but if she's
unconscious or . . . or something—" his voice quavered, and he wrenched it
back under iron control "—we might miss something as small as implant
emissions. We need better scanners."
"Brashan."
Tamman's voice was flat, and Sean nodded choppily.
"Exactly. If he
puts up a full-powered array he can cover five times the ground twice as fast.
And Israel's med computers can access her readouts for a full diagnostic
if she's hurt." He forced his hands down to his sides. "It'll also be
a flare-lit tip-off to the quarantine system when he goes active." He bit
the words off in pain, but they must be said, for if they threw away caution
now, it might kill them all. "If it is watching the planet, there's
no way it'll miss something like that."
"So what?"
Tamman snarled. "We have to find her, goddamn it!"
"Tam's right,"
Sandy agreed without a flicker of hesitation, and Sean's hand caressed her face
for just a moment. Then he opened the cutter hatch and went up the ramp at a
run.
* * *
"I've found
her."
The people in the cutter
jerked upright, staring at Brashan's tiny hologram, and the centauroid's crest
was flat. Another endless hour had passed, and even the fact that the
quarantine system hadn't reacted in the slightest had meant nothing beside
their growing fear as seconds dragged away.
Brashan straightened on
his pad, his holographic eyes meeting Sean's squarely, and his voice was very
quiet. "She's dying."
"No," Sean
whispered. "No, goddamn it!"
"She is
approximately seven kilometers from your current position on a heading of
one-three-seven," Brashan continued in that same flat, quiet voice.
"She has a broken shoulder, a punctured lung, and severe head injuries.
The medical computer reports a skull fracture, a major eye trauma, and two
subdural hematomas. One of them is massive."
"Skull fracture?"
All three humans stared at him in shock, for Harriet's bones—like their
own—were reinforced with battle steel appliqués. But under their shock was icy
fear. Unlike muscle tissue and skin, the physical enhancement of the brain was
limited; Harriet's implants might control other blood loss, but not bleeding
inside her skull.
"I cannot say
positively, but I believe her wounds to be deliberately inflicted,"
Brashan said, and Sean's dark eyes burned with sudden, terrible fire. "I
say this because she is presently in the center of a small village. I
hypothesize that she must have been carried thence by whoever injured
her."
"Those fucking
sons-of-bi—!"
"Wait, Sean!"
Sandy cut him off in midcurse, and he turned his fury on her. He knew it was
stupid, yet his rage needed a target—any target—and she was there. But if her
brown eyes were just as deadly as his own, they were also far closer to
rational.
"Think, damn
it!" she snapped. "Somehow someone must have spotted her—and that
means they probably know she came out of the Valley!"
Sean sank back, his
madness stabbed through with panic as he recalled the fate the Church
prescribed for any who dabbled with the Valley of the Damned. Sandy held his
eyes a second longer, then turned to the Narhani.
"You said she's
dying, Brashan. Exactly how bad is it?"
"If we do not get
her into Israel's sickbay within the next ninety minutes—two hours at
the outside—she will be dead." Brashan's crest went still flatter.
"Even now, her chances are less than even."
"We have to go get
her," Tamman grated, and Sean nodded convulsively.
"Agreed,"
Sandy said, but her eyes were back on Sean. "Tam's right," she said
quietly, "but we can't just go in there and start killing people."
"The hell we can't!
Those motherfuckers are dead, Sandy! Goddamn it, they're trying to kill
her!"
"I know. But you
know why they are, and so do I."
"I don't fucking
well care why!" he snarled.
"Well you fucking
well ought to!" she snarled back, and the utterly uncharacteristic
outburst rocked him even through his rage. "Damn it, Sean, they think
they're doing what God wants! They're ignorant, superstitious, and scared to
death of what she's done—are you going to kill them all for that?"
He stared at her, eyes
hating, and tension crackled between them. Then his gaze fell. He felt ashamed,
which only made his need for violence perversely stronger, but he shook his
head.
"I know." Her
voice was far more gentle. "I know. But using Imperial weapons
against them would be pure, wanton slaughter."
He nodded, knowing she
was right. Perhaps even more importantly, he knew even through his madness why
she'd stopped him. He looked back up, and his eyes were sane once more . . .
but colder than interstellar space.
"All right. We'll
try to scare them out of our way without killing anyone, Sandy. But if they
won't scare—" He broke off, and she squeezed his arm thankfully. She knew
what killing the villagers would do to him after the madness passed, and she
tried not to think about his final words.
* * *
Father Stomald knelt
before his altar, ashen-faced and sick, and raised revolted eyes to the
outsized beaker of oil. To pour that on a human being—any human being,
even a heretic! To light it and watch her burn . . .
Bile rose as he pictured
that blood-streaked, hauntingly beautiful face and saw that slim, lovely body
wreathed in flame, crisping, burning, blackening. . . .
He forced his nausea
down. God called His priests to their duty, and if the punishment of the
ungodly was harsh, it must be so to save their souls. Stomald told himself that
almost tearfully, and it did no good at all. He loved God and longed to serve
Him, but he was a shepherd, not an executioner!
Sweat matted his
forehead as he dragged himself up. The beaker was cold between his palms, and
he prayed for strength. If only Cragsend were big enough to have its own
Inquisitor! If only—
He cut the thought off,
despising himself for wanting to pass his duty to another, and argued
with his stubborn horror. There was no question of the woman's guilt. The
lightning and thunder from the Valley had waked the hunting party, and despite
their terror, they'd gone to investigate. And when they called upon her to
halt, she'd fled, proclaiming her guilt. Even if she hadn't, her very garments
would convict her. Blasphemy for a woman to wear the high vestments of the
Sanctum itself, and Tibold Rarikson, the leader of the huntsmen, had described
her demon light. Stomald himself had seen the other strange things on her belt
and wrist, but it was Tibold's haunted eyes which brought the horror fully
home. The man was a veteran warrior, commander of Cragsend's tiny force of the
Temple Guard, yet his face had been pale as whey as he spoke of the light and
her impossible speed.
Indeed, Stomald thought
with a queasy shiver as he turned from the altar, perhaps she was no woman at
all, for what woman would still live? Three times they'd hit her—three!—at
scarcely fifty paces, and if her long black hair was a crimson-clotted mass and
her right eye wept bloody tears, her other wounds didn't even bleed. Perhaps
she was in truth the demon Tibold had named her . . . but even as he told
himself that, the under-priest knew why he wanted to believe it.
He descended the church
steps into the village square, and swallowed again as he beheld the heretic in
the bloody light of the flambeaux.
She looked so
young—younger even than he—as she hung from the stake by her manacled wrists, wrapped
in heavy iron chains and stripped of her profaned vestments, and he felt a
shameful inner stir as he once more saw her flimsy undergarments. Mother Church
expected her priests to wed, for how could they understand the spiritual needs
of husband or wife without experience? Yet to feel such things now . . .
He drew a deep breath
and walked forward. Her bloody head drooped, and she hung so still he
thought—prayed—she had already died. But then he saw the faint movement of her
thinly covered breasts, and his heart sank with the knowledge that her death
would not free him from the guilt he must bear.
He stopped and turned to
face his flock as Tibold approached. The Guardsman bore a torch, and its flame
wavered with the shaking of his hand. He stopped two paces from the priest, and
the pity in his blunt, hard features made Stomald wonder if perhaps he, too,
had tried to insist this woman was a demon out of revulsion for what they now
must do to her.
He met Tibold's haunted
eyes, and a flicker passed between them. One of understanding . . . and
gratitude. Of thanks that they had no Inquisitor to break that slender body
upon the wheel before her death as the letter of the Church's Law demanded, and
that, demon or no, she had never waked. That she would die unknowing, spared
the agony of her horrible end . . .
unlike the men who would always remember wreaking it upon her.
He turned away from the
Guardsman who must share his duty, facing his people, and wondered how they
would look upon him in days to come. He couldn't see their faces beyond the
fuming flambeaux, and he was glad.
He opened his mouth to
pronounce the words of anathematization.
Harriet's weakening
implant signals left no time to return to Israel, and Sean landed the
stealthed cutter within a half-klick of the village. He selected a
six-millimeter grav rifle from the weapons locker to back up his side arm, and
Tamman chose an energy gun, but Sandy bore only her grav gun and a satchel of
grenades. Sean wished she'd taken something heavier, yet time was too short to
argue, and he led them through the darkness at a run.
The torch-lit village
square came in sight, and his mouth twisted into a snarl. Harriet—his
Harriet!—hung by her wrists from a stake, heaped faggots piled about her
chained, half-naked body, and her hair was soaked with blood. His hands
tightened on his rifle's grips, but he felt Sandy's anxious eyes, and he'd
promised her.
"Go!" he
snapped, and she hurled the first plasma grenade.
* * *
Stomald cried out in
horror as terrible white light exploded against Cragsend's night. Its fiery
breath touched hay ricks to flame and singed the assembled villagers' hair, and
screams of terror lashed the priest.
He staggered back,
blinded by the terrible flash. There was another—and another!—and he
heard Tibold's hoarse bellow beside him and cringed, trying to understand, as
three figures appeared. They seemed to step forth from within the fury
consuming the smithy, the granary, and tanning sheds. Their featureless black
shapes loomed before the glare, and the one in the center, a towering giant out
of some tale of horror, aimed a strange musket shape at the slate roof of the
church.
Sparkling flashes ripped
stout stonework to shrieking splinters in an endless roll of thunder that
scattered screaming villagers in panic, but Stomald's heart spasmed with a
terror even worse than theirs. It was his fault! The thought leapt into his
brain. He'd hesitated. He'd rebelled in his heart, contesting God's will, and
this—this—was the result!
Tibold seized him,
trying to drag him away, but he stared transfixed as the shape beside the giant
aimed its own weapon at a trio of freight wagons. There was no flash this time,
and that was even worse. A hurricane of chips and snapped timbers erupted, and
the only sound was rending wood and the whine as fragments flew like bullets.
It was too much for
Tibold. He abandoned the crazed priest to flee, and Stomald felt only a distant
sympathy for him. This was more than any warrior could be asked to face. These
were the demons of the Valley of the Damned, come to snatch away the demon his
traitor heart had longed to spare, and terror filled him, but he stood his
ground. He had no choice. His faltering faith brought them here. He'd failed
his flock, and though his sin cost him his immortal soul, he was God's priest.
He raised the sanctified
oil like a shield, dry lips whispering in prayer, and a handful of villagers
stared in horror from the cover of darkness as their youthful priest advanced
alone against the forces of Hell.
* * *
Sean blew the village
fountain apart, but the lone madman walked through the spray and kept right on
coming. Sean bared his teeth as he saw the blue and gold priestly robe, and it
took all he had not to turn the rifle upon him, yet he didn't. Somehow, he
didn't. Tamman splintered a half-meter trench across the square, and the priest
halted for a moment. Then he resumed his advance, stepping over the shattered
cobbles like a sleepwalker, and Sean swore as Sandy went to meet him.
Stomald faltered as the
smallest demon walked straight at him. The silhouetted figure entered the spill
of light from the flambeaux, and, for the first time, he truly saw one of them.
His prayer rose higher
at the blasphemy before him, for this demon, too, wore the semblance of a woman
in the holiest of raiment. Torchlight fumed in her eyes and glittered from the
gold of her profaned vestments, the fires of Hell roared behind her, and she
came on as if his exorcism was but words. Terror strangled his voice, yet the
holy oil he bore was more potent than any exorcism, and he sent up a silent
prayer for strength, unworthy though he'd proved himself. She stopped five
paces away, and there was no fear in her face—not of the frightened priest, not
of the blessed weapon he bore . . . not even of God Himself.
* * *
Sandy swallowed rage as
she looked past the priest at Harriet, chained amid her waiting pyre. But then
she saw his terrified face, and she felt a grudging admiration for the
courage—or the faith—that held him here.
He stared at her, eyes
filled with fear, and then his hands lashed. Something leapt from the beaker he
held, but reflex activated her implant force field. Thick, iridescent oil
sluiced down it, caught millimeters from her skin, and the priest's mouth
moved.
"Begone!" he
shouted, and she twitched, for she understood him. His voice was high and
cracked with terror but determined, and he spoke the debased Universal of the
Church. "Begone, Demon! Unclean and accursed, I cast you out in the Name of
the Most Holy!"
* * *
Stomald shouted the
exorcism with all the faith in him as the shining oil coated the demon. She
paused—perhaps she even gave back a step—and hope flamed in his heart. But then
hope turned to even greater horror, for the demon neither vanished in a flash
of lightning nor fled in terror. Instead she came a step closer . . . and she
smiled.
"Begone yourself,
wretched and miserable one!" He reeled, stunned by the terrible thunder of
that demonic voice, and his brain gibbered. No demon could speak the Holy
Tongue! He retreated a faltering step, hand rising in a warding sign, and the
demon laughed. She laughed! "I have come for my friend," she
thundered, "and woe be unto you if you have harmed her!"
Crashing peals of
laughter ripped through him like echoes from Hell, and then she reached out to
the nearest torch. The holy oil sprang alight with a seething hiss, clothing
her in a fierce corona, and her voice boomed out of the roaring flames.
"Begone lest you
die, sinful man!" she commanded terribly, and the furnace heat of her
faceless, fiery figure came for him.
* * *
Sean watched Sandy
confront the priest. Her implant-amplified voice made his head hurt—God
only knew how it must have sounded to the priest! Yet the man had stood his
ground until she touched the oil to flame. That was too much, and he took to
his heels at last, stumbling, falling, leaping back to his feet and running for
the imagined sanctuary of his church while Sandy's bellowing laughter pursued
him.
Yet there was no time to
admire her tactics, and he slung his grav rifle and charged across the square.
Tamman's energy gun splintered more cobbles, driving the villagers still
further back, but Sean hardly noticed. He scattered heavy faggots like
tumbleweeds, and his face was a murderous mask as he gripped the chain about
Harriet's body and twisted the links like taffy. They snapped, and he hurled
them aside and caught at the manacles. His back straightened with a grunt.
Anchoring bolts screamed and sheared like paper, and if she was still breathing
as her limp body slid into his arms, he was close enough to read her implants
directly at last. He paled. The damage was at least as bad as Brashan had said,
and he cradled her like a child as he turned and ran like a madman for the cutter.
* * *
Stomald cowered in the
nave of the broken church, rocking on his knees and praying with all his
strength amid lumps of stone blown from the vault above him. He clung to sanity
with bleeding fingernails, then cringed in fresh terror as something flashed
into the very heavens beyond the village. A howling streak of light exploded
across the stars in an echoing peal of thunder, and a hot breath of air rolled
down through the church's cracked roof on the shrieking wind of its passage as
it screamed low over Cragsend.
Then it was gone, and he
buried his face in his hands and moaned.
Father Stomald stared at
the garments on his vicarage table while wagons creaked beyond his windows.
Nioharqs dragged loads of rubble down Cragsend's streets, drovers shouted, and
repair crew foremen bawled orders, but the men laboring within the church
itself only whispered.
The youthful priest felt
their fear, for their terror was graven in his mind, as well, and with it an
even greater horror.
Mother Church had failed
them. He had failed them, and he steeled his nerve and touched the
bloodstained fabric once more. He was but the vicar of a small mountain
village, but he'd made his pilgrimage to the Temple and served at the Command
Hatch as High Priest Vroxhan intoned mass. He'd seen the Temple's magnificence
and the Sanctum that housed God's Own Voice and marveled at the high priest's
exquisite vestments, at their splendid fabric and shining gold braid, the
glitter of their buttons. . . .
And all that splendor
paled beside these bloodied garments, like a child's clumsy copy of
reality.
He made himself lift the
tunic, and its gleaming buttons flashed under the window's sunlight, trapping
the sun's heart within the crowned glory of God's holy Starburst. But his
breath hissed as he looked closer, for a strange, winged creature—a magnificent
beast whose like he'd never imagined—erupted from the Star's heart to claim
God's Crown . . . even as the demon had erupted from the flames as she advanced
upon him.
He fought a hysterical
urge to fling the garment away. Blasphemy! Blasphemy to deface those holiest of
symbols! Yet that beast, that winged beast, like the winged badge of a Temple
courier and yet unlike . . .
He forced calm upon his
mind and examined the garment once more. Splendid as the buttons were, they
were but ornaments, unlike those of High Priest Vroxhan's vestments. A
quivering fingertip traced the invisible seal which had actually closed the
tunic, and even now he could see no sign of how it worked.
When they'd first tried
to strip the profaned fabric from the . . . the woman, the heretic or . . . or
demon, or whatever she'd been . . .
His shoulders tensed,
and he made them relax. When they'd tried to strip it from—her—they'd found no
fastenings, and it had laughed at their sharpest blades. But then, with no real
hope, he'd tugged—thus.
The cloth opened, and he
licked his lips. It was uncanny. Impossible. Yet he held it in his hands. It
was as real as his own flesh, and yet—
He opened the tunic wide
once more, caressing the union of sleeve and shoulder, and bit his lip. He'd
watched his own mother sew and done sewing enough of his own at seminary to
know what he should find, yet there was no seam. The tunic was a single whole,
perfect and indivisible, as if it had been woven in a single sitting and not
pieced together, its only flaws the holes punched in it by musket balls. . . .
He went to his knees,
folding his hands in prayer. Not even the fabled looms of Eswyn could have
woven that fabric. Not the Temple's finest tailor could have formed it without
thread or seam. No human hand could have wrought that magic closure.
They must have
been demons. He told himself that fiercely, quivering with remembered terror
before the thunder of the demon's voice. Yet there was an even greater terror
at his heart, for the rolling majesty of that voice had crashed over him with
the words of the Holy Tongue itself!
He moaned to the empty
room, and the forbidden thought returned. He fought to reject it, but it hung
in the corners of his mind, and he squeezed his eyes so tightly closed they
ached as it whispered in the silence.
They'd come from the
Valley of the Damned, and lightning had wracked the cloudless heavens above the
Valley. They'd smitten Cragsend with fire and thunder. One of them, alone, had
ripped the entire roof from his church. Another had shattered three heavy
wagons. A third had blazed alive in the flames of Mother Church's holiest oils
and laughed—laughed! And when the smoke had wisped away, Stomald had
stared at bubbled sheets of glass, flashing like gems under the morning sun,
where the smithy had burned to less than ash.
Yet with all that
inconceivable power, they'd killed no one. No one. Not a man, woman, or
child. Not even an animal! Not even the men who'd wounded and captured
their fellow and intended to burn her alive. . . .
The Church taught love
for one's fellows, but demons should have slain—not simply frightened helpless
mortals from their paths! And no demon could endure the Holy Tongue, far less
speak it with its own mouth!
He opened his eyes,
stroking the tunic once more, recalling the beauty of the woman who'd worn it,
and faced the thought he'd fought. They had not—could not—have been mortals,
and that should have made them demons. But demons couldn't have spoken the Holy
Tongue, and demons wouldn't have spared where they might have slain. And
if no woman might wear the vestments of Mother Church, these were not
those of Mother Church, but finer and more mystical than anything Man might
make even for the glory of God.
He closed his eyes and
trembled with a different fear, like sunshine after the tempest, mingling with
his terror in glory-shot wonder. No woman might wear Mother Church's raiment,
no, but there were other beings who might. Beings of supernal beauty who might
enter even that accursed valley and smite its demonic powers with thunder more
deadly than that of Hell itself. Beings who could speak the Holy Tongue
. . . and would not speak another.
"Forgive me,
Lord," he whispered into the sunlight streaming through his window. His
eyes sparkled as he raised his hands to the light, and he stood, opening his
arms to embrace its radiance.
"Forgive my ignorance,
Lord! Let not Your wrath fall upon my flock, for it was my blindness, not
theirs. They saw only with their fear, but I—I should have seen with my heart
and understood!"
* * *
Harriet MacIntyre opened
her eyes and winced as dim light burned into her brain. There was no pain, but
she'd never felt so weak. Her sluggish thoughts were blurred, and vertigo and
nausea washed through her.
She moaned, trying to
move, and quivered with terror when she could not. A shape bent over her, and
she blinked. Half her vision was a terrible boil of featureless glare and the
other half wavered, like heat shimmer or light through a sheet of water. Tears
of frustration trickled as she fought in vain to focus and felt the world
slipping away once more.
"Harry?" A
hand touched hers, lifted it. "Harry, can you hear me?"
Sean's rough-edged voice
was raw with pain and worry. Worry for her, she realized muzzily, and her heart
twisted at the exhaustion that filled it.
"Can you hear
me?" he repeated gently, and she summoned all her strength to squeeze his
hand. Once that grip would have crumpled steel; now her fingers barely
twitched, but his hand tightened as he felt them move.
"You're in sickbay,
Harry." His blurred shape came closer as he knelt by her bed, and a gentle
hand touched her forehead. She felt his fingers tremble, and his voice fogged.
"I know you can't move, sweetheart, but that's because the med section has
your implants shut down. You're going to be all right." Her eyes slid shut
once more, blotting out the confusion. "You're going to be all
right," he repeated. "Do you understand, Harry?" The urgency in
the words reached her, and she squeezed again. Her lips moved, and he leaned
close, straining his enhanced hearing to the limit.
"Love . . . you . .
. all. . . ."
His eyes burned as the
thready whisper faded, but her breathing was slow and regular. He watched her
for a long, silent moment, and then he laid her hand beside her, patted it
once, and sank back in his chair.
* * *
There were other moments
of vague awareness over the next few days, periods of drifting disorientation
which would have terrified her had her thoughts been even a little clearer.
Harriet had been seriously injured once before—a grav-cycle accident that broke
both legs and an arm before she'd been fully enhanced—and Imperial medicine had
put her back on her feet in a week. Now whole days passed before she could hang
onto consciousness for more than a minute, and that said horrifying volumes
about her injuries. Worse, she couldn't remember what had happened. She didn't
have the least idea how she'd been hurt, but she clung to Sean's
promise. She was all right. She was going to be all right if she just held on.
. . .
And then, at last, she
woke and the bed beneath her was still, and the vertigo and nausea had
vanished. Her lips were dry, and she licked them, staring up into near total
darkness.
"Harriet?" It
was Brashan this time, and she turned her head slowly, heart leaping as muscles
obeyed her once more. She blinked, trying to focus on his face, and her
forehead furrowed as she failed. Try as she might, half her field of vision was
a gyrating electrical storm wrapped in a blazing fog.
"B-Brash?" Her
voice was husky. She tried to clear her throat, then gasped as a six-fingered
alien hand slipped under her. It cradled the back of her head, easing her up
while the mattress rose behind her, and another hand held a glass. Her lips
fumbled with the straw, and then she sighed as ice-cold water filled her mouth.
The desiccated tissues seemed to suck it up instantly, yet nothing had ever
tasted half so wonderful.
He let her drink a
moment more, then set the glass aside and settled her back against the pillow.
She closed her right eye, and sighed again as the tormenting glare vanished.
Her left eye obeyed her, focusing on his saurian, long-snouted face and noting
the half-flattened concern of his crest.
"Brash," she
repeated. Her hand rose, and his took it.
"Doctor Brash,
please," he said with a Narhani's curled-lip smile.
"Should've
guessed." She smiled back, and if her voice was weak, it sounded like hers
once more. "You always were better with the med computers."
"Fortunately,"
another voice said, and she turned her head as Sandy appeared on her other
side. Her friend smiled, but her eyes glistened as she sank into the chair and
took her free hand.
"Oh, Harry,"
she whispered. Tears welled, and she brushed at them almost viciously.
"You scared us, honey. God, how you scared us!"
Harriet's hand
tightened, and Sandy bent to lay her cheek against it. She stayed there for a
moment, brown hair falling in a short, silky cloud about a too-thin wrist, and
then she drew a deep breath and straightened.
"Sorry," she
said. "Didn't mean to go all mushy on you. But 'Doctor Brashan' damn well
saved your life. I—" her voice wavered again before she got it back under
control "—I didn't think he was going to be able to."
"Hush,"
Harriet soothed. "Hush, Sandy. I'm all right." She smiled a bit
tremulously. "I know I am—Sean promised me."
"Yes. Yes, he
did." Sandy produced a tissue and blew her nose, then managed a watery
grin. "In fact, he's gonna be ticked he wasn't here when you woke up, but
Brashan and I chased him back into bed less than an hour ago."
"Is everyone else
all right?"
"We're fine, Harry.
Fine. Sean's got some damage to his left arm—he drove himself too hard—but it's
minor, and Tam's fine. Just exhausted. With you out, Brashan stuck here in
sickbay, and Sean ready to kill anybody who suggested he leave you, poor Tam's
been carrying most of the load."
"Tam and you,
you mean," Harriet said, seeing the weariness in her face.
"Oh, maybe."
Sandy shrugged. "But I haven't left the ship—Tam was the one who did all
the traveling back and forth with the computer."
"Computer?"
Harriet said blankly. "What computer?"
"The computer
we—" Sandy started in a surprised voice, then stopped. "Oh. What's
the last thing you remember?"
"We were . . .
going to the valley?" Harriet said uncertainly. "There was some sort
of . . . of defensive system, I think. Did I—" She released Brashan's hand
to cover her right eye. "Is that what happened to me?"
"No." Sandy
patted the hand she held. "That happened later. We'll tell you all about
it, but what matters is we found a personal computer and brought it back. It's
in miserable shape, but Tam's managed to recover some of it, and it looks like
some kind of journal. I think—" she smiled fondly "—he's been
concentrating on it to keep his mind off worrying about you."
"A journal?"
Harriet rubbed her closed eye harder, and her open eye brightened. "That
sounds good, Sandy. I just wish I—"
"Harriet."
Brashan interrupted quietly, and his hand closed on her right wrist, stilling
the fingers on her eye. "Why are you rubbing your eye?"
"I— Oh, it's probably
nothing," she said, and heard the strangeness in her voice. Denial, she
thought.
"Tell me," he
commanded.
"I—" She
swallowed. "I just can't get it to focus."
"I think it's more
than that." His voice accepted no evasion, and she felt her lips quiver.
She stilled them and turned to face him squarely.
"I think it's gone
blind," she said, and heard Sandy's soft gasp beside her. "All I get
is a . . . a blur and a glare."
"Is it bothering
you now?"
"No." She drew
a deep breath, curiously relieved to have admitted there was something wrong.
"Not as long as it's closed."
"Open it." She
obeyed, then squeezed it instantly back shut. The glare was worse than ever,
jagged with pain even her implants couldn't damp.
"I . . . I
can't." She licked her lips. "It hurts."
"I see," he
said, and she felt her nerve steady under his composed voice. "I feared
you might have difficulties, but when you said nothing—" His crest flipped
a Narhani shrug.
"What's
wrong?" She was pleased by how nearly normal she sounded.
"Nothing
irreparable, I assure you. But as you know, Israel's sickbay, while
capable of bone and tissue repair and implant adjustment, was never
intended for enhancement or major implant repair. Her designers—"
he smiled a wry, Narhani smile "—assumed injuries such as that would be
treated aboard her mother ship, which, alas, is beyond our reach."
He paused, and she
nodded for him to continue.
"You were struck in
the right temple, left shoulder, and right lung by heavy projectiles," the
centauroid explained gently. "Despite the crudity of the weapons used,
they had sufficient power at such short range to shatter even enhanced human
bone, but the one which struck your head fortunately impacted at an angle and
your skull sufficed to turn it."
She breathed a bit
harder as he cataloged her wounds but nodded for him to continue, and his eyes
approved her courage.
"Your implants
sealed the blood loss from the wounds to your shoulder and lung. There was
considerable damage to the lung, but those injuries are healing satisfactorily.
The head wound resulted in intracranial bleeding and tissue damage"—she
tensed, but he continued calmly— "yet I see no sign of motor skill damage,
though there may be some permanent memory loss. Your vision problem, however,
stems not from tissue damage but from damage to your implant hardware.
Fragments of bone were driven into the brain and also forward, piercing the eye
socket. The injuries to the eye structures are responding to therapy, and the
optic nerve was untouched, but an implant, unlike the body, cannot be
regenerated. I knew it was damaged, but I'd hoped the impairment would be less
severe than you describe."
"It's only in the
hardware?" Relief washed through her at his nod, but then she frowned.
"Why not just shut it down through the overrides?"
"The damage is too
extensive for me to access it. Short of removing it entirely—a task for a fully
qualified neurosurgeon which I would hesitate to attempt and which would, at
best, leave you effectively blind until we can obtain proper medical
assistance, anyway—I can do nothing with it."
"Well, you're going
to have to do something. I know you've got the lights way down in here,
but I can't even keep it open!"
"I know. Yet, as
you point out, as long as no light reaches it you experience no discomfort.
Rather than risk damaging your presently unscathed optic nerve, I would prefer
simply to cover it."
"An eye
patch?" Despite herself, her lips twitched at the absurdity of such an
archaic approach. Sandy actually chuckled.
"Yo, ho, ho and a
bottle of rum!" she murmured. Harriet gave her a one-eyed glare, but she
only grinned, too relieved to hear the damage wasn't permanent to be deflated
so easily.
"Indeed."
Brashan gave Sandy a moderately severe glance, then looked back down at
Harriet. "Given the unimpaired enhancement of your left eye, you should be
able to adjust once the distraction is suppressed."
"An eye
patch." Harriet sighed. "God, I hope you get holos of this, Sandy. I
know you'll just die if you miss the opportunity!"
"Damn
straight," Sandy said, and smoothed hair from Harry's forehead.
* * *
"But you must
report it, Father!" Tibold Rarikson stared at the priest in disbelief, yet
Stomald's smile was serene.
"Tibold, I will
report it, but not yet." The Guard captain started to protest, but Stomald
shushed him with a gesture. "I will," he repeated, "but only
when I'm certain precisely what I'm to report."
"What you're to report?"
Tibold's eyes bugged, but he gripped his innate respect for the cloth in both
hands and drew a deep breath. "Father, with all due respect, I don't see
what the problem is. Cragsend was attacked by demons who burned the fifth part
of the village to the ground!"
"Indeed?"
Stomald smiled and took a turn around the room, feeling the other's eyes on his
back. If there was one man with whom he wished to share his wondering joy,
Tibold was that man. Hard-bitten warrior that he was, he was a kindly man whose
sense of pity not even war could quench. And despite his Guard rank and the
traditional Malagoran resentment of outside control, he stood almost as high in
Cragsend's estimation as Stomald himself. But for all his desire, how did
Stomald bring the other to see what he himself now saw so clearly?
He drew a deep breath
and turned back to the Guardsman.
"My friend,"
he said gently, "I want you to listen to me carefully. A great thing has
happened here in our tiny town—a greater thing than you may believe possible. I
know you're afraid, and I know why, but there are some points about the
'demons' you should consider. For example . . ."
Sean tried not to hover
as Harriet walked unaided to the astrogator's couch. She was still shaky, and
her missing memories refused to return, yet she had to smile at his expression.
Tamman sat beside her and slipped an arm about her, and she leaned against him,
wishing she knew how to thank them for her life.
But, of course, there
was no need.
"Well!" Sean
flopped into his couch with customary inelegance. "Looks like your
body-and-fender shop does good work, Brashan."
"True," the
Narhani replied with one of his clogged-drain chuckles. "And while I
regret my inability to repair your implant, Harry, I must say your patch gives
you a certain—" He paused, seeking the proper word.
"Raffishness?"
Sean suggested, his smile almost back to normal.
"Thank you, kind
sir." Harriet stroked the black patch and grinned. "I glanced in the
mirror and thought I was looking at Anne Bonny!"
"Who?"
Brashan's crest perked, but she only shook her head.
"Look her up in the
computer, Twinkle Hooves."
"I shall. You
humans have such interesting historical figures," he said, and her
laughter lifted the last shadow from Sean's heart.
"I'm really glad to
see you up again, Harry, and I'm sorry you can't remember what happened. The
rest of us'll put together a combined implant download later, but for now let's
turn our attention to what we got out of it. Aside, of course, from the reincarnation
of Captain Bonny."
His wave gave Sandy the
floor, and she stood.
"Speaking for
myself, Harry, I'm delighted you're back. Tam's been doing his best, but
he'll never make an analyst." Tamman made a pained sound, and Harriet
poked him in the ribs.
"However,"
Sandy went on with a grin, "our ham-handed Marine and I have recovered a
fair amount from our purloined computer, and our original hypothesis was
correct. It was a journal. This man's."
Sean gazed at the image
in the command deck display, mentally turning the hair white and the skin to
parchment, and recognized the lonely, mummified body from the tower bedroom.
"This is—or was—an
engineer named Kahtar. Much of his journal's unrecoverable, and he didn't
mention the planet's name in the portions we've been able to read, so we still
don't know what it was called originally. But I've been able to piece together
what happened."
She looked around,
satisfied by the hush about her. Even Tamman knew only fragments of what she
was about to say, and she wondered if the others would react as she had . . .
and if they'd have the same nightmares.
"Apparently,"
she began, "the planetary governor closed down the mat-trans at the first
hypercom warning, then began immediate construction of a quarantine system
under the direction of his chief engineer. Who," she added wryly,
"was obviously a real whiz.
"Things weren't too
bad at the start. There was some panic, and a few disturbances from people
afraid they hadn't gotten quarantined soon enough, but nothing they couldn't
handle . . . at first." She paused, and her eyes darkened.
"They might have
made it, if they'd just shut down their hypercom. Their defenses destroyed over
a dozen incoming refugee ships, but I think they could have lived even with
that . . . if the hypercom hadn't still been up.
"It was like a com
link to Hell." Her voice was quiet. "It was such a slow, agonizing
process. Other worlds thought they were safe, too, but they weren't,
and, one by one, the plague killed them all. It took years—years of desperate,
dwindling messages from infected planets while their entire universe
died."
Icy silence hovered on
the command deck, and she blinked misty eyes.
"It . . . got to
them. Not at once. But when the last hypercom went silent, when there was no
one else left—no one at all—the horror was too much. The whole planet went
mad."
"Mad?"
Brashan's voice was soft, and she nodded.
"They knew what had
happened, you see. They knew they'd done it to themselves. That it had all been
a mistake—a technological accident on a cosmic scale. So they decided to insure
there would never be another one. Technology had killed the Empire . . . so
they killed technology."
"They what?"
Sean jerked up, and she nodded. "But . . . but they had a high-tech
population. How did they expect to feed it without technology?"
"They didn't
care," Sandy said sadly. "The psychic wounds were too deep. That's
what happened to their tech base: they smashed it themselves."
"Surely not all of
them agreed," Harriet half-whispered.
"No." Sandy
was grim. "There were some sane ones left—like Kahtar—but not enough. They
fought a war here like you wouldn't believe. A high-tech war intended to
destroy its own culture . . . and anyone who tried to stop them. Harry, they
threw people into bonfires for trying to hide books."
Harriet covered her
mouth, trembling with a personal terror they all understood too well, and
Tamman hugged her.
"Sorry," Sandy
said gently, and Harriet nodded jerkily. "Anyway, they didn't quite get
all of it. The Valley of the Damned was a sort of high-tech redoubt. There'd
been others, but the mobs rolled over them—sometimes they used human wave
attacks and literally ran the defenses out of ammunition with their own bodies.
Only the valley held. Their energy guns didn't need ammo, and they threw back
over thirty attacks in barely ten years. The last one was made by a mob on
foot, in the middle of a mountain winter, armed with spears and a handful of
surviving Imperial weapons."
She fell silent once
more, and they waited, sharing her horror, until she inhaled and went on in a
flat voice.
"The attacks on the
valley finally ended because the others had managed to destroy their
technology, and, with it, their agriculture, their transport system, their
medical structure—everything. Starvation, disease, exposure, even cannibalism .
. . within a generation, they were down to a population they could support with
an almost neolithic culture. Kahtar estimated that over a billion people died
in less than ten years.
"But—" her
voice sharpened and she leaned forward "—there was, obviously, one other
high-tech center left: the quarantine HQ. Even the most frenzied mob knew that
was all that stood between them and any possible refugee ship, however slight
the chance one might arrive, and the HQ staff rigged up a ground defense
element in the quarantine system itself. It's nowhere near as powerful as the
space defenses, but it's designed to smash anyone or anything using Imperial
weapons within a hundred klicks of the HQ."
"Oh, crap,"
Sean breathed, and she smiled tightly.
"You got it. And
there's worse. You see, the command staff may have set things up to keep the
mobs from smashing the HQ, but they agreed with the need to destroy all other
technology."
"I don't think I'm
going to like this," Tamman muttered.
"You're not. They
moved out of those ruins near the Temple, put the HQ computer on voice access,
set the shipyard up to handle all maintenance on an automated basis, and
manufactured a religion."
"Oh, Jesus!"
Sean moaned.
"According to
Kahtar, who was pretty much running the valley by then, the port admiral had
some sort of vision that turned the bio-weapon into the Flood and Pardal into
Noah's Ark. But this Flood was a punishment for the sin of technological
pride into which the 'Great Demons' had seduced mankind, and the 'Ark' was a
refuge to which God had guided the handful of faithful who had resisted the
demons' temptation. The survivors were the seed corn of the New Zion, selected
by God to create a society without the 'evils' of technology."
"But if that's
true," Brashan said, "why didn't they destroy the valley? If they had
the capability to set up ground defenses, surely they had the capability to
strike Kahtar's people."
"There was no need.
There were never more than a hundred people in the valley, and it was a
vacation resort before they forted up, without any real industrial base. They
were trapped inside it, with too little genetic material to sustain a viable
population, and the new religion had a use for them—one so important it didn't
even pull the plug on their power supply."
"Demons,"
Harriet murmured.
"Or, more
precisely, a nest of 'lesser demons' and their worshipers. The valley gave
their religion a 'threat' that might last for centuries to help it get its feet
under it. What we walked into was Hell itself as far as the Church is
concerned, and that's why anyone who has anything to do with it must be
exterminated."
"Merciful
God." Sean looked as sick as he felt. The warped logic and cold-blooded
calculation that left those poor, damned souls penned up in their valley as the
very embodiment of evil twisted his guts. He tried to imagine how it must have
felt to know every other human on the planet was waiting, literally praying for
the chance to murder you, and wanted to vomit.
"I think Kahtar
went mad himself, at the end. Some of the others walked out of the valley when
the despair finally got to be too much—walked out knowing what would
happen. Others suicided. None of them were interested in having children. What
future would children have had on a planet of homemade barbarians itching to
torture them to death?
"But Kahtar had to
find something to believe in, and he did—something that kept him alive to the
very end, after all the others were gone. He decided, against all evidence and
sanity, that at least one other world had to have survived. That's why he wired
his journal into the main computers. He left it there for us, or someone like
us, so we'd know what had happened. And that's why he included something very
important for us to know."
"What?" Sean
asked.
"The last of the
original HQ crew didn't just put the computer on voice access, Sean. They knew
there were still at least some enhanced people in the valley. People who could
have ordered the Voice to denounce their precious religion if they'd been able
to get close enough to access the computer, because they could have overridden
voice commands through their implants once the last of the original 'priests'
were gone. So they disengaged the neural feeds. The only way in is by
voice, and they had an entire damned army sitting on top of it to keep everyone
but the priesthood out of voice access range. With the quarantine system set up
to wax anybody who tried to use Imperial weapons to shoot their way in, there
was no way a handful of old, tired Imperials could get to them."
She paused and met their
horrified gazes.
"Which means, of
course, that we can't get to them, either."
* * *
Sean sat in the cutter
bay hatch, high on Israel's flank, and gazed sightlessly out through the
wavering distortion of her stealth field. They were still making progress on
their linguistic programs, helped by the fact that they were no longer afraid
to use their remotes at full range as long as they stayed outside the Temple's
hundred-kilometer kill zone, yet two weeks had passed since Sandy's bombshell,
and none of them had the least idea what to do next. The only good thing was
that Harriet was completely back on her feet now—she was even jogging on Israel's
treadmill again.
He sighed and tugged on
his nose, looking very like an oversized, black-haired version of his father as
he contemplated the problem. He'd expected difficulties getting into the
Temple, but he'd never anticipated that they wouldn't even be able to use
Imperial small arms! Hell, they might not even be able to use their own implants,
so how did four humans—and one Narhani, who'd be mobbed on sight as an
incontrovertible "demon"—break into the most strongly guarded
fortress on the entire goddamned planet?
There was, of course,
one very simple answer, but he couldn't do it. He couldn't even think of it
without nausea. Kahtar's journal indicated "the Sanctum" was heavily
armored and deeply dug in, but they could always take the place out with a
gravitonic warhead, and Israel could launch hyper weapons from
atmosphere. They could hit the Temple before the quarantine system even began
to react, and if the computer went down, so did the entire system.
Unfortunately, they also killed everyone in Pardal's largest city—almost two
million people, by Sandy's estimate.
He squeezed his nose
harder. His clever stratagem to get them down had worked, all right, and he'd
poked their collective heads right into a trap. They couldn't take off—assuming
they'd had anywhere to go—without the quarantine system killing them for trying
to leave the planet, but there wasn't any way to shut the system off from
the planet!
"Sean?" He
looked up at Sandy's voice. She was standing at the far end of the bay, waving
at him. "Come on! You've gotta see this!"
"See what?" he
asked, climbing to his feet with a puzzled frown.
"It's too good to
spoil by telling you." Her expression was strange, and she sounded amused,
frightened, excited, and surprised, all in one.
"At least give me a
clue!"
"All right."
She eyed him with an odd, lurking smile. "I didn't have anything else to
do, so I sent a remote back to take a peek at the village we pulled Harry out
of, and you won't believe what's going on!"
* * *
"Well,
Father," Tibold closed the spyglass with a click and grimaced at Stomald,
"it seems His Grace was unimpressed."
Stomald nodded, shading
his eyes with his hand, and tried not to show his own despair. He hadn't
expected Bishop Frenaur to accept his unsupported word without question, but he
certainly hadn't counted on this.
Mother Church's
blood-red standards advanced up the twisting valley, blue and gold cantons
glittering, and metal gleamed behind them: pikeheads and muskets, armor, and
the dully-flashing barrels of artillery.
"How many, do you
think?" he asked quietly.
"Enough." The
Guard captain squinted into the sun, frowning. "More than I expected,
really. I'd say that's most of the Malagoran Temple Guard out there, Father.
Call it twenty thousand men."
Stomald nodded again,
grateful Tibold hadn't said, "I told you so." The Guard captain had
argued against sending the good word to the Temple. Unlike Stomald, Tibold
wasn't a native-born Malagoran, but he knew the Temple regarded Malagor as a
hotbed of sedition, and seeing that armed, advancing host, Stomald was just as
glad he'd at least agreed to send his news by semaphore rather than taking it
in person.
He shook that thought
off and pressed his lips together. Surely God had sent His angels to Cragsend
for a purpose. He didn't promise His servants would always be bright enough to see
His purpose, but He always had one. Of course, sometimes it wasn't a very safe
one. . . .
"What do you
advise?"
"Running
away?" Tibold suggested with a smile, and Stomald surprised himself with a
chuckle.
"I don't think God
would like that. Besides, where would we run to? We're backed up against the
mountains, Tibold."
"Just like a
kinokha in a trap," the Guard captain agreed, wondering why he wasn't more
frightened. He'd thought his young priest was mad at first, but something about
him had been convincing. Certainly, Tibold told himself yet again, those hadn't
been demons. He'd seen too much of what men, touched with God's immortal
spirit, were capable of in time of war. No, if they'd been demons, Cragsend
would be a smoking ruin peopled only by the dead.
And, like Father
Stomald, he could think of only one other thing they could have been, though he
did wish they'd been a bit less ambiguous in their message. Still, he supposed
that was his fault. He was the damn-fool idiot who'd shot the first of
them down. Even an angel might forget her message with a bullet in her head,
and the others had seemed more intent on getting her back than dropping off any
letters.
He snorted. The other
local villages and towns—even Cragwall, the largest town in the Shalokar
Range—had sent their priests to stare at the wreckage and hear Father Stomald's
tale. Tibold had never realized just how powerful a preacher Stomald was until
he heard him speaking to those visitors, bringing forward other villagers to
bear witness, describing the angel who'd spoken in the Holy Tongue even while
the sanctified oil blazed upon her. It was a pity he couldn't have a word or
two with the commander of that army, for he'd brought everyone else around. Of
course, his audience had been Malagorans, with all a Malagoran's resentment of
foreign domination, and Tibold knew better than most how jealous the Temple was
of its secular power. Whoever was in command down there had his orders from the
Circle; he was hardly likely to forget them on the say-so of a village
under-priest, however eloquent.
Tibold reopened his
glass to study the standards once more. Columns of smoke rose behind
them—columns which had once been farmsteads and small villages. The people
who'd lived there had either come to join the "heresy" or fled to
escape it, and he was grateful they had, for the smoke told him what the Guard's
orders were. Mother Church had decided to make an example of the
"rebels" and declared Holy War, and her Guard would take no
prisoners.
"Well,
Father," he said at last, "I don't see much choice. I've got five
hundred musketeers, a thousand pikemen, and four thousand with nothing but
their bare hands. Even with God on our side, that's not a lot."
"No," Stomald
sighed. "I wish I could say God will save us, but sometimes we can meet
our Trial only by dying for what we know to be right."
"Agreed. But I'm a
soldier, Father, and, if it's all the same to you, I'd like to die as
one—without making it any easier for them than I have to."
"I don't know of
any Writ that says you should," Stomald said with a sad smile.
"Then we'll fall
back to Tilbor Pass. It's less than four hundred paces across, and it'll take
even this lot a few days to dig us out of that." Stomald nodded, and the
Guardsman smiled crookedly. "And in the meantime, Father, I won't take it
a bit amiss if you ask God to help us out of the mess we've landed ourselves
in!"
"You're
joking!" Sean stared at the images from the remote. "Angels?"
"Yep." Sandy's
eyes sparkled. "Wild, isn't it?"
"My God." Sean
sank onto his couch. All the others were gazing as fixedly as he at the display.
"Actually, it's not
as crazy as it sounds," Harriet mused. "I mean, we obviously weren't
mortals—not with bio-enhancement, grav guns, and plasma grenades—and if you
aren't mortal, you're either a demon or an angel. And I've been back over your
reports." Her voice wavered, for the others had prepared their promised
implant download. She still had no memory of the event, but the download had
shown it all to her through her friends' eyes. She shivered as her mind
replayed the image of her own bloody body, awaiting the torch, then shook
herself. "It looks like the only two they saw clearly were Sandy and
me."
"That's what I
gather from what this Father Stomald is saying." Sandy switched to an
image of the priest and smiled wryly as she recalled the last time she'd seen
the broad-shouldered, curly-haired young man with the neatly trimmed beard. He
looked far more composed now as he stood talking to the hard-faced soldier at
his side.
"He's kind of cute,
isn't he?" Harriet murmured, then blushed as Sean gave her a very speaking
look and she remembered what that cute young man had almost done to her. She
rubbed her eye patch and gave herself another shake.
"Anyway, if we're
the only ones he saw, it all makes sense. Their church is patriarchal—well, for
that matter, most of Pardal is. Malagor's sort of radical in that respect; they
actually let women own property. The thought of a woman in the priesthood is
anathema, but there Sandy and I were in Battle Fleet uniform . . . which just
happens to be what their bishops wear for their holiest church feasts. Add the
fact that this patriarchal outfit has decided, for reasons best known to
themselves, that angels are female—"
"And
beautiful," Tamman inserted.
"As I say, angels
are female," Harriet went on repressively. "They're also immortal,
but not invulnerable, which explains how I could have been injured, and this
Stomald seems to realize you three deliberately didn't kill anyone when you
came in like gangbusters. Given all that, there's actually a weird sort of logic
to the whole thing."
"Yeah," Sean
said more soberly, and changed the display himself. The marching columns of
armed men sent a visible chill through Israel's crew, and he sighed.
"We may not have killed anyone, but it looks like maybe we should
have. At least then we would have been 'demons' instead of some kind of divine
messengers that're going to get all of them massacred."
"Maybe . . . and
maybe not. . . ." Sandy was gazing at the advancing Temple Guard, and the
light in her eyes worried Sean.
"What d'you
mean?" he demanded, and she gave him a beatific smile.
"I mean we just
found the key to the Temple's front door."
"Huh?" her
lover said sapiently, and her smile became a grin.
"We don't want all
those people slaughtered for something we started, however unintentionally, do
we?" Four heads shook, and she shrugged. "In that case, we've got to
rescue them."
"And how do you
propose to do that?"
"Oh, that's the
easy part. Those guys are a heck of a lot more than a hundred kilometers from
the Temple."
"Hold on
there!" Sean protested. "I don't want to see Stomald and his fellow
nuts massacred, but I don't want to massacre anyone else, either!"
"No need," she
assured him. "We can probably scare the poo out of them with a few holo
projections without even a demonstration of firepower."
"Hum." Sean
looked at the others, and his eyes began to dance. "Yeah, I suppose we
could. Might even be fun."
"Don't get too
carried away," Sandy said, "because what happens after we
scare 'em is what really matters."
"What are you
talking about?" Tamman sounded puzzled.
"I mean that
whether we like it or not, the fat's in the fire. Either we let the Church
massacre these people, or we rescue them. If we rescue them, do you think the
Temple's just going to say, 'Gosh! Looks like we better leave those nasty
demon-worshiping heretics alone'? And they're not going to go home like
nothing happened, either, because if we save them, we reconfirm their belief in
divine intervention."
"Great," Sean
sighed.
"Maybe it is."
He looked up in surprise, and she shrugged. "We didn't do it on purpose,
but we can't undo it. So if the Temple wants a crusade, why not give it
one?"
"Are you saying we
should instigate a religious war?!" Harriet stared at her in horror, and
Sandy shrugged again.
"I'm saying we
already have," she said more soberly. "That gives us a responsibility
to end it, one way or another, and we're not going to be able to do that
without getting our hands bloody. I don't like that any more than you do,
Harry, but we don't have a choice—unless we want to sit back and watch Stomald
and his people go down.
"So if we have to
get involved, let's go whole hog. The Church is too big, too static. Even the
secular lords are lap dogs for it. But the only way Stomald's going to survive
is to take out the Inner Circle . . . and that just happens to be what we
need to do to get into the Sanctum."
"I don't know. . .
." Harriet said slowly, but Sean was staring at Sandy in admiration.
"My God,
Sandy—that's brilliant!"
"Well, pretty darn
smart, anyway," she agreed. Then she laughed. "Anyway, we're
certainly the right people for the job!" Sean looked blank, and her grin
seemed to split her face. "Of course we are, Sean! After all, we are
the Lost Children of Israel, aren't we?"
Sean grimaced as his
stealthed fighter, one of only three Israel carried, hovered above the
twisting gorge. It was sheer, deep, and dizzy, with vertical walls that
narrowed to less than two hundred meters where they'd been closed with
earthworks, and he saw why the "heretics" had retreated into it, but
such tight quarters made maneuvering for the shot a bitch.
He checked his scanners.
The cutter Sandy, Harriet, and Brashan rode was as invisible as the fighter,
but their synchronized stealth fields made it clear to his own instruments
while they ran their final checks.
He wished there'd been
time to test their jury-rigged holo projector properly. It would have been nice
to have had more planning time, too. Building a strategy in less than ten hours
offered little scope for careful consideration, though he had to admit Sandy
seemed to have answered his major objections.
The hardest part, in
many ways, was the limits on what they could offer these people. It would take
a "miracle" to save them this time, but it was the only miracle Israel's
crew could work. They dared not use Imperial technology within a hundred klicks
of the Temple, yet if they used it up to that point and then stopped, the
result would be disastrous. Not only would it offer the Temple fresh hope, but
the sudden cessation would fill the "heretics" with dismay. It might
well convince them they were heretics, that the "false angels"
dared not confront the Temple on its own ground, and that limitation was going
to make even more problems than Harriet's monkey wrench.
He puffed his lips and
wished his twin were just a little less principled. Her insistence that they
never claim divine status was going to make things difficult—and probably
wouldn't be believed anyway. Yet she was right. They'd done enough damage, and,
assuming they won the war they'd provoked, they'd eventually have to convince
their "allies" they weren't really angels. Besides, demanding their
worship would have made him feel unclean.
He turned his attention
to the army of the Church. Those earthworks looked almost impregnable, but the
valley formed a funnel to them, and the Temple Guard was busy deploying field
guns under cover of darkness. With the dawn, dozens of them would be able to
open fire across a wide arc. They didn't look very heavy—they might throw five
or six-kilo shot—but there were a lot of them, and he didn't see any in the
heretics' camp.
"Wish Sandy's dad
was here," he muttered.
"Or my
dad," Tamman grunted. "Better yet, Mom!"
"I'd settle for any
of 'em, but Uncle Hector's the history nut. I don't know crap about black
powder and pikes."
"We'll just have to
pick up on-the-job training. And at least we've got the right
accouterments." Tamman grinned and rapped his soot-black breastplate. Sean
wore a matching breast and backplate with mail sleeves. The armor, like the
swords racked behind their flight couches, came from Israel's machine
shops, and the materials of which they were made would have raised more than a
few eyebrows in either of the camps below.
"Easy for you to
say," Sean grunted. "You were the big wheel on the fencing team—I'm
likely to cut my own damn head off!"
"These guys are
more into broadsword tactics," Tamman pointed out. "I don't know how
much fencing's going to help against that. But we've both got enhanced reaction
speeds, and none—"
"Sean, it's show
time." Sandy's quiet transmission cut Tamman off.
Tibold Rarikson stood
behind the parapet, straining his eyes into the night, and rubbed his aching
back. It had been years since last he'd plied a mattock, but most of his
"troops" were only local militia. They had yet to learn a shovel was
as much a weapon as any sword . . . and it seemed unlikely they'd have time to
digest the lesson. He couldn't see it in the dark, but he knew they were
bringing up the guns, and Mother Church's edict against secular artillery
heavier than chagors gave the Guard a monopoly on the heavier arlak. Of course,
he didn't even have any chagors, though his malagors might come as a nasty
surprise. Except that he faced Guards who'd spent most of their enlistments in
Malagor, so they knew all about the heavy-bore musket that was the princedom's
national trademark. . . .
He shook himself. His
wandering thoughts were wearing ruts, and it wasn't as if any of it really
mattered. There were more than enough Guardsmen to soak up all the musket balls
he had and close with cold steel, which meant—
His thoughts broke off
as a dim pool of light glowed suddenly into existence between him and the Guard's
pickets. He rubbed his eyes and blinked hard, but the wan radiance refused to
vanish, and he poked the nearest sentry.
"Here, you! Go get
Father Stomald!"
* * *
"Captain Ithun!
Look!"
Under-Captain Ithun
jumped and smothered a curse as heated wine spilled down his front. The Guard
officer—one of the very few native Malagorans in the Temple's detachment to the
restive province—mopped at his breastplate, muttering to himself, and stalked towards
the picket who'd shouted.
"Look at what,
Surgam?" he demanded irritably. "I don't—"
His voice died. An
amorphous cloud of light hovered five hundred paces away, almost at the edge of
the ditch footing the heretic's earthen rampart. It seethed and wavered,
growing brighter as he watched, and his hair tried to stand on end under his
helmet. The incredible tales told by the handful of heretics they'd so far
captured poured through his mind, and his mouth was dust-dry as the eerie
luminescence flowed towards him.
He swallowed. If the
heretics were meddling with the Valley of the Damned, then that might be a—
He stopped himself
before he thought the word.
"Get Father
Uriad!" he snapped, and Private Surgam raced off into the dark with rather
more than normal speediness.
* * *
"What is it,
Tibold?" Stomald had finally managed to fall asleep, and his mind was
still logy as he panted from his hasty run.
"Look for yourself,
Father," Tibold said tautly, and Stomald's mouth fell open. The ball of
light was taller than three men and growing taller.
"I— How long has
that been there?!"
"No more than five
minutes, but—" Tibold's explanation broke off, and the Guardsman swallowed
so hard Stomald heard it plainly even as he fell to his own knees in awe.
The pearly light had
suddenly darkened, rearing to a far greater height, and he groped for his
starburst as it coalesced into a mighty figure.
"Saint Yorda
preserve us!" someone cried, and Stomald's thoughts echoed the unseen
sentry as the blue and gold shape towered in the night, lit by fearsome inner
light. Her back was to him, and she might be twenty times taller than the last
time he'd seen her, but he recognized that short hair, cut like a helmet of
curly silk, and his lips shaped a soft, fervent prayer as he recalled a
thundering voice from a mass of flames.
* * *
"Dear God!"
Under-Captain Ithun whispered.
The light streaming from
the unearthly figure washed the gorge walls in rippling waves of blue and gold,
and its brown eyes glowed like beacons. He fought his panic, locking trembling
sinews against the urge to fall to his knees, and cries of terror rose from his
men. A demon, he told himself. It had to be a demon! But there was something in
that stern face. Something in the set of that firm mouth. Could it be the
heretics were—?
He slashed the thought
off, wavering on the brink of flight. If he so much as stepped back his company
would vanish, but he was only a man! How—?
"God preserve
us!"
He wheeled at the
whispered prayer and gasped in relief. He reached out, heedless of discourtesy
in his fear, and shook Father Uriad.
"What is it,
Father?" he demanded. "In the name of God, what is it?"
"I—" Uriad
began, and then the apparition spoke.
* * *
"Warriors of Mother
Church!"
Stomald gasped, for the
rolling thunder of that voice was ten times louder than in Cragsend—a hundred
times! All about him men fell to their knees, clapping their hands over their
ears as its majesty crashed through them. Surely the very cliffs themselves
must fall before its power!
"Warriors of Mother
Church," the angel cried, "turn from this madness! These are not your
enemies—they are your brothers! Has Pardal not seen enough blood? Must you turn
against the innocent to shed still more?"
The giant figure took
one stride forward—a single stride that covered twenty mortal paces—and bent
towards the terrified Temple Guard. Sadness touched those stern features, and
one huge hand rose pleadingly.
"Look into your
hearts, warriors of Mother Church," the sweet voice thundered. "Look
into your souls. Will you stain your hands before man and God with the blood of
innocent babes and women?"
* * *
"Demon!"
Father Uriad cried as men turned to him in terror. "I tell you, it's a
demon!"
"But—" someone
began, and the priest rounded on him in a frenzy.
"Fool! Will you
lose your own soul, as well? This is no angel! It is a demon from Hell
itself!"
The Guardsmen wavered,
and Uriad snatched a musket from a sentry. The man gawked at him, and he
charged forward, evading the hands that clutched at him, to face the monster
shape alone.
"Demon!" His
shrill cry sounded thin and thready after that majestic voice. "Damned and
accursed devil! Foul, unclean destroyer of innocence! I cast you out! Begone to
the Hell from whence you came!"
The Temple Guard gaped,
appalled yet mesmerized by his courage, and the towering shape looked down at
him.
"Would you slay
your own flock, Priest?" The vast voice was gentle, and clergymen in both
armies gasped as it spoke the Holy Tongue. But Uriad was a man above himself,
and he threw the musket to his shoulder.
"Begone, curse
you!" he screamed, and the musket cracked and flashed.
* * *
"That tears
it," Sean muttered, jockeying the fighter as Sandy's holo image
straightened. "Why the hell couldn't they just run? Got lock,
Tam?"
"Yeah. Jesus, I
hope that idiot isn't as close as I think he is!"
* * *
"Priest," the
contralto voice rolled like stern, sweet thunder, "you will not lead these
men to their own damnation."
Upper-Priest Uriad
stared up, clutching his musket. Powder smoke clawed at his nostrils, but the
ball had left its target unmarked and terror pierced the armor of his rage. He
trembled, yet if he fled his entire army would do the same, and he pried one
clawed hand from the musket stock. He scrabbled at his breast, raising his
starburst, and it flashed in his hand, lit by the radiance streaming from the
apparition as her own hand pointed at the earth before her.
"These innocents
are under my protection, Priest. I have no wish for any to die, but if die
someone must, it will not be they!"
A brilliant ray of light
speared from her massive finger.
* * *
Tamman tightened as the
fighter's main battery locked onto the laser designator within that beam. He
took one more second, making himself double-check his readings. God, it was
going to be close. They'd never counted on some idiot being gutsy enough to
come to meet Sandy's holo image!
* * *
The ray of light touched
the ground, and twenty thousand voices cried out in terror as a massive trench
scored itself across the valley, wider than a tall man's height and thrice as
deep. Dirt and dust vomited upward as the very bedrock exploded, and Father
Uriad flew backward like a toy.
The raw smell of rock
dust choked nose and throat, and it was too much. The Guardsmen screamed and
turned as one. Sentries cast aside weapons. Artillerists abandoned their guns.
Cooks threw down their ladles. Anything that might slow a man was hurled away,
and the Temple Guard of Malagor stampeded into the night in howling madness.
The ray of light died,
and the blue-and-gold shape turned from the shattered hosts of Mother Church to
face Father Stomald's people.
The young priest drove
himself to his feet, standing atop the rampart to face the angel he'd tried to
slay, and the burning splendor of her eyes swept over him. He felt his
followers' fear against his back, yet awe and reverence held them in their
places, and the angel smiled gently.
"I will come among
you," she told them, "in a form less frightening. Await me."
And the majestic shape
of light and glory vanished.
Father Stomald sat down
to the supper on the camp table with a groan. He hadn't expected to be alive to
eat it, and he was tired enough to wonder if it was worth the bother. Just organizing
the unexpected booty abandoned by the Guard had been exhausting, yet Tibold was
right. The dispersal of one army was no guarantee of victory, and those weapons
were priceless. Besides, the Guard might regain enough courage to reclaim them
if they weren't collected.
But at least deciding
what to do with pikes and muskets was fairly simple. Other problems were less
so—like the more than four thousand Guardsmen who'd trickled back and begged to
join "the Angels' Army" as wonder overcame terror. Stomald had
welcomed them, but Tibold insisted no newcomer, however welcome, be accepted
unquestioningly. It was only a matter of time before the Church attempted to
infiltrate spies in the guise of converts, and he preferred to establish the
rules now.
Stomald saw his point,
but discussing what to do had taken hours. For now, Tibold had four thousand
new laborers; as they proved their sincerity, they would be integrated into his
units—with, Tibold had observed dryly, non-Guardsmen on either side to help
suppress any temptation to treason.
Yet all such questions,
while important and real, had been secondary to most of Stomald's people. God's
own messengers had intervened for them, and if Malagorans were too pragmatic to
let joy interfere with tasks they knew must be performed, they went about those
tasks with spontaneous hymns. And Stomald, as shepherd of a vaster flock than
he'd ever anticipated, had been deeply involved in planning and leading the
solemn services of thanksgiving which had both begun and closed this long,
exhausting day.
All of which meant he'd
had little enough time to breathe, much less eat.
Now he mopped up the
last of the shemaq stew and slumped on his camp stool with a sigh. He could
hear the noises of the camp, but his tent stood on a small rise, isolated from
the others by the traditional privacy of the clergy. That isolation bothered
him, yet the ability to think and pray uninterrupted was a priceless treasure
whose value to a leader he was coming to appreciate.
He raised his head, gazing
past the tied-back flap at the staff-hung lantern just outside. More lanterns
and torches twinkled in the narrow valley below him, and he heard the lowing of
the hundreds of nioharqs the Guard had abandoned. There were fewer
branahlks—the speedy saddle beasts had been in high demand as the Church's
warriors fled—but the nioharqs, more than man-high at the shoulder, would be
invaluable when it came to moving their camp. And—
His thoughts chopped
off, and he lunged to his feet as the air before him suddenly wavered like heat
above a flame. Then it solidified, and he gazed upon the angel who had saved
his people.
* * *
Sean and Tamman waited
outside the tent inside their portable stealth fields. The trip across the camp
had been . . . interesting, since people don't avoid things they can't see.
Sandy had almost been squashed by a freight wagon, and her expression as she
nipped aside had been priceless.
Sean had planned to get
this over with last night, but the totality of the Guard's rout—and the
treasure-trove of its abandoned camp—had changed his schedule. One thing
Stomald hadn't needed while he organized that windfall was the intrusion of
still more miracles. Besides, the delay had given Sean time to watch the
"heretics" work, and he'd been deeply impressed by Stomald's military
commander. That man was a professional to his toenails, and a soldier of his
caliber was going to be invaluable.
But that was for the
future, and right now he tried not to laugh at the priest's expression when
Sandy suddenly materialized in front of him.
* * *
Stomald's jaw dropped,
and then he fell to his knees before the angel. He signed God's starburst while
his own inadequacy suffused him, coupled with a soaring joy that, inadequate as
he was, God had seen fit to touch him with His Finger, and held his breath as
he awaited some sign of her will.
"Stand up,
Stomald," a soft voice said in the Holy Tongue. He stared at the floor of
his tent, then rose tremblingly. "Look at me," the angel said, and he
raised his eyes to her face. "That's better."
The angel crossed his
tent and sat in one of his camp chairs, and he watched her in silence. She
moved with easy grace, and she was even smaller than he'd thought on that
terrible night. Her head was little higher than his shoulder when she stood,
but there was nothing fragile about her tiny form.
Brown hair gleamed under
the lantern light, cut short as a man's but in an indefinably feminine style.
Her clean-cut mouth was firm, yet he felt oddly certain those lips were meant
to smile. Her triangular face was built of huge eyes, high cheekbones, and a
determined chin that lacked the beauty of the angel Tibold's huntsmen had
wounded yet radiated strength and purpose.
She returned his gaze
calmly, and he cleared his throat and fiddled with his starburst, trying to
think. But what did a man say to God's messenger? Good evening? How are
you? Do you think it will rain?
He had no idea, and the
angel's eyes twinkled. Yet it was a kindly twinkle, and she took pity on his
tongue-tied silence.
"I said I would
visit you." Her voice was deep for a woman's, but without the thunder of
her wrath it was sweet and soft, and his pulse slowed.
"You honor us,
Holiness," he managed, and the angel shook her head.
" 'Holiness' is a
priestly title, and I am but a visitor from a distant land."
"Then . . . then by
what title shall I address you?"
"None," she
said simply, "but my name is Sandy."
Stomald's heart leapt as
she bestowed her name upon him, for it was a new name, unlike any he'd ever
heard.
"As you
command," he murmured with a bow, and she frowned.
"I'm not here to
command you, Stomald." He flinched, afraid he'd angered her, and she shook
her head as she saw his fear.
"Things have gone
awry," she told him. "It was no part of our purpose to embroil your
people in holy war against the Church. It was ill-done of us to endanger your
land and lives."
Stomald bit down on a
need to reject her self-accusation. She was God's envoy; she could not do ill.
Yet, he reminded himself, angels were but God's servants, not gods themselves,
and so, perhaps, they could err. The novel thought was disturbing, but
her tone told him it was true.
"We did more ill
than you," he said humbly. "We wounded your fellow angel and laid
impious, violent hands upon her. That God should send you to us once more to
save us from His own Church when we have done such wrong is a greater mercy
than any mortals can deserve, O Sandy."
Sandy grimaced. She'd
intended to leave angels entirely out of this if she could, but Pardalians, like
Terrans, had more than one word for "angel." Sha'hia, the most
common, was derived from the Imperial Universal for "messenger," just
as the English word descended from the Greek for the same thing. Unfortunately,
there was another, derived from the word for "visitor"—from, in fact,
erathiu, the very word she'd just let herself use—and her slip hadn't
escaped Stomald. He had been using sha'hia; now he was using erathu,
and if she corrected him, he would only assume he'd mispronounced it.
Explaining what she meant by "visitor" would get into areas so
far beyond his worldview that any attempt to discuss them was guaranteed to
produce a crisis of conscience, and she bit her lip, then shrugged. Harry was
right about the care they had to take, but Harry was just going to have to
accept the best she could do.
"You did only what
you thought was required," she said carefully, "and neither I nor
Harry herself hold it against you."
"Then . . . then
she lived?" Stomald's face blossomed in relief, and Sandy reminded herself
that Pardalian angels could be killed.
"She did. Yet what
brings me here is the danger in which your people stand, Stomald. We have our
own purpose to achieve, but in seeking to achieve it we put you in peril of
your lives. If we could, we would undo what we've done, yet that lies beyond
our power."
Stomald nodded. Holy
Writ said angels were powerful beings, but Man had free will. His actions could
set even an angel's purpose at naught, and he flushed in shame as he realized
his flock had done just that. Yet the Angel Sandy wasn't enraged; she'd saved
them, and the genuine concern in her soft voice filled his heart with
gratitude.
"Because we can't
undo it," Sandy continued, "we must begin from what has happened. It
may be we can combine our purpose with our responsibility to save your people
from the consequences of our own errors, yet there are limits to what we may
do. Last night, we had no choice but to intervene as we did, but we can't do so
again. Our purpose forbids it."
Stomald swallowed. With
Mother Church against them, how could they hope to survive without such aid?
She saw his fear and smiled gently.
"I didn't say we
can't intervene at all, Stomald—only that there are limits on how we may do so.
We will aid you, but you must know that the Inner Circle will never rest until
you've been destroyed. You threaten both their beliefs and their secular power
over Malagor, and your threat is greater, not less, now, for word of what
happened last night will spread on talmahk wings.
"Because of that,
fresh armies will soon move against you, and I tell you that our purpose is not
to see you die. We seek no martyrs. Death comes to all men, but we believe the
purpose of Man is to help his fellows, not to kill them in God's name. Do you
understand that?"
"I do,"
Stomald whispered. That was all he'd ever asked to do, and to be told by an
angel that it was God's will—!
"Good," the
angel murmured, then straightened in her chair, and her mouth turned firmer,
her eyes darker. "Yet when others attack you, you have every right to
fight back, and in this we will help you, if you wish. The choice is yours. We
won't force you to accept our aid or our advice."
"Please."
Stomald's hands half-rose, and he fought an urge to throw himself back to his
knees. "Please, aid my people, I beg you."
"There is no need
to beg." The angel regarded him sternly. "What we can do, we will do,
but as friends and allies, not dictators."
"I—" Stomald
swallowed again. "Forgive me, O Sandy. I am only a simple under-priest,
unused to any of the things happening to me." His lips quirked despite his
tension, for it was hard not to smile when her eyes were so understanding.
"I doubt even High Priest Vroxhan would know what to say or do when
confronted by an angel in his tent!" he heard himself say, and quailed,
but the angel only smiled. She had dimples, he noted, and his spirits rose
before her humor.
"No, I doubt he
would," she agreed, a gurgle of laughter hovering in her soft voice, and
then she shook herself.
"Very well,
Stomald. Simply understand that we neither desire nor need your worship. Ask
what you will of us, as you might ask any other man. If we can do it, we will;
if we can't, we'll tell you so, and we won't hold your asking against you. Can
you do that?"
"I can try,"
he agreed with greater confidence. It was hard to be frightened of one who so
obviously meant him and his people well.
"Then let me tell
you what we can do, since I've told you what we cannot. We can aid and advise
you, and there are many things we can teach you. We can tell you much of what
passes elsewhere, though not all, and while we can't slay your enemies with our
own weapons, we can help you fight for your lives with your own if you choose
to do so. Do you so choose?"
"We do."
Stomald straightened. "We did no wrong, yet Mother Church came against us
in Holy War. If such is her decision, we will defend ourselves against her as
we must."
"Even knowing both
you and the Inner Circle cannot survive? One of you must fall, Stomald. Are you
prepared to assume that responsibility?"
"I am," he
said even more firmly. "A shepherd may die for his flock, but his duty is
to preserve that flock, not slay it. Mother Church herself teaches that. If the
Inner Circle has forgotten, it must be taught anew."
"I think you are as
wise as you are courageous, Stomald of Cragsend," she said, "and
since you will protect your people, I bring you those to help you fight."
She raised her hand, and Stomald gasped as the air shimmered once more and two
more strangers appeared out of it.
One was scarcely taller
than Stomald himself, square-shouldered and muscular in his night-black armor.
His hair and eyes were as brown as the angel's, though his skin was much
darker, and his hair was even shorter. A high-combed helmet rode in his bent
elbow, and a long, slender sword hung at his side. He looked tough and
competent, yet he might have been any mortal man.
But the other! This was
a giant, towering above Stomald and his own companion. He wore matching armor
and carried the same slender sword, but his eyes were black as midnight and his
hair was darker still. He was far from handsome—indeed, his prominent nose and
ears were almost ugly—but he met the priest's eyes with neither arrogance nor
inner doubt . . . much, Stomald thought, as Tibold might have but for his
automatic deference to the cloth.
"Stomald, these are
my champions," the angel said quietly. "This—" she touched the
shorter man's shoulder "—is Tamman Tammanson, and this—" she touched
the towering giant, and her eyes seemed to soften for a moment "—is Sean
Colinson. Will you have them as war captains?"
"I . . . would be
honored," Stomald said, grappling with a fresh sense of awe. They weren't
angels, for they were male, but something about them, something more even than
their sudden appearance, whispered they were more than mortal, like the
legendary heroes of the old tales.
"I thank you for
your trust," Sean Colinson—and what sort of name was that?—said. His voice
was deep, but he spoke accented Pardalian, not the Holy Tongue, as he offered a
huge right hand. "As Sandy says, your destiny is your own, but your danger
is none of your making. If I can help, I will."
"And I."
Tamman Tammanson stood a half-pace behind his companion, like a shieldman or an
under-captain, but his voice was equally firm.
"And now,
Stomald," the Angel Sandy said in the Holy Tongue, "it may be time to
summon Tibold. We have much to discuss."
* * *
Tibold Rarikson sat in
his camp chair and felt his head turning back and forth like an untutored
yokel. He'd found his eyes had a distinct tendency to jerk away from the Angel
Harry's beautiful face whenever she glanced his way, and it shamed him. She
hadn't said a word to condemn him for shooting her down, and he was grateful
for her understanding, yet somehow he suspected he would have felt better if
she'd been less so.
But it wasn't just guilt
which kept pulling his gaze from her, for he'd never imagined meeting with such
a group. The man the angels called Sean was a giant among men, and the one called
Tamman had skin the color of old jelath wood, yet the angels automatically drew
the eye from their champions. The Angel Harry might be shorter than Lord Sean,
but she was a head taller than most men, and despite her blind eye, she seemed
to look deep inside a man's soul every time her remaining eye met his. Yet for
all that, it seemed odd to see her in trousers, even those of the priestly
raiment she wore. She should have been in the long, bright skirts of a
Malagoran woman, not men's garb, for despite her height and seeming youth, she
radiated a gentle compassion which made one trust her instantly.
And then there was the
Angel Sandy. Even on this short an acquaintance, Tibold suspected no one was
likely to imagine her in skirts! Her brown eyes glowed with the
resolution of a seasoned war captain, her words were crisp and incisive, and she
radiated the barely leashed energy of a hunting seldahk.
" . . . so as you and the Angel Sandy
say—" Stomald was saying in response to Lord Sean's last comment when the
angel leaned forward with a frown.
"Don't call us
that," she said. Tibold had spent enough years in the Temple's service to
gain a rough understanding of the Holy Tongue, but he'd never heard an accent
quite like hers. Not that he needed to have heard it before to recognize its
note of command.
Stomald sat back in his
own chair with a puzzled expression, looking at Tibold, then turned back to the
angel. His confusion was evident, and it showed in his voice when he spoke
again.
"I meant no
offense," he said humbly, and the angel bit her lip. She glanced at the
Angel Harry, whose single good eye returned her look levelly, almost as if in
command, then sighed.
"I'm not offended,
Stomald," she said carefully, "but there are . . . reasons Harry and
I wish you would avoid that title."
"Reasons?"
Stomald repeated hesitantly, and she shook her head.
"In time, you'll
understand them, Stomald. I promise. But for now, please humor us in
this."
"As you comm—"
Stomald began, then stopped and corrected himself. "As you wish, Lady
Sandy," he said, and glanced at Tibold once more. The ex-Guardsman
shrugged slightly. As far as he was concerned, an angel could be called
whatever she wished. Labels meant nothing, and any village idiot could tell
what the angels were, however they cared to be addressed.
"As Lady
Sandy says," Stomald continued after a moment, "the first step must
be to consolidate our own position. The weapons the Guard abandoned will help
there—" he glanced at Tibold, who nodded vigorously "—but you're
correct, Lord Sean. We cannot stand passively on the defensive. I am no war
captain, yet it seems to me that we must secure control of the Keldark Valley
as soon as possible."
"Exactly,"
Lord Sean said in his deep, accented voice. "There are a lot of things
Tamman and I can teach your army, Tibold, but we can't make the Temple stand
still while we do it. We've got to secure control of the valley—and the Thirgan
Gap—quickly enough to discourage the Guard from anything adventurous."
"Agreed, Lord
Sean," Tibold said. "If the An—" He paused with a blush.
"If Lady Sandy and Lady Harry can provide us with the information
on enemy movements you've described, we'll have a tremendous advantage, but too
many of our men have little or no experience. They'll need good, hard drilling,
and if we can do it in a strong enough defensive position, the Guard may leave
us alone long enough to do some good."
"Very well,
then," Stomald said firmly. "We will be guided by you and the An—you
and the Lady Sandy and Lady Harry, Lord Sean. Tomorrow morning, Tibold and I
will introduce you to our army as its new commander, and we will act as you
direct."
High Priest Vroxhan sat
behind his desk and glared at Bishop Frenaur and Lord Marshal Rokas. Neither
quite met his fiery eyes, and he growled something under his breath, then
inhaled deeply and managed—somehow, out of a lifetime of clerical discipline—to
still his need to curse at them.
"Very well,"
he grated, placing one hand on the message upon his blotter, "I want to
know how this happened."
Frenaur cleared his
throat. He hadn't visited Malagor in half a year, but he'd read the semaphore
messages to Vroxhan and additional, personal ones from Under-Bishop Shendar in
Malgos, the Malagoran capital. He wasn't certain he believed what they
reported, but if even a tenth of them were true . . .
"Holiness, I'm not
certain," he said at last. "Father Uriad led the Guard against the
heretics as the Circle directed, and for almost a moon he met with total
success. There was no resistance until they reached the northern Shalokars and
the heretics fortified a pass. He moved against them and—" He broke off
and shrugged helplessly. "Holiness, the Guardsmen who fled all insist they
saw something, and their descriptions certainly tally with the heretic
Stomald's descriptions of his 'angels.' "
"Angels?"
Vroxhan spat. "Angels who kill a consecrated priest?"
"I didn't say it was
an angel, Holiness." Frenaur managed not to retreat. "I said it
matched Stomald's descriptions. And whatever it was, it protected the heretics
with powers which were far more than mortal."
"Assuming the
cowards who fled aren't lying in fear of Mother Church's wrath," Vroxhan
snarled, and Marshal Rokas stirred at Frenaur's side.
"Holiness,"
the grizzled veteran's rough voice was deferential but unafraid,
"Captain-General Yorkan reports the same thing. I know Yorkan. I would
know if his report was an attempt to cover himself." The grim old warrior
met his master's eyes, and Vroxhan glowered for a moment, then sighed.
"Very well,"
he said heavily, "I must accept their story when all of them agree. But
whatever that . . . thing was, it was no angel! We didn't come through
the Trial only to have angels suddenly appear to tell us we all stand in
doctrinal error! If that were the case, the Voice wouldn't have saved us."
Frenaur bit his tongue.
Wisdom suggested this was no time to mention the irregularity of the Trial's
liturgy. And, he thought unhappily, far less was it a time to point out that
Stomald had never claimed his "angels" had said anything at all, much
less condemned the Church for error. Besides, the mere fact that they'd had
dealings with the Valley of the Damned proved they couldn't be angels . . .
didn't it?
"Yet whatever
happened, it's deprived us of over twenty thousand Guardsmen," Vroxhan
continued grimly.
"It has,
Holiness," Rokas agreed. "Worse, we've lost their equipment, as well.
The heretics have gained their weapons, including their entire artillery train
. . . and their position divides our strength."
Vroxhan looked like a
man drinking sour milk, but he nodded. There might even have been a glimmer of
respect in his eyes for Rokas' unflinching admission, and he pinched the bridge
of his nose while he thought.
"In that case,
Marshal," he said finally, "we shall just have to call forth a
greater host. There can be no compromise with the heretical—especially not when
they now possess such strength of arms." He turned cold eyes upon Frenaur.
"How widely has this heresy spread?"
"Widely,"
Frenaur confessed. "Before . . . whatever happened, there were only some
few thousand, mostly peasant villagers from the Shalokars. Now word of the
'miracle' is spreading like wildfire. It's even reached beyond the Thirgan Gap
to Vral. God only knows how many people have flocked to Stomald's standard by
now, but the signs are bad. Messages indicate entire villages are streaming
north to join 'the Army of the Angels.' "
Vroxhan scowled at him
for a moment, then shrugged.
"I know it's not
your fault." He sighed, and the bishop relaxed. "You're simply in
range of my ill humor and fear." His mouth tightened. "And I am
afraid, Brothers. Malagor has always been prone to schism, and this comes too
close upon the Trial. The vile powers of the valley have awakened to the defeat
of the Greater Demons. Perhaps still more of the unclean star spawn wait to
smite us—the Writ says there are many Demons—and they use these lesser evil
spirits to divide us before they assail us yet again."
He brooded down at his
desk, then straightened his shoulders.
"Lord Marshal, you
will summon the Great Host of Mother Church to Holy War." Rokas bowed, and
Frenaur bit his lip. The full Host had not been summoned since the Schismatic
Wars themselves. "But we must prepare our men to withstand demonic deceit
before we offer battle," Vroxhan continued heavily, "and I fear much
of Malagor will go over to the heretics before we are ready."
He looked up at
Frenaur's unhappy face, and his angry eyes softened.
"The same would be
true anywhere, Frenaur. The common folk are ill-equipped to judge such matters,
and when their own priests lead them astray it's hardly their fault that they
believe. Yet be that as it may, those who embrace heresy must pay heresy's
price." He returned his eyes to the marshal. "I do not yet wish to
summon the secular lords to your banner, Rokas, but even if we rely solely on
the Guard, we must first send priests among them, preaching the truth of what's
happened lest we lose still more troops to panic and spiritual seduction. Do
you agree?"
"I do, Holiness,
but I must urge caution lest we delay overlong."
"What do you mean,
'overlong'?"
"Holiness, Malagor
has always been difficult to invade, and its position divides our forces.
Worse, my own reports indicate the heretics are as inflamed by what they see as
foreign control as by whatever other seeds the demons may have sown."
Rokas watched Vroxhan
with care and was relieved when the high priest gave a slow nod. Before the
Schismatic Wars, Malagor had been strong enough to give even Mother Church
pause. Indeed, the traditional Malagoran restlessness under the Tenets'
restrictions had helped fuel the Great Schism, and the Inner Circle of the
time, already engaged upon a life-or-death struggle with the Schismatics, had
used the wars to break the princedom. Prince Uroba, Malagor's present
"ruler," was the Temple's pensioner—a drunkard sustained in power not
by birth or merit but by the pikes of the Guard—and his people knew it.
"Our forces west of
Malagor are weak," Rokas went on. "We have perhaps forty thousand
Guardsmen in Doras, Kyhyra, Cherist, and Showmah, but less than five thousand
in Sardua and Thirgan, and the heresy has spread more quickly to the west than
to the east. Indeed, I fear the Guard's strength may be hard pressed to prevent
more of the common folk from joining the heresy in those regions. More, the
semaphore chains across Malagor will soon fall into heretic hands, depriving us
of direct communications. We will have to send messages by semaphore to Arwah
and thence by ship to Darwan for relay through Alwa via the Qwelth Gap chain.
Such a delay will make it all but impossible to coordinate closely between our
forces east and west of Malagor."
He paused until Vroxhan
nodded once more, then went on in measured tones.
"The Guard's total
strength west of Malagor is, as I say, perhaps forty-five to fifty thousand.
Here in the east, the Temple can summon five times that many Guardsmen if we
strip our garrisons to the bone. For more than that, we would require a general
levy, yet, as you, I prefer not to rely upon the secular lords' troops—not, at
least, until we've won at least one victory and so proved these 'angels' are,
in fact, demons."
He paused again, and
again Vroxhan nodded, this time impatiently.
"The only practical
routes for armies into or out of Malagor are the Thirgan Gap and the Keldark
Valley. The gap is broader, but its approaches are dotted with powerful fortresses
which the heretics may well secure before we can move. Given those facts and
our weakness in the west, I would recommend massing the western Guard south of
the Cherist Mountains around Vral. In that position, they can both seal the
Thirgan Gap and maintain civil control."
Rokas began to pace,
tugging at his jaw as he marshaled words like companies of pikes.
"Our major strength
lies in the east, and with the gap secured we may concentrate in Keldark, using
the Guardsmen of Keldark to block the valley against heretical sorties until
we're ready. The valley is bad terrain and even narrower than the gap, but most
of its fortresses were razed after the Schismatic Wars. There are perhaps three
places the heretics might choose to stand: Yortown, Erastor, and Baricon. All
are powerful defensive positions; the cost of taking any of them will be
high."
He made a wry face.
"There won't be much strategy involved until we actually break into
Malagor, Holiness, not with such limited approach routes, but the same applies
to the heretics. And, unlike us, they must equip and train their forces. If we
strike quickly, we may well clear the entire valley before they can
prepare."
"I agree,"
Vroxhan said after a moment's thought. "And it will, indeed, be best to
move from the east. If they can strike before we prepare, they'll move
east, directly for the Temple."
"That was my own
thought," Rokas agreed.
"In the
meantime," Vroxhan returned to Frenaur, "I see no choice but to place
Malagor under Interdict. Please see to the proclamation."
"I will,"
Frenaur agreed unhappily. What must be must be.
"Understand me,
Brothers," Vroxhan said very quietly. "There will be no compromise
with heresy. Mother Church's sword has been drawn; it will not be sheathed
while a single heretic lives."
Robert Stevens—no longer
"the Reverend"—watched the broadcast with hating eyes. Bishop
Francine Hilgemann stared out over her congregation from a carven pulpit, and
her soft, clear voice was passionate.
"Brothers and
sisters, violence is no answer to fear. Perhaps some souls are mistaken,
but the Church cannot and will not condone those who defy a loving God's will
by striking out in unreasoning hatred. God's people do not stain their hands
with blood, nor is it fitting that the death of any human should be wreaked in
anger. Those who style themselves 'The Sword of God' are not His servants, but
destroyers of all He teaches, and their—"
Stevens snarled and
killed the HD, sickened that he'd once respected that . . . that— He couldn't
think of a foul enough word.
He paced slowly, and his
eyes warmed with an ugly light. Disgust and revulsion had driven him from the
Church, but Hilgemann and those like her could never weaken God's Sword. Their
corruption only filled the true faithful with determination, and the Sword
struck deeper every day.
As he had struck. The
most terrifying—and satisfying—day of his life had been the one in which he
realized why his cell had been sent against Vincente Cruz. The deaths of Cruz's
wife and children had bothered some of his people, yet God's work required
sacrifices, and if innocents perished, God would receive them as the martyrs
they'd become. But that he had been the instrument which destroyed the
heirs—heirs so corrupt they'd claimed a Narhani as a friend—had filled
Stevens with exaltation.
There'd been other
missions, but none so satisfying as that . . . or as the one he now looked
forward to. It was time Francine Hilgemann learned God's true chosen rejected
her self-damning compromises with the Anti-Christ.
* * *
Sergeant Graywolf was
calm-eyed and relaxed, for he knew how to wait. Especially when he awaited
something so satisfying.
He didn't know how the
analysts had developed the intel. From the briefing, he suspected they'd
intercepted a courier, but all that mattered was that they knew. With luck,
they might even take one of the bastards alive. Daniel Graywolf was a
professional, and he knew how valuable that could be . . . yet deep down
inside, he hoped they wouldn't be quite that lucky.
* * *
Stevens gave thanks for
the rainy night. Its wet blackness wouldn't bother Imperial surveillance systems,
but the people behind those systems were only human. The dreary winter rain
would have its effect where it mattered, dulling and slowing their minds.
Alice Hughes and Tom
Mason walked arm-in-arm behind him like lovers, weapons hidden by their raincoats.
Stevens carried his own weapon in a shoulder holster: an old-style automatic
with ten-millimeter "slugs" of the same explosive used in grav guns.
He didn't see Yance or Pete, but they'd close in at the proper moment. He knew
that, just as he knew Wanda Curry would bring their escape flyer in at
precisely the right second. They'd practiced the operation for days, and their
timing was exact.
His pulse ticked faster
as he reached the high-rise. It was of Pre-Siege construction, but it had been
modernized, and he paused under the force field roof protecting the front
entrance. He wiped rain from his face with just the right gratitude for the
respite while Alice and Tom closed up on his heels, and the corner of his eye
saw Yance and Pete arriving from the opposite direction. The five of them came
together by obvious coincidence, and then all of them turned and stepped
through the entrance as one.
There were no security
personnel in the lobby, only the automated systems he'd been briefed upon, and
he paused in the entry, head bent to hide his features, shielding Yance and
Pete as they reached under their coats. Then he stepped aside, and their
suppressors rose with practiced precision and burned each scan point into
useless junk with pulses of focused energy.
Stevens grunted, jerked
the ski mask over his face, and snatched out his own weapon, and the
well-drilled quintet raced for the transit shafts.
* * *
Graywolf stiffened at
the implant signal. Clumsy, he thought with a hungry smile. Obviously their
information had been less complete than they'd thought, for they'd missed three
separate sensors.
Nine more Security
Ministry agents stood as one behind nine closed doors as Graywolf cradled his
hyper rifle and moved to the window.
* * *
Stevens led his
followers from the transit shaft, and they spread out behind him, hugging the
walls, weapons poised. His own eyes were fixed on the door at the end of the
corridor, yet his attention roamed all about him, acute as a panther's after so
many months at the guerrilla's trade.
They were half way down
the hall when nine doors opened as one.
"Lay down your
weapons!" a voice shouted. "You're all under arr—"
Stevens spun like a cat.
He heard Yance's enraged bellow even as he tried to line up on the uniformed
woman in the doorway, but his people's reactions didn't match their
murderousness, for none were enhanced. His barking automatic blasted a chunk
from the wall beside the door, and then a hurricane of grav gun darts blew all
five terrorists into bloody meat.
* * *
Graywolf heard the
thunder and shrugged. They'd had their chance.
He held his own position
and watched the getaway flyer slide to a neat halt. It was right on the tick,
and he aligned his hyper rifle on the drive housing before he triggered his
com.
"Land and step out
of the flyer!" he told the pilot.
There was a split-second
pause, and then the flyer leapt ahead with blinding acceleration. But unlike Stevens'
killers, Graywolf was fully enhanced, and the exploding flyer gouged a
fifty-meter trench in the street below as its drive unit vanished into
hyper-space.
* * *
Lawrence Jefferson
completed his report with profound satisfaction.
He'd never really been
happy about penetrating security on Birhat. The distance was too great, and any
communication with agents there was vulnerable to interception. But that was no
longer necessary; his plans had matured to a point at which it no longer
mattered what the military did, and he controlled Earth's security
forces from his own office.
His lips pursed as he
considered his intertwining strategies. His latest ploy should remove Francine
from any suspicion. She'd openly become the Church of the Armageddon's leader,
but as one who denounced the Sword of God's fanaticism. Her masterful pleas for
nonviolence only underscored the Sword's growing ferocity, yet she was
emerging as a moderate, and Horus and Ninhursag were obligingly accepting his
own "astonished" conclusion that she was someone they could work with
against the radicals.
Now his security forces'
defeat of the Sword's attempt on her life would make her whiter than snow. He'd
wondered if he was being too clever, for it would never have done for any of
Stevens' people to be taken alive and disclose the truth about Imperial
Terra, but he'd chosen his agents with care. All were utterly loyal to the
Imperium . . . but each had lost friends or family to the Sword. He was certain
they'd tried to take the terrorists alive—and equally certain they hadn't tried
any harder than they had to. And, of course, he'd known he could trust Stevens'
fanatics to resist.
He was just as happy to
have that loose end tied, for Ninhursag's decision to flood Earth with ONI
agents worried him, especially since he didn't know why she was doing it. Her
official explanation might be the truth, for reinforcing Earth Security
and opening a double offensive against the Sword made sense. He didn't like it,
but it did make sense. Yet he wasn't quite convinced that was her real motive.
At first he'd been afraid she was somehow onto him, but five months had passed
since she'd started, and if he had, indeed, been her objective, he'd be in
custody by now.
Whatever she was up to,
it enforced greater circumspection upon him. Since taking over from Gus,
Jefferson had found it expedient to make adjustments in certain background
investigations, culling his own cadre of fully-enhanced personnel from the
Ministry of Security itself. It was so convenient to have the government
enhance his people for him, but Ninhursag's swarm of busybodies had forced a
temporary shutdown in such activities.
Not that it worried him
too much. His plans were in place, centered upon the crown jewels of his
subversions: Brigadier Alex Jourdain and Lieutenant Carl Bergren. Jourdain's
high position in Earth Security made him invaluable as Jefferson's senior field
man and cutout, but Bergren was even more important. That lowly officer was the
key, for he was a greedy young man with expensive habits. How Battle Fleet had
ever let him into uniform, much less placed him in such a sensitive position,
passed Jefferson's understanding, but he supposed even the best screening
processes had to fail occasionally. He himself had stumbled upon Bergren almost
by accident, and he'd taken pains to conceal Bergren's . . . indiscretions, for
thanks to Lieutenant Bergren, Admiral Ninhursag MacMahan had just over five
months to do whatever she was doing before she died.
* * *
Senior Fleet Captain Antonio
Tattiaglia looked up in surprise, trowel in hand and his newest rose bush
half-planted, as Brigadier Hofstader entered his atrium. Hofstader was a small,
severe woman, always immaculate in her black-and-silver Marine uniform, and
this hasty intrusion was most unlike her.
"Yes, Erika?"
"Sorry to bother
you, Sir, but something's come up."
Tattiaglia hid a sigh.
Hofstader had commanded Lancelot's Marines for over a year, and she
still sounded as if she were on a parade ground. The woman was almost oppressively
competent, but he couldn't warm to her.
"What is it?"
"I believe we've
just detected a Sword of God strike force en route to its target, Sir,"
she said crisply, and he forgot all about her manner.
"Are you serious?"
"Yes, Sir. The
scanner tech of the watch—Scan Tech Bateman—decided to run an
atmospheric-target tracking exercise, in the course of which she detected three
commercial conveyors with inoperable transponders executing a nape-of-the-earth
approach to the Shenandoah Power Reception Facility."
Hofstader had her
expression well in hand, but excitement was burning through her professionalism
for the first time since he'd known her.
"Have you alerted
Earth Security?" he demanded, already trotting towards the transit shaft.
"No, Sir. Fleet
Captain Reynaud informed ONI." She moved briskly at his side, and her
smile was cold. "ONI has requested that we investigate."
"Hot damn,"
Tattiaglia whispered. They stepped into the shaft and it hurled them towards Lancelot's
bridge. "Do we have something in position?"
"Sir, I alerted my
ready duty platoon as soon as Bateman reported the conveyors. They'll enter
atmosphere in approximately—" she paused to consult her internal
chronometer "—seventy-eight seconds."
"Good work,
Brigadier. Very good work!" The shaft deposited them outside the
planetoid's bridge, and Tattiaglia rubbed his mental hands in glee as he raced
for the command hatch.
"Thank you,
Sir."
Captain Tattiaglia
arrived on his bridge just as Hofstader's assault shuttle entered atmosphere at
eleven times the speed of sound. A corner of the command deck display altered
silently, showing them what the shuttle pilot was seeing, and the captain
dropped into his command couch with hungry eyes.
* * *
"Listen up, people,"
Lieutenant Prescott said as his shuttle hurtled downward. "We don't know
these're terrorists, so we ground, watch 'em, and get ready to move if they
are, but nobody does squat unless I say so. Got it?" A chorus of assents
came back. "Good. Now, if they are bad guys, ONI wants prisoners.
We take some of 'em alive if we can—everybody got that?"
The fresh affirmatives
were a bit disappointed, but he had other things to worry about as the shuttle
grounded to disgorge his Marines, then swooshed back into the heavens in
stealth to give air support if it was needed. Prescott didn't even watch it go;
he was already maneuvering his troops into the hastily chosen positions he'd
selected on the way in.
* * *
Three big conveyors
ghosted to a landing in a patch of woods, and forty heavily armed people filed
out with military precision. The raiders moved quietly towards the floodlit
grounds of the Shenandoah Valley Power Receptor, then split, diverging towards
two different security gates.
The commander of one attack
party studied a passive scanner as he neared the perimeter fence, hunting
security systems their briefing might have missed, then stiffened. He whirled,
and his jaw dropped as his eyes confirmed his instrument's findings.
* * *
Well, they sure
as hell aren't picnickers, Prescott thought as his armor scanners confirmed
the intruders' heavy load of weapons, and— Oh shit! So much
for surprise!
"Take 'em!"
* * *
The terrorist leader saw
the armored shapes and tried to scream a warning, but a burst of fire
splattered him across his troops halfway through the first syllable.
His followers gaped at
the Marines, but they had weapons of their own and two of them were fully
enhanced, and a Marine blew apart as the night exploded in a vicious firefight.
An energy gun killed a second trooper, the whiplash of grav gun darts crackled
everywhere, and a third Marine went down—wounded, not dead—but the Marines had
combat armor, and the terrorists didn't.
Forty-one seconds after
the first shot, three Marines were dead and five were wounded; none of the four
terrorist survivors was unhurt.
Prescott waved his
medics towards the casualties, then turned as the parked conveyors screamed
upwards. They were still climbing frantically when Lancelot's assault
shuttle blew them apart from stealth.
Funny, I could've sworn
I told Owens to challenge 'em before she shot. Prescott ran back over his
conversation with his pilot. Oops, guess not.
* * *
"Friend,"
Fleet Lieutenant Esther Steinberg said, "I don't really care whether you talk
to me or not. We've got three of your buddies, too, and one of you is going to
tell me what I want to know."
"Never!"
The young man cuffed to the chair under the lie detector looked far less
defiant than he tried to sound. "None of us have anything to say to
servants of the Anti-Christ!"
You're talking too much,
friend. Got a little case of nerves here, do we? Good. Sweat, you bastard!
"Think not?"
She crossed her arms. "Let me explain something. We caught you in the act,
and you killed three Fleet Marines. Know what that means?" Her prisoner
stared at her, sullen eyes frightened, and she smiled. "That means there's
not gonna be any fooling around. You're gonna be tried and convicted so fast
your head swims." The young man swallowed audibly. "I don't imagine
your mama and papa'll be real pleased to see their itty-bitty son shot—and they
will, 'cause every data channel's gonna carry it live. I'd guess you've seen
one or two people catch it with grav guns, haven't you? Kinda messy, isn't it?
I figure a half second burst ought to just about saw you in two, friend. Think
your folks'll like that?"
"You bitch!"
the prisoner screamed, and she smiled again—coldly.
"Sticks and stones,
friend. Sticks and stones. I'll make sure I've got some spare time to watch,
too."
"You—you—!"
The prisoner writhed against his restraints, wounds forgotten, eyes mad, and
Steinberg's laugh was a douche of ice-water.
"You seem a mite
upset, friend. Too bad." She turned towards the hatch, then paused,
listening to his incoherent, terrified rage and gauging his mood. This boy's
just about ripe.
"Just one
thing." He froze, glaring at her. "Talk to me, and ONI'll recommend
leniency. You still won't like what happens, but you'll be alive." She
smiled like a shark. "Only catch is, we only make the deal with one
of you—and you've got ten seconds to decide if you're the lucky one."
* * *
"That," Fleet
Captain Reynaud observed, "is one nasty lieutenant."
"She is,
indeed," Tattiaglia murmured, watching the holo of the
"interview" with his exec as the terrorist began to spill his guts,
then glanced up at the captain from ONI. "I'm not going to shed any tears
for the prisoners, but will any of this stand up in court?"
"Not in a civilian
court, but it won't have to. His Majesty's invoked the Defense of the Imperium
Act, and that gives military courts jurisdiction over prisoners captured by the
military. Besides," the captain's grin was as sharklike as his
lieutenant's, "we don't need any of it. Your boys and girls caught
these jokers with enough physical evidence to shoot them all."
"Then what's the
point?"
"The point, Captain
Tattiaglia," the ONI officer said, switching off the holo and turning to Lancelot's
CO, "is that I've got another little job for you. Among the other tidbits
our gallant fanatic let slip is the location of his own cell's HQ—and Esther
set a new personal record breaking that little prick. If we get a move on, we
can hit them before they figure out their raiders aren't coming back."
"You mean—?"
"I mean, Captain,
that twenty more terrorists are just sitting there waiting for you to drop a
few Marines down their chimney."
"Oh boy,"
Tattiaglia whispered. "Oh boy, oh boy, oh boy! Now I know
there's a God."
* * *
Fleet Admiral MacMahan's
smile was wolfish as she studied the report. That Lieutenant Steinberg is one
sharp cookie. Have to do something nice for her in the next promotion list. And
Tattiaglia's people deserve one hell of a pat on the back, too.
She finished the report
with a sigh of satisfaction. Nice. Very nice. Jefferson's people swat an
assassination attempt Tuesday, and we pick off an entire cell Thursday. Not a
good week for the Sword of God.
Of course, it hadn't
gotten them any closer to Mister X, but she wasn't complaining. She punched up
the holo record of the terrorist hideout and studied it. Steinberg had
accompanied the Marines in and gotten every bit of the raid and its aftermath
for her report, and Ninhursag whistled at the size of the terrorists' arsenal.
There was a lot of Imperial weaponry in it, and she made a mental note to ask
about the serial numbers. They hadn't had a lot of luck in that regard from
Jefferson's occasional successes, but they had a lot more hardware this time,
and all they really needed was one hard lead.
The holo record shifted
to a view of the terrorist's main planning area. They seemed to have been well
equipped with maps, too, and she frowned as she saw the precision with which
some were marked. They even had a trophy room, she noted, grimacing at the
wall-mounted displays. Stupid bastards. They'd collected bits and pieces from
past raids as if they were counting coup! Well, it might help her people figure
out which attacks this bunch had been responsible for, and—
Ninhursag MacMahan
slammed the hold button and stood slowly, face pale as death, and walked into
the holo to peer at one particular trophy. She licked her lips, trying to tell
herself she was wrong, but she wasn't, and she whispered a soft, frightened
prayer as she stared at her worst nightmare: a second-stage initiator from
Tsien Tao-ling's super bomb.
* * *
The council room was
quiet. Colin and Jiltanith sat between Gerald Hatcher and Tsien Tao-ling, and
their faces were as pale as Ninhursag's own.
"Sweet Jesu,"
Jiltanith murmured at last. "Thy news is worse than e'er I durst let
myself believe, 'Hursag, yet 'tis God's Own grace thou'st beagled out this
threat."
"Amen to
that." Colin frowned down at the tabletop. "Does this suggest a link
between the Sword and Mister X?"
"I don't think
so," Ninhursag said. "None of the survivors can tell us where that
particular 'trophy' came from, but they're all souvenirs of attacks their cell
carried out. I wish we did know where they got it; at least then we'd
have some idea where to look for whoever has the thing. It's possible the Sword
hit them before they finished it, but it wouldn't mean much if they did.
Whoever's behind this must've made more than one copy of the plans. Losing one
construction team might slow them down; it wouldn't stop them."
"Lord." Colin
pulled on his nose, and Ninhursag saw the lines months of worry had carved in
his face. "Gerald? Tao-ling?"
" 'Hursag is
correct," Tsien said. Hatcher only nodded, and Colin sighed.
"Okay, 'Hursag.
Where do we go from here?"
"We start from a
worst-case assumption. First, the thing's been built. Second, the people who probably
have it killed eighty thousand people just to get the twins. Third—and scariest
of all—the Sword may have captured it." A visible shudder ran through her
audience at that thought.
"I think we're
still fairly safe in assuming Earth isn't the target. I'm not going to cast
that in stone, but I simply cannot conceive of anyone wanting to destroy the
bulk of the human race. Certainly the Sword wouldn't; their whole purpose is to
save the rest of humanity from us back-sliders and the Narhani. And there's not
too much doubt Mister X is operating from Earth, which means he'd be blowing up
his own base."
"Agreed."
Colin pulled on his nose again, then looked at Hatcher. "Get hold of
Adrienne, Hector, and Amanda. I want an evacuation plan for Birhat yesterday.
We can't rehearse it without risking warning Mister X that we know he's got
this thing, but we can at least get organized for it. I'll warn Brashieel's
people personally. There's not much chance of a leak at their end, and there's
still few enough Narhani we can pull them all out by mat-trans if we have
to."
The admiral nodded, and
he turned back to Ninhursag, nodding for her to continue.
"While they do
that," she said, "I intend to start an immediate high-priority search
of Narhan and Birhat. Maker knows that bomb's a damnably small target, but
Battle Fleet can carry out centimeter-by-centimeter scans without tipping
Mister X. It'll take time, especially under a security blackout, but if it's out
there, Gerald's and my people will find it."
She paused, and her dark
eyes met her Emperor's.
"I only pray we
find it in time," she said softly.
Tibold Rarikson lay
beside Lord Sean atop the cliff and watched his youthful commander pretend to
use a spyglass.
The ex-Guardsman's bushy
mustache hid his smile as the black-haired giant made a great show of adjusting
the glass. Tibold didn't know why the Captain-General tried to hide his
more-than-human abilities, but he was willing to play along, even though Lord
Sean and Lord Tamman were probably the only people who thought they were
fooling anyone.
In all his years, Tibold
had never met anyone like these two. They were young; he'd seen enough
hot-blooded young kinokha in his career to know that, and Lord Tamman was as
impulsive as he was young. But Lord Sean . . . There was a youthful
recklessness in his eyes, and a matching abundance of ideas behind them, but
there was also discipline, and Tibold had known gray-bearded marshals less willing
to listen to suggestions. And though he tried to hide it, Tibold had seen how
his strange, black eyes warmed whenever the Angel Sandy was about. He treated
her with the utmost respect, yet Tibold had the odd suspicion that was more for
the army's benefit than for the angel's. Indeed, the angel seemed to watch for
Lord Sean's reaction to whatever she might be saying even as she said it.
Tibold hadn't figured
out why an angel should—well, defer wasn't quite the word, though it came
close—even to Lord Sean's opinion, but there was no denying Lord Sean and Lord
Tamman were uncanny. They might have keener eyes and greater strength than
other men, and they certainly knew things Tibold hadn't, yet there were
peculiar holes in their knowledge. For instance, Lord Tamman had actually
expected nioharqs to slow infantry, and Lord Sean had let slip a puzzling
reference to "heavy cavalry," a manifest contradiction in terms.
Branahlks were fleet, but they had trouble carrying an unarmored man.
Yet neither seemed upset
when he corrected them. Indeed, Lord Sean had spent hours picking his brain,
combining Tibold's experience with things he did know to create the army
they now led, and he'd been delighted by Tibold's insistence upon remorseless
drill—one more thing whose importance young officers frequently failed to
appreciate.
And if their ignorance
in some matters was surprising, their knowledge in others was amazing! He'd
thought them mad to emphasize firearms over polearms. A joharn-armed musketeer
did well to fire thirty shots an hour, while the heavier malagor could manage
little more than twenty. There was simply no way musketeers could break a
determined charge . . . until Lord Sean opened his bag of tricks. And, of
course, until the angels intervened.
Even Tibold had felt . .
. unsettled . . . when the Angel Sandy had Father Stomald stack a thousand
joharns in a small, blind valley and leave them there overnight. Indeed, he'd
crept back—strictly against Father Stomald's orders—late that night . . . and
crept away again much more quietly than he'd come when he found all thousand of
them had disappeared!
But they'd been back by
morning, and Tibold hadn't argued when the Angel Sandy had him pile two
thousand in the same valley the next night. Not after he'd seen what had
happened to the first lot.
Changing wooden ramrods
for iron had been but the first step, and Lord Sean had accompanied it by
introducing paper cartridges to replace the wooden tubes hung from a
musketeer's bandoleer. A man could carry far more of them, and all he had to do
was bite off the end, pour the powder down the barrel, and spit in his ball.
The paper wrapper even served as a wad!
The thing Lord Sean
called a "ring bayonet" was another deceptively simple innovation.
Hard-pressed musketeers often shoved the hafts of knives into their weapons'
muzzles to turn them into crude spears as the pikes closed in, yet that was
always a council of desperation, since it meant they could no longer fire. But
they could fire with the mounting rings clamped around their
weapons' barrels, and Tibold looked forward to the first time some Guard
captain assumed musketeers with fixed bayonets couldn't shoot him.
Then there was the
gunlock. No one had ever thought of widening the barrel end of the touch-hole
into a funnel, but that simple alteration meant it was no longer necessary to
prime the lock. Just turning the musket on its side and rapping it smartly
shook powder from the main charge into the pan.
Yet the most wonderful
change of all was simpler yet. Rifles had been a Malagoran invention (well,
Cherist made the same claim, but Tibold knew who he believed), yet it
took so long to hammer balls down their barrels—the only way to force them into
the rifling—that they fired even more slowly than malagors. While prized by
hunters and useful for skirmishers, the rifle was all but useless once the
close-range exchange of volleys began.
No longer. Every altered
joharn—and malagor—had returned rifled, and the angels had provided molds for a
new bullet, as well. Not a ball, but a hollow-based cylinder that slid easily
down the barrel. Tibold had doubted the rifling grooves could spin a bullet
with that much windage, but Lord Sean had insisted the exploding powder would
spread the base into them, and the results were phenomenal. Suddenly a rifle
was as easy to load as a smoothbore—and able to fire far more rapidly than
anyone had ever been able to shoot before! Tibold couldn't see why Lord Sean
had been so surprised to find the weapons were . . . "bore-standardized,"
he called them (it only made sense to issue everyone the same size balls,
didn't it?), but the Captain-General had been delighted by how easy that made
it to produce the new bullets for them.
Nor had he ignored the
artillery. Mother Church restricted secular armies to the lighter chagon, and
the Guard's arlaks threw shot twice as heavy, even if their shorter barrels
didn't give them much more range. But Lord Sean's gunners were supplied with
cloth bags of powder instead of clumsy loading-ladles of loose powder. And for
close-range firing there were "fixed rounds"—thin-walled,
powder-filled wooden tubes with grape or case shot wired to one end. A good
crew could fire three of those in a minute.
And when all those
changes were added together, the Angels' Army could produce a weight of fire no
experienced commander would have believed possible. Instead of once every five
minutes, its artillerists fired three times in two minutes—even faster, using the
"fixed rounds" at close range. Instead of thirty rounds an hour, its
musketeers—no, its riflemen—could fire three or even four a minute
and hit targets they could hardly even see! Tibold still wasn't certain fire
alone could break a phalanx, but he wouldn't care to charge against such
weapons.
Perhaps even better,
there were maps. Wonderful maps, with every feature to scale and none left out.
It was kind of the angels to try to make them look like those he'd always used,
and he lacked the heart to tell them they'd failed when they seemed so pleased
by their efforts, but no mortal cartographer could have produced them. Some of
his militiamen hadn't realized how valuable they were, but he'd worn his voice
hoarse until they did. To know exactly how the ground looked, where the best
march routes lay, and precisely where the enemy might be hidden—and where your
own troops could be best deployed—was truly a gift worthy of angels.
Best of all, the angels
always knew what was happening elsewhere. The big map in the command tent
showed every hostile army's exact position, and the angels updated it
regularly. The sheer luxury of it was addictive. He was glad Lord Sean
continued to emphasize scouting, but knowing where and how strong every major
enemy force was made things so much simpler . . . especially when the enemy didn't
know those things about you.
Still, he reminded
himself, the odds were formidable. None of Malagor had remained loyal to the
Church, but the "heretics" had far too few weapons for their manpower,
and garrisoning the Thirgan Gap fortresses had drawn off over half of their
strength, while the Temple had over two hundred thousand Guardsmen in eastern
North Hylar, not even counting any of the secular armies.
Yet Tibold no longer
doubted God was on their side, and while he knew too much of war to expect His
direct intervention, Lord Sean and Lord Tamman were certainly the next best
thing.
* * *
Sean closed the spyglass
and rolled onto his back to stare up into the sky. Lord God, he was tired! He hadn't
expected it to be easy—indeed, he'd feared the Pardalians would resist his
innovations, and the eagerness with which they'd accepted them instead was a
tremendous relief—but even so, he'd underestimated the sheer, grinding labor of
it all, and he'd expected to get more advantage from Israel's machine
shops. To be sure, Sandy's stealthed flights to shuttle muskets back and forth
for rifling had been an enormous help, but this was Sean's first personal
contact with the reality of military logistics, and he'd been horrified by the
voracious appetite of even a small, primitively-armed army. Brashan and his
computer-driven minions had been able to modify existing weapons at a
gratifying rate, but producing large numbers of even unsophisticated
weapons would quickly have devoured Israel's resources.
Not that Sean intended
to complain. His troops were incomparably better armed (those who were armed at
all!) than anything they were likely to face, and if he'd been disappointed in Israel's
productivity, he'd been amazed by how quickly the Malagoran guilds had begun
producing new weapons from the prototypes "the angels" had provided.
He'd been totally
unprepared for the hordes of skilled artisans who'd popped up out of the
ground, but he'd forgotten that Earth's own industrial revolution had begun
with waterwheels. Pardal—and especially Malagor—had developed its own version
of the assembly line, despite its limitation to wind, water, or muscle power,
and that required a lot of craftsmen. Most had declared for "the
angels"—as much, Sean suspected, from frustration at the Church's tech
limitations as in response to any miracles "the angels" had
wrought—but even with their tireless enthusiasm, there were never enough hours
in the day.
Nor did the long year
Pardal's huge orbital radius produced ease things. On a planet where spring
lasted for five standard months and summer for ten, the campaigning seasons of
Terra's preindustrial armies were a useless meterstick. Sean was devoutly
thankful the Temple had seen fit to postpone operations for over two months
while it indoctrinated its troops, but a delay which would have meant having to
hold the Temple off only until the weather closed in on Terra meant nothing of
the sort here. He faced an immediate, decisive campaign, and the sheer size of
Pardalian armies appalled him. There were over a hundred thousand men headed up
the Keldark Valley, and by tomorrow—the day after at latest—a lot of people
were going to die.
Too many people,
whichever side they're on, but there's not a damned thing I can do about that.
He clapped Tibold on the
shoulder, and, despite everything, his heart rose at the older man's confident
grin as they headed for their branahlks.
* * *
Stomald rose as the
Angel Harry entered the command tent to update the "situation map."
She smiled, and he knew she was chiding him for his display of respect, but he
couldn't help it. And, he reminded himself, he had finally managed to
stop addressing her and the Angel Sandy as "angels," even if he
didn't understand why they were so adamant about that. But, then, there were a
lot of things he didn't understand. He'd expected the angels to be angry when
the army's mood began to shift, yet they were actually pleased to see
the troops becoming Malagoran nationalists rather than religious heretics.
He watched her work. She
was a head taller than he, and even more beautiful (and younger) than he'd
remembered, now that her face was alive with thought and humor, and he chided
himself—again—as he thought of the body hidden by her raiment. She might not
use his people with the authority which was her right, but she was an
angel.
She cocked her head to
check her work with her remaining eye, and he bit his lip in familiar anguish.
Her other terrible wounds had healed with angelic speed, but that black eye
patch twisted his heart each time he saw it. Yet despite all Cragsend had done
to her, there was no hate in the Angel Harry. Stomald didn't believe she could
hate, not after the gentleness with which she always spoke to him, the man
who'd almost burned her alive.
She turned from the map,
and amusement deepened her smile as he blushed under her regard. But it didn't
embarrass him further. Instead, he felt himself smiling back.
"Sandy will have a
fresh update in a few hours," she said in the Holy Tongue. "We're
keeping a closer eye on them now that they're approaching."
"I'm no
soldier—or," he corrected himself wryly, "I was no soldier—but
that seems wise to me."
"Don't belittle
yourself. You're fortunate to have a captain like Tibold—and Sean and Tamman,
of course—but you've got a good eye for these things yourself."
He bent his head,
basking in her praise, but before he could say anything more Lord Sean walked
in, followed by Tibold.
Lord Sean touched his
breastplate in respectful salute, and the angel acknowledged it gravely, yet
Stomald noted the twinkle in her eye. For just an instant, he resented it, and
then shame buried his pique. She was an angel, and Lord Sean was the
Angel Sandy's chosen champion.
"Is that the latest
update?" Lord Sean's Pardalian had developed a distinct Malagoran accent
in the past five days, and he smiled as the angel nodded. He moved closer to
the map and leaned forward beside her to study it.
Tibold grinned at
Stomald behind their backs, and the priest smiled back despite another tiny
stab of envy. It was easier for Tibold, for whatever else he was, Lord Sean was
a born soldier. Tibold took paternal pride in him, and Lord Sean seemed to
return his regard. He certainly listened attentively to anything Tibold had to
say.
Lord Sean was murmuring
to the Angel Harry in that other odd-sounding language they often spoke.
Stomald suspected they sometimes forgot no one else understood it (Lord Sean
always fell back into Pardalian whenever he remembered others were present),
and the young war captain's ability to speak it awed the heretic priest. To be
so close to the angels he spoke their own tongue almost unthinkingly must be
wondrous, indeed.
Lord Sean stood back
from the map at last, and his eyes were pensive. "Tibold, I think they'll
hit our forward pickets this afternoon. Do you agree?"
Tibold studied the map a
moment and nodded.
"Then it's
time," Lord Sean sighed. "I'll speak to Tamman again, but you have a
word with the under-captains. Make sure they keep their heads. We're fighting
for survival, not honor, and we don't want any wasted lives."
"I will, Lord
Sean," Tibold promised, obviously pleased by the Captain-General's concern
for his men, and Lord Sean turned to Stomald.
"I expect to hold
them, Father, but are we ready if we can't?"
"We are, Lord Sean.
I've sent the last of the women back to safety, and the nioharqs will be in the
traces by dawn, ready to advance or retreat."
Lord Sean nodded in
satisfaction, then nodded again as the Angel Harry murmured something too soft
for any other ears to hear.
"Father, Captain
Tibold and I will be unable to release the troops for services this evening
with the enemy so near at hand, but if you'd care to send the chaplains
forward—?"
"Thank you,"
Stomald said. Lord Sean was always careful about such things, yet the priest
wondered why neither he nor Lord Tamman nor even the angels attended the
services. Of course, such as they had their own links to God, but it was almost
as if they stood aside intentionally.
"In that case, I
think I'll go find lunch. Will you join me?"
Stomald nodded, and
noted the amusement in the Angel Harry's eye. She smiled on the captain, and a
surprising thought flickered in Stomald's mind. Lord Sean was as homely as the
Angel Harry was beautiful, and the angel, for all her height, seemed tiny
beside him, yet there was something . . .
It was the eyes, he thought.
Why had he never noticed before? Lord Sean's strange, black eyes, darker than
night, were exactly the same shade. And the hair, so black it was almost blue.
That, too, was the same. Why, aside from Lord Sean's homeliness, they might
have been brother and sister!
Like everyone else,
Stomald knew Lord Sean and Lord Tamman were more than human—one had only to
watch their blinding reflexes or see them occasionally forget to hide their
incredible strength to know that—but it hadn't occurred to him they might share
the angels' blood!
The thought was somehow
chilling. Lord Sean and Lord Tamman were mortal. They both insisted on that,
and Stomald believed them, and that meant they couldn't be related to
angels. Besides, Holy Writ said all angels were female, and how could mortal
blood mingle with divine? And yet . . . what if—?
He thrust the idea
aside. It was disrespectful at best, and, a hidden part of him knew guiltily,
it sprang from an unforgivable yearning that would have appalled him had he
faced it squarely.
* * *
Tamman leaned against
the thyru tree, watching the road to the east, then glanced back up at the man
perched in the branches with his mirror. Pardalian armies had surprisingly
sophisticated signal systems, but both mirrors and flags were "daylight-only,"
and the afternoon was passing.
He wanted to pace, but
that would never do for an angelically chosen war captain. Besides, he was out
here instead of Sean expressly to win his men's confidence, which might be
important tomorrow, so he contented himself with crushing dried thyru husks
under his heel. The thyru resembled an enormous acorn, but its soft, inner
tissues produced an oil which filled much the same niche as Terra's olive oil,
and he wondered how the Pardalians dealt with its thick shell. Now there
was a messy thought!
He realized his mind was
straying and tinkered with his adrenaline levels. He didn't really know why he
was watching the road so hard. Unlike his scouts, he had a direct link to Israel's
scanner arrays via Sandy's cutter. He knew where the enemy was, and
glaring at an empty piece of road wasn't going to get them here a moment
sooner.
He gave himself a shake
and moved along the line, patting shoulders and exchanging smiles. Pardalian armies
knew about mounted firearms—indeed, most Pardalian cavalry were dragoons—but
they'd never been a real threat. While handy for scouting and harassment,
dragoons could wear only light armor, their shorter muskets had neither the
range nor rate of fire to stand off pikemen, and you couldn't put pikes on
branahlks. But these dragoons were something new, for their joharns were
rifled. Not, he reminded himself, that this was the time to show the Holy Host
all they could do. That would come tomorrow.
He reached the end of
the line and strolled back to his tree, then rechecked his uplink. Well, how
about that? Looks like I spent just about exactly the right time with
the troops.
"Rethvan?" He
glanced up at the signaler once more.
"Yes,
Captain?"
"I expect their
point to round the bend in about five minutes. Get ready to pass the
signal."
"At once, Lord
Tamman." Rethvan couldn't see around that bend, but he sounded so
confident Tamman grinned. Now all we have to do is never ever make a
mistake—'cause if we do, that confidence could turn around and bite us right on
the ass.
The westering sunlight
turned steadily redder, and a corner of his mind looked down through the
scanner arrays. Just . . . about . . . now.
The first mounted scout
rounded the bend exactly on cue.
"Send it,
Rethvan." He was pleased by how calm he sounded.
"Yes,
Captain."
The flashing mirror
alerted the outposts to the west, and Tamman heard branahlks whistle behind his
hill as their holders got them ready, but it was only a distant background. His
attention was on the advancing company of Temple Guard cavalry, and his eyes
slipped into telescopic mode.
They looked tired, and
little wonder. Lord Marshal Rokas had moved fast once he started. The logistic
capabilities of Pardalian armies amazed Tamman; he'd expected something like
Earth's pike-and-musket era, but Pardal had nioharqs. The huge, tusked
critters—they reminded him of elephant-sized hogs—could eat almost anything,
which made forage far less of a problem than it had been for horse-powered
armies, and their sustained speed was astonishing. True, their low top
speed made them useless as cavalry, but they let Pardalians move artillery, rations,
tents, portable forges, and mobile kitchens at a rate which would have turned
Gustavus Adolphus green with envy.
Even so, Rokas's troops
had to be feeling the pace. Sean had sealed the borders, and the Temple didn't
know diddly about their deployment—their remotes couldn't penetrate the Temple
itself, but they'd eavesdropped on enough of Rokas's field conferences to prove
that. Yet the lord marshal had made a pretty fair estimate of their maximum
possible strength, and he wasn't worrying about subtle maneuvers. He was going
to throw enough bodies at them to plow them under and bull right through . . .
he thought.
Tamman's smile was evil
as he watched the scouts advance. They might be tired, but they seemed alert.
Unfortunately for them, however, they were watching for threats inside the
range they "knew" Pardalian weapons had.
"Let's get ready,
boys," he said quietly as the first branahlk passed the four-hundred-meter
range stakes. A soft chorus of responses came back, and his hundred dragoons
settled down in their paired-off positions. He watched them sighting across
fallen trees and logs as Rokas' scouts closed to just over two hundred meters.
That was still far beyond aimed smoothbore range, but some of them were
beginning to look more speculatively his way than he liked.
"Fire!" he
barked, and fifty rifled joharns cracked as one.
The muzzle flashes were
bright in the shadows of the grove, and powder smoke stung his nose, but his
attention was on the scouts. Thirty or more went down—many, he was sure,
dismounted rather than hit; branahlks were bigger targets than men—and the
others gaped at the smoke cloud rising from the trees. Tamman grinned at their
stunned reaction, counting under his breath while the first firers reloaded.
The second half of each team waited until his partner was half-reloaded, then
fired, and more riders went down. The survivors wheeled and spurred frantically
back towards the bend, dismounted men racing after them on foot, but individual
shots barked at their heels, and most of them were picked off before they could
get out of range.
"Okay, boys, saddle
up," Tamman said, and grinning dragoons filtered back towards their
mounts. Their commander waited a moment longer, and his own grin faded as he
watched the road. A handful of wounded crawled along it, their agony plain to
his enhanced eyes, while others writhed where they'd fallen, and even
unenhanced ears could have heard their screams and sobs.
He shivered and turned
away, hating himself just a little because not even his horror made him feel
one bit less satisfied.
* * *
Lord Marshal Rokas
glowered at the map in the lamplight, but his glare couldn't change it, and the
reports were just as disturbing now as they'd been when they were fresh.
He scowled. The first
ambush had cost him seventy-one men, and that at a range Under-Captain Turalk
swore was two hundred paces if it was a span. The second and third had been
worse. The Host's total losses were over four hundred, and they were
concentrated in his cavalry—which he wasn't over-supplied with in the first
place.
His scouts would be more
than human if what had happened today didn't make them cautious tomorrow, which
was bad enough, but how had the heretics done it? Where had they gotten that
many dragoons? Or hidden them? He wouldn't have believed more than a hundred
men could be concealed in any of those ambush sites, but his casualties argued
for three or four times that many—with malagors, at that—in each.
He poured a goblet of
wine and sank into a folding chair. How they'd done it mattered less than that
they had, but ambushes wouldn't save them. Unless they wanted to lose any
chance to bottle him up in the mountains, they had to stand and fight; when
they did, he would crush them.
He'd better, for
two-thirds of Mother Church's own artillery and muskets and half her armor and
pikeheads had come from Malagor's foundries. Rokas had never liked being so
dependent on a single source, yet what they faced now was worse than his worst
nightmare, for every foundry Mother Church had lost, the heretics had gained.
Rokas knew to the last
pike and pistol how many weapons had lain in the Guard's armories in Malagor.
His figures were less accurate for the secular arsenals but still enough for a
decent guess, and even if the heretics had them all, they could field little
more than a hundred thousand men. Yet given time, Malagor's artisans could arm
every man in the princedom, and if that happened, the cost of invading that
mountain-guarded land would become almost unbearable.
He'd finally managed to
convince the Circle of that simple, self-evident fact; if he hadn't, the
prelates would have delayed the Host until first snow "strengthening their
souls against heresy."
But High Priest Vroxhan
had listened at last, and now Rokas brooded down at the map tokens representing
a hundred and twenty thousand men—the picked flower of the Guard from eastern
North Hylar. His force was really too large for the constricted terrain, but,
as he'd told the high priest, strategy and maneuver were of scant use in this
situation.
He stared unhappily at
the blue line of the Mortan River and sipped his wine. An infant could divine
his only possible path, and Tibold was no infant, curse him! He was a seldahk,
with all the speed and cunning of the breed; a seldahk who'd offended a
high-captain and been banished to the most miserable post that high-captain
could find. Tibold would know precisely what Rokas planned . . . and how to
make the most of whatever force he had.
The marshal chewed his
mustache at the thought. Mother Church's last true challenge had been the
conquest of barbarian Herdaana six generations ago, and even that had been far
short of what this could become. If the heresy wasn't crushed soon, it
might turn into another nightmare like the Schismatic Wars, which had laid half
of North Hylar waste, and the thought chilled him.
* * *
Sean MacIntyre stood on
the walls of the city of Yortown and stared down at the fires of his men. His
men. The thought was terrifying, for there were fifty-eight thousand people
down there, and their lives depended on him.
He folded his hands
behind him and considered the odds once more. Worse than two-to-one, and they'd
have been higher if the Church had chosen to squeeze more troops into the
valley. He'd rather hoped they might do just that, but this Lord Marshal Rokas
knew better than to crowd himself—unfortunately.
He gnawed his lip and
wished he weren't so far out of his own time, or that the Academy's military
history hadn't tended to emphasize strategy and skimp on the military nuts and
bolts of earlier eras. Half of what they'd introduced to the Malagorans had
been dredged up from remembered conversations with Uncle Hector. The rest had
been extrapolated from that or gleaned from Israel's limited (and
infuriatingly nonspecific) military history records, and he intended to have a
severe talk with Aunt Adrienne about her curriculum.
He paced slowly,
brooding in the night wind. The pike was the true mankiller of Pardal, and most
armies had at least three of them for every musket. The Temple Guard certainly
did, and Tibold had explained how it used its phalanx-like formations to pin an
enemy under threat of attack, "prepared" him with artillery and small
arms, and finally charged home with cold steel. Yet for all their horrific
shock power, those massive pike blocks were unwieldy; he suspected traditional
Malagoran tactics would have given Rokas problems even without the
"angels" and their innovations.
The Malagorans' polearms
reminded him of Earth's Swiss pikemen, but with fewer pikes and more bills
which, in the absence of any heavy cavalry threat, were shorter, handier melee
weapons than those of Earth. Tactically, they were far more agile than the
Guard, relying on shallower pike formations to hold an enemy in play while
billmen swept out around his flanks, and Sean's modifications should make them
even deadlier . . . assuming they were
ready.
If only he'd had more
time! He'd let Tibold handle training, and the tough old captain made Baron von
Steuben look like a Cub Scout, but they'd had barely two months. Their army had
incredible esprit and a hard core of militia (Malagor's self-governing
towns and villages raised their own troops in the absence of feudal grandees),
and over eight thousand Guardsmen had defected to the rebels, but fusing them
into a single force and teaching them a whole new tactical doctrine in two
months had been a nightmare.
Worse, none of his own
training had taught him how to lead troops with so little command and control.
He was used to instant, high-tech communication, and he suspected his most
pessimistic estimates fell far short of just how bad this was going to
be. His men looked good at drill, but would they hang together in battle when
the whole world went crazy about them? He didn't know, but he knew too many
battles in Earth's history had been lost when one side lost its cohesion and
fell apart in confusion.
Still, he told himself
firmly, if they did hold together, the Guard was in trouble. Normally,
its phalanxes would have had the edge at Yortown, where flanks could be secured
by terrain and mass and momentum were what counted, but that was where the
contributions of Israel's crew came in. They hadn't gotten the volume of
their troops' fire up to anything approaching a modern level, but it was far
heavier than Pardal had ever seen . . . and pike blocks made big targets. If he
could get the Guard stuck, it was going to learn what the bear did to the
buckwheat, and he thought—hoped—he'd found the place to bog it down. The
Keldark Valley narrowed to a little more than six kilometers of open terrain at
Yortown, and if Lord Rokas was as good a student of military history as Tibold
said . . .
He sighed and shook free
of the thoughts wearing grooves in his brain, then stretched, glanced up at the
alien stars, and took himself off to bed, wondering if he'd sleep a wink.
Lord Marshal Rokas
climbed the hill and opened his spyglass with a click. The morning mist had
lifted, though tendrils still clung to the line of the Mortan, and his mouth
tightened as he studied the terrain. He'd expected—feared—from the start that
Tibold would offer battle here, for more than one invading army had been broken
against Yortown.
The town stood on the
bluffs beyond the river. Its walls had been razed after the Schismatic Wars,
but the heretics were building new ones. Not that they were really needed. The
Mortan ran all the way to the Eastern Ocean, twisting down the Keldark Valley
to escape the Shalokars, and it coiled like a hateful serpent about Yortown's
feet. The river swooped from the northern edge of the valley to the southern
cliffs before it turned east once more, and like many a Malagoran before him,
Tibold had drawn up beyond that icy natural moat.
Rokas's glass lingered
on the Yortown bridges with wistful longing, but the demolitions had been too
thorough. The broken spans had been dropped into water too deep to ford even
across their rubble, and he smothered a curse. If the Circle hadn't hesitated
so long, he could have been past Yortown and into Malagor's heart before the
heretics got themselves organized!
He turned further south.
No position was impregnable, but his mouth tightened anew as he considered the
fords the blown bridges had made the key to this one. They lay southeast of
Yortown, where the river broadened, and raw earthworks reared on the western
bank. He saw the glint of pikes and gleam of artillery, and his heart sank.
Those fords were over a hundred paces wide and more than waist deep; the
wounded would be doomed even without armor. With it—
He turned back to the
north to glare at the dense forest which sprawled down from the valley wall
almost to his hilltop vantage point. It offered his right flank a natural
protection—God knew no pikeman could get through that tangle!—but it was
a guard against nothing. The river was too deep to bridge, much less ford,
north of Yortown, and no captain as canny as Tibold would put men in a trap
from which they could not withdraw.
He closed his glass. No,
Tibold knew what he was about . . . and so did Rokas. Too many battles had been
fought at Yortown; defender and attacker alike knew all the moves, and if the
cost would be high, it was one he could pay. It would trouble too many dreams
in years to come, but he could pay it.
"I see no need to
alter our plans," he told his officers. "Captain Vrikadan," he
met the high-captain's eyes, "you will advance."
* * *
"God, look at
them!" Tamman muttered over his com implant, and Sean nodded jerkily,
forgetting his friend couldn't see him. No sensor image could have prepared him
for seeing that army uncoiling in the flesh, and he braced himself in the
tree's high fork, peering through its leaves while the Host deployed towards the
fords. Musketeers screened massive columns of pikes, and nioharq-drawn
artillery moved steadily between the columns. Armor flashed, pikeheads were a
glittering forest above, and the marching legs below made the columns look like
horrible caterpillars of steel.
"I see them,"
he replied after a moment, "and I wish to hell we had the Holy Hand
Grenade of Antioch!"
Tamman chuckled at the
feeble joke, and Sean's dry mouth quirked. He wished he—or Tibold, at
least—could be at the fords with Tamman. He knew he couldn't, and he needed
Tibold here in case something happened to him, but he'd felt far more confident
before he saw the Host with his own eyes.
He sighed, then
slithered down the tree. Tibold stood with Folmak, the miller who commanded
Sean's headquarters company, and Sean met their eyes.
"They're doing
it."
"I see."
Tibold plucked at his lower lip. "And their scouts?"
"You were right
about them, too. There's a screen of dragoons covering their right flank, but
they're not getting too far out."
"Aye." Tibold
nodded. "Rokas didn't become Lord Marshal by being careless even of
unlikely threats. But—" his teeth flashed in a tight grin "—it seems
Lord Tamman did indeed teach his men caution yesterday."
"So it seems,"
Sean agreed, and peered into the green shadows where twenty thousand men lay
hidden amid undergrowth as dense as anything Grant had faced at The Wilderness.
They wore dull green and brown, their rifle barrels had been browned to prevent
any betraying gleam, and they made a sadly scruffy sight beside the crimson and
steel of the Guard, but they were also almost totally invisible.
He flicked his neural
feed to the stealthed cutter above the valley, exchanging a brief, wordless
caress with an anxious Sandy, then plugged into Brashan's arrays through the
cutter's com. The Host was closing up, packing tighter behind the assault
elements. With a little luck . . .
He shifted his attention
to the pontoon bridges north of Yortown, hidden behind the woods. Pontoons were
new to Pardal, and they'd been trickier to erect than he'd hoped, but they
seemed to be holding. He hoped so. If it all came apart, those bridges were the
only way home for a third of his army.
* * *
Stomald watched the
Angel Harry make another small adjustment on the situation map. She was intent
upon her work, yet he saw a tiny tremble in her slender fingers and wanted to
slip an arm about her to comfort her. But she was an angel, he reminded himself
again, and gripped his starburst, instead, trying to share the army's mood.
The men were confident,
filled with near idolatry for the angels' champions. Indeed, they were more
than confident. They no longer looked to simply defending themselves, but to
smashing their enemies, despite the odds, and if they'd prayed dutifully for mercy,
their fervor was reserved for prayers for strength, victory,
and—especially—Malagoran independence.
Now he listened to the
steady cadence of the Guard's drums and sweat dotted his brow as he prayed
silently—not for himself, but for the men he'd led to this. A surgeon began to
hone his knives and saws, and he watched the shining steel with appalled eyes,
unable to look away.
A hand touched his
shoulder, startling despite its lightness, and he looked up with a gasp. The
Angel Harry squeezed gently, and her remaining eye was soft and understanding.
He reached up and covered her hand with his own, marveling at his own audacity
in touching her holy flesh, and she smiled.
* * *
High-Captain Vrikadan's
branahlk jibed and fretted as ten thousand voices rose to join the thunder of
the drums, and he turned in the saddle to study his men. The mighty hymn
swelled around him, strong and deep, but the leading pike companies were
tight-faced as they roared the words.
Vrikadan urged the
branahlk closer to a battery of arlaks, creaking along between the columns.
Even the stolid nioharqs were uneasy, tossing their tusks and lowing, and a
gray-bearded artillery captain looked up and met his eye with a grim smile.
* * *
Tamman stood on the
fighting step and watched the juggernaut of steel and flesh roll towards him.
The rumble of its singing was a morale weapon whose potency he hadn't really
appreciated, but at least the Host was performing exactly as Tibold had
predicted. So far.
Twenty thousand men
marched towards the fords. As many more followed to exploit any success, and he
felt very small and young. Worse, he sensed his men's disquiet. It wasn't even
close to panic, but that hymn-roaring monster was enough to shake anyone, and
he turned to his second-in-command.
"Let's have a
little music of our own, Lornar," he suggested, and High-Captain Lornar
grinned.
"At once, Lord
Tamman!" He beckoned to a teenaged messenger, and the lad dashed back to
the rear of the redoubt. There was a moment of muttered consultation, and then
a high-pitched skirling. The Malagorans had invented the bagpipe, and Tamman's
troops looked at one another with bared teeth as the defiant wail of the pipes
rose to meet the Guard.
* * *
God, I never
realized how long it took! Sean made himself stand still,
listening to the music swelling from the redoubts to answer the Guard's
singing, and felt sick and hollow, nerves stretched by the deliberation with
which thousands of men marched towards death. This wasn't like Israel's
frantic struggle against the quarantine system. This was slow and agonizing.
The range dropped
inexorably, and he bit his lip as the first gouts of smoke erupted from the
redoubts. Round shot ripped through the Guard's ranks, dismembering and
disemboweling, and his enhanced vision made the carnage too clear. He swallowed
bile, but even as the guns fired the music of the pipes changed. It took on a
new, fiercer rhythm, and he looked at Tibold.
"I haven't heard
that hymn before."
"That's no
hymn," Tibold said, and Sean raised an eyebrow. "That's 'Malagor the
Free,' Lord Sean," the ex-Guardsman said softly.
* * *
Vrikadan heard the high,
shivering seldahk's howl of the Malagoran war cry—a terrifying sound which,
like the music shrilling beneath it, had been proscribed on pain of death for
almost two Pardalian centuries—but he had other things to worry about, and he
fought his mount as a salvo of shot shrieked through his men. And another. Another!
Dear God, where had they gotten all those guns?
A cyclone howled, and he
kicked free of his stirrups as a round shot took his branahlk's head. The beast
dropped and its blood fountained over him, but he rolled upright and drew his
sword. The range was too great for his own guns to affect earthworks, but he
grabbed at the knee of a mounted aide.
"Unlimber the
guns!" he snapped. "Get them into action now!"
* * *
Tamman coughed, watching
one of his arlak crews as the reeking smoke rolled over him. A bagged charge
slid down the muzzle while the captain stopped the vent with a leather thumbstall.
The eight-kilo round shot followed, and the wad, and the crew heaved the piece
back to battery as the captain cocked the lock and drove a priming quill down
the vent to pierce the bag. The gun vomited flame and lurched back, a dripping
sponge hissed into its maw, quenching the embers of the last shot, and a fresh
charge was waiting.
He turned away, dazed by
the bellow and roar and insane keening of the pipes, and his hands clenched on
the earthen rampart as the lines of Guard musketeers parted to reveal the pikes
and their own unlimbering guns.
* * *
Lord Rokas strained to
pierce the smoke. The waves of fire washing along those redoubts was
impossible. No one could fit that many guns into so small a space even if they
had them, and the heretics couldn't have that many!
But they did. Tongues of
flame transfixed the pall, smashing tangles of bloody limbs through his
advancing pikes. Vrikadan's men were falling too quickly and too soon, and he
turned to a signaler.
"Tell High-Captain
Martas to tighten the interval. Then instruct High-Captain Sertal to
advance."
Signal flags snapped,
and Rokas chewed his lip. He'd hoped Vrikadan would clear at least one ford,
but that would take a special miracle against those guns. Yet his bleeding
columns should cover Martas long enough for him to reach charge range of the
river.
He raised his glass once
more, cursing silently as his men entered grapeshot range and his estimate of
Yortown's cost rose.
* * *
Sandy MacMahan was
white, and her brain screamed for her to arm her cutter's weapons, but she
couldn't. She was sickened by how glibly she'd suggested taking part in this
horror, yet stubborn rationality told her she'd been right—as Sean was right
now. Imperial weapons could never be used if they couldn't be used throughout,
but logic and reason were cold, hateful companions as she watched the smoke and
blood erupting below her.
* * *
High-Captain Vrikadan's
arlaks thundered. They were too distant to penetrate the earthen ramparts, but
their crews heaved them further forwards with every shot, pounding away in a
desperate effort to suppress the heretic guns.
They weren't
accomplishing much, Vrikadan knew, yet every little bit helped, and if they
could dismount a few of those guns . . .
His northern column
wavered, and Vrikadan charged through the smoke, bouncing off wounded men,
beating at stragglers with the flat of his blade.
"Keep your
ranks!" he bellowed. "Keep your ranks, damn you!"
A wild-eyed under-captain
recognized him and wheeled on his own men, quelling their panic. Vrikadan
shouldered up beside the younger man, waving his sword while the lead company
of the stalled phalanx stared at him.
"With me, lads!"
he screamed, and dashed forward like a man possessed.
* * *
Smoke blinded Tamman,
and he switched his vision to thermal imaging. The image was blurry, and he
could no longer see the range stakes, but a mass of men was almost to the east
bank. He sent a runner forward.
* * *
Vrikadan's lips drew
back in a snarl as a ray of sunlight pierced the smoke and the river glistened
before him. Grapeshot heaped his men in ugly, writhing tangles, but the weight
of numbers behind them was an avalanche. They couldn't stop—they couldn't be
stopped!—and the water beckoned.
And then, just as he
reached the bank, the smoke lifted on a billow of flame. There were gun pits at
the feet of the redoubts! Camouflaged pits filled not with arlaks but with
chagors, light guns packed hub-to-hub and spewing fire.
He had only an instant
to see it before a charge of grape ripped both legs off at the hip.
* * *
Sean swallowed again,
cringing inwardly as he watched through Sandy's scanners and saw the east bank
of the Mortan writhe with screaming, broken bodies . . . and saw living men
advancing through the horror.
God in Heaven, how could
they do that? He knew the momentum of the men behind drove them forward,
giving them no choice, but it was more than that, too. It was unreasoning,
blood-mad insanity and it was courage, and there was no longer any difference
between them.
They were going to reach
the fords despite Tamman's guns, and he hadn't really believed they could.
* * *
The first Guardsmen
splashed into the river. It ran scarlet as case shot flailed at them, but they
came on. High-Captain Lornar saw Lord Tamman's slender sword rise above his
head and blew his whistle, and more whistles shrilled up and down the fighting
step. Three thousand rifled joharns were leveled across the rampart, and Lord
Tamman's sword hissed down.
* * *
The leading pikemen were
still three hundred paces away when a sheet of lead slashed through them like
fiery sleet. Whole companies went down, and those following stared in horror at
the writhing carpet of their companions and the isolated individuals who still
stood, stunned by the density of the volley. They wavered, but High-Captain
Martas' men were on their heels, driving them forward. There was nowhere to go
but into those flaming muzzles, and they lowered their pikes and charged.
* * *
The first three thousand
musketeers reached for cartridges and stepped down from the fighting step, and
three thousand more replaced them. Ramrods clinked and jerked, whistles
screamed again, and a second stupendous volley smashed out. Sergeants shouted,
bellowing to control the lethal ballet, and the musketeers exchanged places
again. The first group's reloaded joharns leveled, and lightning sheeted across
the rampart once more.
* * *
Lord Rokas paled as the
roar of massive volleys drowned even the artillery. With no way to know how
quickly Tamman's men could reload, those steady, crashing discharges could only
mean the heretics had far more muskets than he'd believed possible.
He couldn't see through
the wall of smoke, but experience told him what had happened to Vrikadan—and
that Martas was moving into the maelstrom, with High-Captain Sertal on his
heels. Those fords were mincing machines, devouring his troops, yet they were
also the only way into Yortown, and he banished all expression as he barked out
orders to send even more of the Guard to their deaths.
High-Captain Martas's
men burst through the smoke. Bodies littered the riverbank, but the heretics'
guns and muskets had been too busy dealing with Vrikadan's men to ravage
Martas's companies. Now they lunged for the river, for their only salvation lay
in reaching and silencing those redoubts.
They began to die as
more volleys roared, and their fellows stumbled forward over their bodies,
floundering and cursing in the shallows, wading deeper, crouching to hide as
much of themselves below the water as they could.
And then the lead ranks
lunged upright, screaming as the rear ranks drove them forward onto the
sharpened stakes and needle-pointed caltrops hidden in the river. They thrashed
and shrieked in the scarlet water, and the deadly waves of musketry ripped them
to pieces.
Round shot hissed
overhead or thudded into the earthwork as the Host's guns scrambled into
action, and one of them slammed into the arlak beside Tamman. The barrel spun
away, the carriage disintegrated, and something less than human twitched and
mewled amid the wreckage. His guns were protected by the redoubt's embrasures,
but they were also outnumbered. More and more of the Guard's artillery was
coming into action between the bleeding infantry columns, and musketeers stood
fully exposed on the flanks to fire into the smoke. They were shooting blind at
extreme range, but even with their low rates of fire, an awesome number of
balls buzzed overhead.
He stared down into the
carnage of the ford. Pikemen and musketeers waded out into that madness,
advancing until grapeshot or musket balls hammered them under, but the men
behind them were stopping at last. Or were they? He strained his eyes and
swallowed. They weren't stopping; they were reforming.
* * *
High-Captain Sertal's
face was white under its dust and grime, but his hoarse voice cut through the
din. His forward companies absorbed the survivors of Vrikadan's and Martas's
men, standing with iron discipline under the tornado of the heretics' fire.
Under-captains and sergeants shouted orders. Where necessary, they kicked
troopers into formation with boots caked in bloody mud, and Sertal winced as
another deadly lash of grapeshot scythed through his men. He couldn't hold them
here long, but he had to hold them long enough to reorder their ranks,
and he gripped his sword and coughed on smoke, listening to the screams.
* * *
Sean checked the
scanners once more as the zone south of the High Road became a solid mass of
advancing Guardsmen, then nodded to Tibold.
"They're stuck in
deep," he said, trying to hide his anxiety, "and Rokas is sending his
reserves forward. It's time."
"Aye, Lord
Sean!" Tibold began snapping orders, and twenty thousand men, without a
single pike among them, rose to their feet in the "impassable" woods
north of the Host.
* * *
Now!
Sertal thrust his sword
at the redoubts and swept it down in command, and his men lurched into the
holocaust. Tamman saw them coming and turned to shout another order to Lornar,
but Lornar was down, head smashed by one of those blind-fired musket balls. He
grabbed a captain's shoulder. The Malagoran's face—it was Captain Ithun, one of
the ex-Guard officers—was white and strained, and he went still whiter as he
realized he was now Tamman's senior officer in the central redoubt.
Tamman saw it, but there was no time for encouragement.
"Pikes
forward!" he bellowed.
* * *
The chagors in Tamman's
advanced gun pits fired one last salvo, and their crews snatched for swords and
pikes as the bleeding ranks of the Guard won free of the water at last. A dozen
gun captains paused to light fuses before they grabbed up their own weapons,
and the madmen who'd fought their way through everything the Malagorans could
throw lunged towards them with a howl. Fresh concussions turned howls to
screams as the crude mines seeded the river bank in fountains of flame and
flying limbs, and the survivors wavered, but Sertal's men drove forward, and
edged steel stabbed and cut.
Malagoran pikemen
funneled through sally ports in their earthworks and foamed over the foremost
Guardsmen behind the high, quavering Malagoran yell, then crashed into the
ranks behind them. They thrust forward, bills rising and falling, shearing
limbs and plucking heads, and hurled the Host back into the fords, but there
they stopped. The hand-to-hand butchery blocked the chagors, and the arlaks
were locked in a duel with the Guard's gun lines. Musketry continued to crash out
above their heads, yet the Host was taking fewer fire casualties now, and the
lead formations had cleared most of the obstacles with their own bodies.
Thousands of Guardsmen lay dead or wounded, but more pressed forward, and sheer
weight of numbers began to drive the Malagorans back.
* * *
Captain Yurkal stared
south at the clouds of smoke, listening to the artillery and crashing musketry.
The screams were faint with distance, a savage sound under the explosions, and
he was guiltily aware of his own relief at being spared that hell. Yurkal was a
son of Mother Church, but he was also grateful his dragoons had been deployed
so far from the fighting, and—
He jerked in
astonishment as his banner-bearer fell, clawing at his chest. There was a meaty
thud as the sergeant beside him slid to the ground as well, and Yurkal whirled
as the popping sounds behind him registered.
Three hundred paces
away, still hidden in the edge of the forest, a green-and-brown-clad marksman
settled his rifled malagor into its rest and peered through his peep sight. He
squeezed the trigger, and a twenty-millimeter bullet blew Captain Yurkal's
heart apart.
* * *
Sean watched the snipers
methodically pick off officers and noncoms while the rest of his men debouched
from the forest. It wasn't chivalrous . . . but, then, neither was war.
More officers fell, and
suddenly leaderless troopers began to panic. Most were already fleeing, and the
pairs of malagors continued to fire, cutting down the handful of Guardsmen who
stood while leather-lunged sergeants cursed their own men into formation.
Fifteen thousand men
formed a three-deep battle line three kilometers long. The Malagoran yell
quivered down their front, and they swept south, and five thousand more
followed as a reserve.
* * *
Lord Marshal Rokas's
head snapped up at the crackle of musketry. He spun to the north and gaped as a
new wall of smoke billowed. Impossible!
He jerked his spyglass
open, and his blood ran chill. His mounted screen had dissolved like leaves in
a tempest, and even as he watched the advancing lines of muzzle flashes ripped
at the fugitives' backs.
A trap. This entire
position was a trap, and he'd walked right into it! Tibold had done the
unthinkable, splitting his outnumbered forces, deploying those oncoming
musketeers in a position from which they couldn't possibly retreat in order to
hit him when he was mired in the fords!
The plan's insane
audacity stunned him, but half his total force was committed to the lunge at
the fords. Another quarter had been left behind, lest it constrict his
movement. That left barely thirty thousand men to meet this new threat, and
they were spread out behind his attacking formations.
He leapt onto his
branahlk, spurring down the hill even as he began volleying orders, and signals
and couriers exploded in every direction in a deadly race against that
advancing horde of heretical musketeers.
Another isolated company
disintegrated under the rolling fire of Sean's battle-line, and his pulse
pounded. His men couldn't move as quickly in line as in column, but the hours
of drill were bearing fruit. Their formation was perfect, and they advanced
like automatons, reloading on the move. Their fire swept the trampled crop land
before them like a lethal broom, and he could see the panicky movement of
Rokas's reserves ahead of them.
* * *
The carnage in the fords
drove inexorably towards the redoubts, for the Guardsmen there had no way of
knowing what was descending upon their flank. Sixty thousand men clawed their
way forward. Only a fraction of them could reach the fords at any given moment,
yet the numbers behind them seemed inexhaustible. The Malagorans fought back with
equal ferocity, but they, too, were dying, and there were less of them.
The whistles shrilled
again, and the Guard forged ahead with a bellow. But the Malagorans weren't
breaking. They fell back, step by step, into the redoubts under cover of their
musketeers, and Tamman watched anxiously.
Sean had to cross ten
more kilometers of open ground to reach the fords.
* * *
Rokas's orders began to
reach their destinations, and a shudder pulsed through the Host. The sudden
threat to their "secure" flank mingled with the slaughter at the
fords and woke a shiver of dread. Their enemies served the forces of Hell—was
that how they'd managed this impossible maneuver?
But there was no time to
think of such things with that battle-line sweeping down upon them. Companies
wheeled, nioharq-drawn batteries lumbered to new positions, and an answering
formation began to coalesce. It was shaken and uncertain, but it was there, and
Rokas allowed himself to hope.
* * *
Sean watched the
patterns shift, and his own orders raced up and down the line. He had no
artillery . . . but, then, the Guard artillerists weren't used to muskets which
could kill them at eight hundred meters, either.
A forlorn hope of
musketeers tried to slow him, and perhaps a hundred of his own men went down.
Then the fire of his line tore the defenders apart, and the inexorable advance
swept over them.
* * *
The hand-to-hand
fighting reached the redoubts, and screams bubbled as Guardsmen tumbled into
the ditches at their feet and died on the waiting stakes. Their fellows
advanced over them, marching across their writhing bodies, too frenzied even to
realize what they were doing.
The musketeers fired one
last volley and fell back to clear the fighting step. Pikes and bills crossed
at the ramparts, and Tamman knew he should go with the marksmen, but Lornar was
dead. His men were fighting like demons, yet it all hinged on their morale, and
if he seemed to waver . . .
A pikeman leapt up a
pile of bodies, thrusting at him, and his left hand darted out with inhuman
quickness. He caught the pike haft, enhanced muscles jerked, and the Guardsman
clung in disbelief as he was wrenched in close.
A battle steel blade
hissed, and a head bounded away.
* * *
Two batteries of arlaks
unlimbered, and the gunners wheeled their pieces frantically into position to
stem the heretics' advance. They were six hundred paces from the enemy, three
times effective malagor range—and they died in deep astonishment as the crackling
fire killed them anyway.
* * *
The second wave of
attackers was thrown back, but a third formed and crashed forward over the
bodies, and the man beside Tamman went down screaming with a pikehead in his
guts. Tamman lunged at his killer, grunting as his slender sword punched
through breast and backplate alike, and kicked the body aside, then grunted
again as a musket ball smashed into his own breastplate. It whined aside,
marking the undented Imperial composite with a long smear of lead, and he cut down
two more Guardsmen. But this time the bastards were coming through, and his
free hand ripped a mace from a dead man's belt as the defending line crumbled
to his left.
"Follow me!"
he bellowed, and sensed the rush of his men behind him as he hurtled to meet
the penetration.
* * *
Sean's line swept over
the guns and the bodies of their crews, and a hungry roar went up as his men
saw the first pike blocks formed across their path. His own pipes screamed,
wailing their fury, and his amplified voice bellowed through the din.
"Halt!"
Fifteen thousand men
paused as one, and the waiting Guardsmen's pikes swung down into a leveled
glitter of steel.
"Front rank,
kneel!"
Five thousand men went
to one knee, shouldering their muskets as the Guard's drums thundered and the
charge began. Seven or eight thousand men swept forward, shrieking their
battlecries, and he watched them come.
Three hundred meters.
Two hundred.
"Take aim!"
One hundred.
Seventy-five. Fifty.
"By ranks—fire!"
A sheet of flame rolled
down his kneeling rank, and the front of the pike blocks collapsed in hideous
ruin. Men stumbled and sprawled over the bodies of their fellows as the charge
wavered, and the second rank fired. A third of the Guardsmen were down, and the
charge slithered to a halt as the hurricane blast swept over them . . . and the
third rank fired!
The surviving pikemen
hurled away their weapons and fled.
* * *
Captain Ithun watched
his company reel back as the Guard swept over the parapet. Its men wavered,
shaken by the terror thundering about them and ready to flee, then stared in
disbelief as Lord Tamman charged the enemy's flank. The fighting step was wide
enough for five men abreast, but there was no one beside him, for he'd
outdistanced them all . . . and it didn't matter.
Ithun gaped as the
black-armored figure erupted into the Guardsmen, mace in one hand, skinny sword
in the other. No Pardalian had faced a fully enhanced enemy in forty-five
thousand years, and any Guardsman who'd doubted the heretics were allied to
demons knew better now. Limbs and dead men exploded from Lord Tamman's path. A
pike lunged at him, and metal screamed as that impossible sword sheared through
the pikehead.
"Come on,
Malagorans!" Ithun shrieked, and his men roared as they swept back up
the fighting step in his wake.
* * *
It was over, Rokas
thought remotely.
A line of fire ground
down from the north in a haze of powder smoke, shattering everything in its
path and crunching over the wreckage. No army in the world could advance like
that, not without a single polearm, but the heretics were doing it, and his men
refused to face them.
He stood numbly,
watching the Host disintegrate as his men threw away their weapons and bolted,
and he couldn't blame them. There was something dreadful about that deliberate,
remorseless advance—something that proved the tales of demons—and all of Mother
Church's exorcisms couldn't stop it.
An aide jerked at him,
shouting about withdrawal, and Rokas turned like a man in a nightmare, then
gasped as a fiery hammer smashed his side.
The lord marshal fell to
his knees, and the tumult about him had grown suddenly faint. He rolled onto
his back, staring up at his panicked aide and the smoke-streaked sky, and his
dimming mind marveled that evening had come so soon.
But it wasn't evening,
after all; it was night.
The stench was enough to
turn a statue's stomach.
Eleven thousand
Guardsmen lay dead. Another twenty thousand wounded littered the Keldark
Valley, whimpering or screaming . . . or lying silent while they waited to die.
Another thirty or forty thousand (the count was far from done) huddled in
shocked disbelief under the weapons of their enemies.
A miserable, battered
third of the Holy Host was still running as darkness covered the horror.
And horror it was. Sean
stood beside a field hospital, watching the surgeons, and only his implants
held down his gorge. Pardalians had a good working knowledge of anatomy and a
kitchen sink notion of sepsis, but distilled alcohol was their sole anesthetic
and disinfectant. There were no medical teams to rebuild shattered limbs;
amputation was the prescription, and the treatment of men's wounds was more
horrifying than their infliction.
Sandy and Harry were out
there in the middle of it. Israel's facilities couldn't have healed a
fraction of the suffering, but Brashan had sent forward every painkiller his
sickbay had, and the iron-faced "angels" moved through Hell, easing
its pain and following the anesthetic with broad-spectrum Imperial antibiotics.
Guardsmen who cursed them as demons fell silent in confusion as they watched
them heal their enemies, and hundreds who should have died would live . . . and
none of it absolved Israel's crew of their guilt.
Sean and Tamman had
visited their own wounded—blessedly few compared to the Host's—but their
responsibilities lay elsewhere, and Sean turned away to stare out at the torches
and lanterns creeping across the battlefield. He shuddered as he braced himself
for another journey into that obscenity, yet he had to go. He squared his
shoulders and started forward against the steady stream of litter-bearers, and
Tibold followed him silently.
He tried not to think,
but he couldn't stop looking . . . or smelling. The reek of blood and torn
flesh mixed with the sewer stench of riven entrails, scavengers—some of them
human—were already busy beyond the reach of the moving torches, and Pardal's
small moon added its wan light to the horror.
More people had died
with Imperial Terra than here, but they'd died without even knowing.
These men had died screaming, ripped apart and mutilated, and he was the one
who'd planned their murder. He knew he'd had no choice, that less than four
thousand of his own lay dead or wounded because he'd gotten it right, but this
moonlit nightmare was too much.
His vision blurred, and
he stumbled over a body. His legs gave, and he sank to his knees before his
lieutenant, trying to speak, fighting to explain his inner agony, but no words
came. Only terrible, choking sounds.
Tibold knelt beside him,
brown eyes dark in the moonlight, and a hard-palmed hand touched his cheek.
Sean stared at him, twisted by shame and guilt and a wrenching loss of
innocence, and Tibold raised his other hand to cradle his captain-general's
head.
"I know, lad,"
the ex-Guardsman murmured. "I know. The fools who call war
'glorious' have never seen this, curse them."
"I-I—" Sean
gasped and fought for breath, and Tibold's hands slid down from his head. The
older man cradled him like a lover or a child, and Crown Prince Sean Horus
MacIntyre sobbed upon his shoulder.
* * *
Tamman huddled close to
the fire with his captains as aides came and went. Enhancement kept the outer
chill at bay, but he hugged the fire's light, refusing to think about what lay
beyond its reach. The chainmail on his right arm was stiff with other men's
dried blood, his implants were busy with half a dozen small wounds, and he'd
never been so tired in his life.
Branahlks whistled as
some dragoons herded in more prisoners, and a messenger came in with a report
from the troops Sean had sent to watch the fleeing Guardsmen. The messenger
wanted nioharqs to collect another half-dozen abandoned guns, and Tamman
cudgeled his brain until he remembered who to send him to. Another messenger
trotted up on a drooping branahlk to announce his men had gathered up four
thousand joharns, and what should he do with them? He dealt with that, as well,
then looked up as Sean and Tibold walked into the fire lit circle.
The officers raised a
tired cheer, and Tamman saw Sean wince before he raised a hand to acknowledge
it. His friend's face was like iron as they clasped forearms tiredly, and the two
of them stared into the fire together.
* * *
Stomald closed two more
dead eyes, then rose from aching knees. The captured priests and under-priests
of the Temple would have nothing to do with him. They spat upon him and reviled
him, but their dying soldiers saw only his vestments and heard only his
comforting voice.
He closed his own eyes,
swaying with fatigue, and whispered a prayer for the souls of the dead. For the
many dead of both sides, and not for his own, alone. Pardal had not seen such
slaughter, nor such crushing victory, in centuries, yet there was no jubilation
in Stomald's heart. Thankfulness, yes, but no one could see such suffering and
rejoice.
A slender arm steadied
him, and he opened his eyes. The Angel Harry stood beside him. Her blue-and-gold
garments were spattered with blood, and her face was drawn, her one eye
shadowed, but she looked at him with concern.
"You should
rest," she said, and he shook his head drunkenly.
"No." It was
hard to get the word out. "I can't."
"How long since
you've eaten?"
"Eaten?"
Stomald blinked. "I had breakfast, I think," he said vaguely, and she
clucked her tongue.
"That was eighteen
hours ago." She sounded stern. "You're not going to do anyone any
good when you collapse. Go get something to eat."
He gagged at the
thought, and she frowned.
"I know. But you
need—" She broke off and looked about until she spied the Angel Sandy. She
said something in her own tongue, and the Angel Sandy replied in the same
language. The laughter had leached even out of her eyes, but she held out her
hand, and the Angel Harry handed over her satchel of medicines without ever
removing her arm from Stomald's shoulders.
"Come with
me." He started to speak, but she cut him off. "Don't
argue—march," she commanded, and led him towards the distant cooking
fires. He tried again to protest, then let himself slump against her strength,
and she murmured something else in that strange language. He looked up at her
questioningly, but she only shook her head and smiled at him—a sad, soft little
smile that eased his wounded heart—and her arm tightened about him.
* * *
The Inner Circle sat in
silence as High Priest Vroxhan laid the semaphore message aside. He pressed it
flat with his fingers, then tucked his hands into the sleeves of his robe,
hugging himself against a chill which had nothing to do with the cool night,
and met their gaze. Even Bishop Corada was white-faced, and Frenaur sagged
about his bones.
Lord Rokas was dead;
barely forty thousand of the Host had escaped, less than half of them with
weapons; and High-Captain Ortak had the Host's rearguard working with frantic
speed to dig in further down the Keldark Valley. Ortak's report was short of
details, yet one thing was clear. The Host hadn't been beaten. It hadn't even
been routed. It had been destroyed.
"There you have it,
Brothers," Vroxhan said. "We've failed to crush the heresy, and
surely the heretics will soon counterattack." He glanced at
High-Captain—no, Lord Marshal—Surak, and the man who had just become the
Guard's senior officer looked back with stony eyes. "Exactly how bad is
the situation, Lord Marshal?"
Surak winced at his new
title, then squared his shoulders.
"Even with Ortak's
survivors, we have barely seventy thousand men in all of Keldark. I don't yet
know how many men the heretics deployed, but from the casualties we've
suffered, they must have many more than that. I would have said they could
never have raised and armed them, even with demonic aid, yet that they must
have is evident from the result. I've already ordered every pike in Keldark
forward to Ortak, but I fear they can do little more than slow the heretics.
They can't stop them if they keep coming."
A soft sigh ran around
the table, but Vroxhan looked up sternly, and it faded. Surak continued in a
harsh voice.
"With Your
Holiness' permission, I will order Ortak to retire on Erastor until more
men—and weapons—can reach him. He can fight delaying actions, but if he stands,
the heretics will surely overwhelm him."
"Wait," Corada
objected. "Did not Lord Rokas say that an attacker needed twice or thrice
a defender's numbers?"
Surak looked to Vroxhan,
who nodded for him to answer.
"He did, and he was
right, Your Grace, but those calculations are for battles in which neither side
has demonic aid."
"Are you suggesting
God's power is less than that of demons?"
Surak was no coward, but
he fought an urge to wipe his forehead.
"No, Your
Grace," he replied carefully. "I think it plain the demons did
aid the heretics, and until I have Ortak's detailed report I can't say how they
did so, but that isn't what I meant. Consider, please, Your Grace. Our men have
been defeated—" that pallid understatement twisted his mouth like sour
wine "—and they know it. They've lost many of their weapons. Ortak may
have forty thousand men, but barely twenty thousand are armed, and their morale
is—must be—shaken. The heretics have all the weapons abandoned on the field to
swell their original strength, and demons or no, they know they won. Their
morale will be strengthened even as ours is weakened."
He paused and raised his
empty hands, palms uppermost.
"If I order Ortak
to stand, he will. And as surely as he does, he'll be destroyed, Your Grace. We
must withdraw, using the strength we still possess to slow the enemy
until fresh strength can be sent to join it."
"But by your
estimate, Lord Marshal," Vroxhan said, "we lack the numbers to meet
the heretics on equal terms." The high priest's voice was firm, but
anxiety burned in its depths.
"We do,
Holiness," Surak replied, "but I believe we have sufficient to hold
at least the eastern end of the Keldark Valley. I would prefer to do just that
and open a new offensive from the west, were our strength in Cherist and
Thirgan great enough. It isn't, however, so we must fight them here. I realize
that it was the Inner Circle's desire to defeat this threat solely with our own
troops, Holiness, yet that's no longer possible either. Our main field army
has, for all intents and purposes, been destroyed, not merely defeated, and I
fear we must summon the secular armies of the east to Holy War. Were all
their numbers gathered into a single new Host under the Temple's banner, they
would—they must—suffice for victory . . . but only if we can hold the heretics
in the mountains until they've mustered. For that reason, if no other, Ortak
must be ordered to delay the enemy."
"I see."
Vroxhan sighed. "Very well, Lord Marshal, let it be as you direct. Send
your orders, and the Circle will summon the princes." Surak stooped to
kiss the hem of the high priest's robe and withdrew, his urgency evident in his
speed, and Vroxhan looked about the table once more.
"And as for us,
Brothers, I ask you all to join me in the Sanctum that we may pray for
deliverance from the ungodly."
Sean MacIntyre stood
with Sandy and frowned down at the relief map. Tibold and a dozen other
officers stood around respectfully, watching him and "the Angel
Sandy" study the map, and the absolute confidence in their eyes made him
want to scream at them.
The Battle of Yortown
lay one of the local "five-days" in the past. The Angels' Army had
advanced a hundred and thirty kilometers in that time, but now High-Captain
Ortak's entrenched position lay squarely in its path, and try as he might, Sean
saw no way around it. In fact, he'd come to the conclusion Tibold had offered
from the first: the only way around was through, and that was the reason
for his frown.
Sean's army had every
advantage in an open field battle. The Yortown loot had included twenty-six
thousand joharns, enough for Sean to convert all fifty-eight thousand of his
men into musketeers and send several thousand to the force covering the Thirgan
Gap in the west to boot, and Brashan had shifted Israel to the mountains
directly above Yortown to decrease cutter transit time to the battleship. The
Narhani's machine shop modules had increased their modification rate to
forty-five hundred rifles (with bayonet rings) a night, and the Malagoran
gunsmiths were adding almost a thousand a day more on their own, now that
"the angels" had taught them about rifling benches. Unfortunately,
over half Sean's army had been trained as pikemen, and the new men were
still learning which end the bullet came out of.
Even so, his troops were
fleeter of foot and had incomparably more firepower than any other Pardalian
army. The new, standardized rifle regiments he and Tibold had organized could
kill their enemies from five or six times smoothbore range, and the absence of
polearms made them far more mobile. Even the best pikemen were less than nimble
trailing five-meter pikes, and his rifle-armed infantry could dance rings
around the Guard's ponderous phalanxes. Coupled with its higher rate of fire,
the Angels' Army could cut four or five times its own number to pieces in a
mobile engagement.
Unhappily, High-Captain
Ortak knew it. He was well supplied with artillery, since Lord Marshal Rokas
had known the cramped terrain at Yortown would reduce his guns' efficiency and
left many of them with his rearguard, and reinforcements had come forward, but
less than half his roughly eighty thousand men were actually armed. Less than
twelve thousand were musketeers, and he dared not face the Angels' Army in the
open. But short of arms or not, his men still outnumbered Sean's by almost
forty percent, and all those unarmed men had been busy with mattocks. The
earthworks he'd thrown up at Erastor closed the Keldark Valley north of the
Mortan, and he clearly had no intention of venturing beyond them. Nor could any
army go around them. The Mortan was unfordable for over ninety kilometers
upstream or down from Erastor, and the terrain south of the river was so boggy
not even nioharqs could drag artillery or wagons through it.
In many respects, Erastor
was a stronger defensive position even than Yortown, and Sean and Tibold had
considered meeting Rokas there. In the end, they'd decided in favor of Yortown
because its terrain had let Sean set his ambush, but for a simple holding
engagement, Erastor would actually have been better. There were no open flanks
between the Erastor Spur and the river, which left an opponent with superior
numbers—or mobility—no openings. He had to attack head-on, and if Ortak refused
to come out, Sean would have to go in after him . . . which meant the Guard's
outnumbered and outranged musketeers could hunker down behind their parapets
until Sean's men entered their range. The Guard's morale had to be
shaken by what had happened at Yortown, while the Angels' Army's morale had soared
in inverse proportion, and Sean knew his troops could take Erastor. It was the cost
of taking it that terrified him.
He frowned more deeply
at the map and once more castigated himself for not pushing on more quickly.
He'd taken five days to march a distance a Pardalian army could have done in
three if it was pushed, and the consequences promised to be grim. If he'd
crowded the routed Host harder, he might have bounced Ortak out of Erastor
before the high-captain dug in, and telling himself his troops had been
exhausted by the Yortown fighting made him feel no better. He should have
gotten them on the way with the next dawn, however tired, not wasted two whole
days burying the dead and collecting the Host's cast away weapons, and he swore
at himself for delaying.
He wanted to swear at
Tibold, as well, for letting him, but that wouldn't have been fair. The
ex-Guardsman was a product of the military tradition which had evolved after
the Schismatic Wars, and Pardalian wars were fought for territory. Ideally,
battles were avoided in favor of efforts to outmaneuver an opponent, and
campaigns were characterized by intricate, almost formal march and countermarch
until they climaxed in equally formal engagements or sieges for vital
fortresses. The Napoleonic doctrine of pursuing a beaten foe to annihilation
was foreign to local military thought. It shouldn't have been, given the
mobility nioharqs bestowed, but it was, and a crushing victory like Yortown
would have brought most wars to a screeching conclusion as the defeated side
treated for terms. Not this time. High Priest Vroxhan and the Inner Circle
might not have the least idea what Sean and his marooned friends were truly
after, but they'd realized they were fighting for their very survival. Worse,
they were fighting, as they saw it, for their souls. Oh, it was obvious they'd
become firmly attached to their secular power, but they also saw no distinction
between "God's Will" and the Temple's domination of Pardal. Under the
circumstances, there were—could be—no acceptable "terms" for
them short of the "heretics' " utter destruction, and they were
mobilizing their reserves. Within another two weeks, at most three, thousands
of fresh troops would be marching into Erastor. Somehow he had to crush the
Erastor position before those reinforcements arrived, and his soul cringed at
the thought of the casualties his men would suffer because he'd screwed
up.
His frown at the map
became a glare. He knew, intellectually, that there wasn't always a clever
answer, but he was also young. Centuries older than he'd been before Yortown,
but still young enough to believe there ought to be an answer, if he
were only smart enough to see it.
A hand touched his
elbow, and he turned his head to see Sandy looking up at him. Her face was no
longer the haunted mask it had been the first night after Yortown, but, as for
all of Israel's crew, the slaughter of that day had left its mark upon
her. Her eyes had learned to twinkle once more, yet there was less brashness
behind them. No less confidence, perhaps, but a deeper awareness of the
horrible cost reality could exact. Now those eyes met his searchingly, the
question in them plain, and he sighed.
"I don't see an
answer," he said in English. "They've put in too solid a roadblock,
and it's my own damned fault."
"Oh, shush!"
she said in the same language, squeezing his elbow harder. "We're all
getting on-the-job training, and the last thing we need is for you to kick
yourself for things you can't change. Seems to me you did a pretty fair job at
Yortown, and you've got a lot more to work with now."
"Sure I do."
He tried to keep the bitterness from his voice. His officers might not
understand English, but they could recognize emotional overtones, and there was
no sense shaking their confidence. "Unfortunately," he went on
in a determinedly lighter tone, "the bad guys have more to work with, too.
Not in numbers, but in position." He waved at the fifteen kilometers of
earthworks linking the stony Erastor Spur to the river. "We surprised
Rokas by doing something he knew was impossible, but Ortak has a much
better idea of our capabilities, and he's dug in to deny us all our advantages.
We can take him out with a frontal assault, but we'll lose thousands, and I
just can't convince myself it's worth it, Sandy. Not just so we can get hold of
a computer!"
"It's not
just to get us to the computer!" she said fiercely, then smoothed her own
tone as a few officers stirred in surprise. She shook her head and went on more
calmly. "It's life and death for all these people, Sean—you know
that."
"Yeah? And whose
fault is that?" he growled.
"Ours," she
said unflinchingly. "Mine, if you want to be specific. But it's something
we blundered into, not something we did on purpose, and if we started all this,
then we have to finish it."
Sean closed his eyes and
tasted the bitterness of knowing she was right. It was a conversation they'd
had often enough, and rehashing it now would achieve nothing. Besides, he liked
the Malagorans. Even if he'd borne no responsibility for their predicament, he
still would have wanted to help them.
"I know," he
said finally. He opened his eyes and smiled crookedly, then patted the hand on
his elbow. "And it's no more your fault than it is mine or Tamman's or
Brashan's—even Harry's. It's just knowing how many of them are going to get
killed because I didn't push hard enough." She started to open her mouth,
but he shook his head. "Oh, you're right. People make mistakes while they
learn. I know that. I only wish my mistakes could be made somewhere that
didn't get people killed."
"You can only do
the best you can do." Her voice was so gentle he longed to take her in his
arms, but God only knew how his officers would react if he started going around
hugging an "angel"!
He actually felt his
mouth quirk a smile at the thought, and he folded his hands behind him again
and walked slowly around the table, studying the relief map from all angles. If
only there were a way to use his mobility! Someone—he thought it had been
Nathan Bedford Forrest—had once said war was a matter of "getting there
firstest with the mostest," not absolute numbers, and the one true
weakness of Ortak's position was its size. He had fifteen kilometers of
frontage—more, with the salients built into his earthworks—and that gave him
barely two thousand armed men per kilometer even if he withheld no reserve at
all. Of course, he had another thirty or forty thousand he could send in to
pick up the weapons of their fallen comrades, but even so he was stretched
thin. If Sean could break his front anywhere, and get behind his works,
he could sweep them like a broom. But there was no way he could—
He paused suddenly, and
his eyes narrowed. He stood absolutely still, staring down at the map while his
mind raced, and then he began to smile.
"Sean? Sean?"
Sandy had to call him twice before he looked up with a jerk. "What is
it?" she asked, and his smile took on a harder, fiercer cast.
"I've been going at
this wrong," he said. "I've been thinking about how Ortak has us
blocked, and what I should have been thinking about is how he's trapped
himself."
"Trapped?" she
asked blankly, and he waved Tibold closer and pointed at the map.
"Could infantry get
through these swamps?" he asked in Pardalian, and it was the
ex-Guardsman's turn to frown down at the map.
"Not pikes,"
he said after a moment, "but you might be able to get musketeers
through." He cocked his head, comparing the exquisitely detailed map the
angels had provided to all the ones he'd ever seen before, then tapped the
southern edge of the swamp with a blunt forefinger. "I always thought the
bad ground was wider than that down along the south face of the valley,"
he said slowly. "We could probably get a column across this narrow bit in,
oh, ten or twelve hours. Not with guns or pikes, though, Lord Sean. There's no
bottom to most of this swamp. You might get a few chagors through, but
arlaks would sink to the axles in no time. And even after you get through the
swamp, the ground's still soft enough between there and the river to slow
you."
"Would Ortak expect
us to try anything like that?" Sean asked, and Tibold shook his head
quickly.
"He's got the same
maps we had before you and the ang—" The ex-Guardsman bit the word
off as he remembered how Lord Sean and the angels kept trying to get people not
to call them that. For a moment his face felt hot, but then he grinned up at
his towering young commander. "He's got the same maps we always had
before. Besides, no Guard captain would even consider leaving his pikes and
guns behind."
"That's what I
hoped you'd say," Sean murmured, and his brain whirred as he estimated
times and distances. The Mortan was the better part of three unfordable kilometers
wide above and below Erastor, but it could be forded at Malz, a farm
town ninety-odd klicks below its junction with the Erastor River. If he moved
back west, out of sight of Ortak's lines, and threw together enough rafts . . .
Or, for that matter, could his engineers knock together proper bridges? He
considered the thought for a moment, then shook his head. No, that would take a
good two or three days, and if this was going to work at all, he didn't have
two or three days to waste.
"All right,
Tibold," he said. "Here's what we'll do. First . . ."
* * *
High-Captain Ortak stood
in his entrenchments' central bastion and stared west. Drizzling rain drew a
gray veil across the Keldark Valley, limiting his vision, but he knew what was
out there and breathed a silent thanks for his enemies' lack of initiative.
Every day that passed without attack not only helped the morale of his battered
force but brought its desperately needed relief one day closer.
He strained his eyes,
trying to make out details of the earthworks the heretics had thrown up to face
his own. Part of him shuddered every time he thought of the cost of taking that
position once the Holy Host had reinforced and resumed the offensive, but not
even that could shake his gratitude. He knew how thin-stretched he was,
and if the heretics had been willing to throw a column straight at him
anywhere—
He shivered, and not
because of the rain. He disliked having to stand with a river at his back, but
the Erastor was fordable for most of its length. If he had to, he could fall
back across it, though he'd have to abandon what remained of his baggage, and
this was the best—probably the only—point at which to stop an army from the
west. Conscripted laborers were building another position in his rear at
Baricon, but Baricon was better suited to resisting attacks from the east. No,
he had to hold the heretics here if he meant to keep them out of Keldark, and
if they ever got loose in the duchy their freedom of maneuver would increase a
hundredfold. After what they'd done to Lord Marshal Rokas at Yortown, that was
enough to strike a chill in the stoutest heart.
He wrapped his cloak
about himself and pursed his lips in thought. The semaphore chain across
Malagor had been cut, but it continued to operate east of him, and the Temple's
dispatches were less panicky than they had been. The secular lords were being
slow to muster, but the Guard had stripped its garrisons throughout the eastern
kingdoms to the bone, and fifty thousand men were on their way to him. Better
yet, the first trains of replacement weapons had begun coming in. There were
less of them than he would have liked, especially given what the heretics had
captured at Yortown, but he'd already received eight thousand pikes and over
five hundred joharns. If the reports from Yortown were right, the heretics had
found some way to give joharns and malagors the range of rifles, which
suggested final casualties would be atrocious even if the Guard managed to
rearm every man, but that should be less of a factor defending entrenched
positions than in the open field. They were going to have to find some reply to
the heretics' weight of fire in the future, and Ortak was already considering
ways to increase the ratio of firearms to pikes, but for the moment he had a
stopper in the bottle and the heretics seemed unwilling to take the losses to
remove it.
He sighed and shook
himself. The light was going, and he had more than enough paperwork waiting to
keep him up half the night. At least his quarters in Erastor were better than a
tent in the field, he told himself, and smiled wryly as he turned and called
for his branahlk.
* * *
Sean MacIntyre
dismounted and wiped rain from his face. He could have used his implants to
stay dry, but that would have felt unfair to his troops, which was probably
silly but didn't change his feelings. He smiled at his own perversity and
scratched his branahlk's snout, listening to its soft whistle of pleasure, and
tried to hide his worry as the sodden column squelched past.
It was taking longer
than planned, and the rain was heavier than Israel's meteorological
remotes had predicted. The cold front pushing down the valley had met a warm
front out of Sanku and Keldark, and Brashan's latest forecast warned of at
least twenty hours of hard rain, probably with thunderstorms. They would make
the ground still softer and the going harder, and they were also going to
deepen the fords at Malz, but at least it didn't look as if the Mortan would
reach critical depths. Or, he thought grimly, not yet.
Tibold splashed up on
his own branahlk and drew up beside him.
"Captain Juahl's
reached the bivouac area, Lord Sean." The ex-Guardsman's tone made Sean
crook an eyebrow, and Tibold sighed. "It's under a handspan of water, My
Lord."
"Great." Sean
closed his eyes and inhaled deeply, then flipped his fold com up to Sandy's
hovering cutter. "Got a problem down here," he subvocalized.
"Our bivouac site's underwater."
"Damn. Hang on a
sec," she replied, and brought up her sensors, berating herself for not
having checked sooner. She frowned in concentration over her neural feed as she
swept the area ahead of the column, then her eyes brightened. "Okay. If
you push on another six klicks, the ground rises to the south."
"Firewood?" he
asked hopefully.
" 'Fraid not,"
she replied, and he sighed.
"Thanks
anyway." He turned to Tibold. "Tell Juahl he'll find higher ground if
he bears a bit south and keeps moving for another hour or so."
"At once, Lord
Sean." Tibold didn't even ask how his commander knew that; he simply
turned his branahlk and splashed off into the gathering gloom, and Sean leaned
back against his own mount and sighed.
He had twenty-five
thousand men marching through mud towards fords which ought to be
passable when they arrived, and he was beginning to wonder if he'd been so
clever after all. Pardal's days were long, and on good roads (and Pardalian
roads would have made any Roman emperor die of jealousy), infantry routinely
made fifty kilometers a day in fair weather. Marching cross-country in the
rain, even through open terrain, they were doing well to make thirty pushing
hard, and they hadn't even reached the swamps yet. The men were in better
spirits than he would have believed possible under the circumstances, but
they'd marched for three grueling days, mostly in the rain and with no hot
meals. Even for someone with full enhancement, this march was no pleasure
jaunt; for the unenhanced, it was unadulterated, exhausting misery, and they
were barely halfway to the fords.
He flicked his mind back
over the latest reports from their stealthed remotes. Ortak was receiving fresh
weapons, but any additional reinforcements were still at least twelve days
away. Even allowing for his column's slower than estimated progress, Sean
should be back north of the Mortan within another four days, but he was grimly
aware of the risk he was running. The valley's peasants had been moved out by
the Holy Host on its way in, and the Temple's troops had already accounted for
everything that could be foraged from the abandoned farms. Pack nioharqs had
accompanied them this far, but they'd have to be sent home once the column
reached the swamp. From there, Sean's infantry would have to pack all of their
supplies—including ammunition—on their backs, and that gave them no more than a
week's food. Which meant that if his plan to surprise Ortak didn't work, he was
going to find himself with twenty-five thousand starving men trapped between
Erastor and the Guard reinforcements.
At least Ortak was
cooperating so far. The high-captain "knew" the terrain south of the
river was impassable, and he was too short of armed men to spare many from his
prepared positions. He had pickets east of the Erastor, but they were fairly
close to the bridges. It was still a bit hard to adjust to a pre-technic
society's limitations, and despite everything, Sean felt vaguely exposed. His
column was barely fifty air kilometers from Ortak's position, and it was hard
to believe Ortak had no suspicion of what he was up to, yet the high-captain's
deployments and the reports of Sandy's eavesdropping remotes all confirmed that
he didn't.
The thought drew a wet
chuckle from Sean. Miserable as he and his troops might be, they had the most
deadly weapon known to man: surprise. And at least if he screwed up, it
wouldn't be because the Guard had surprised him.
He gave his branahlk
another scratch, then swung back into the saddle and trotted forward along the
column.
* * *
Father Stomald stepped
into the command tent and paused. The Angel Harry stood alone, staring down at
the map and unaware of his presence, and her shoulders were tight.
The young priest
hesitated. Part of him was loath to disturb her, but another part urged him to
step closer. An angel needed no mortal's comfort, yet Stomald was guiltily
aware that he was coming less and less to think of her as he ought.
The angels had fallen
into a division of their duties which was too natural to have been planned, and
the Angel Harry's share of those duties had brought her into almost constant
contact with Stomald. The fighting of the war in which they were all trapped
was the task of Lord Sean and Lord Tamman, but ministering to its consequences
was Stomald's task. It was he who had begun it, whatever his intent, and it was
he who must bear the weight of caring for its victims. He accepted that, for it
was but an extension of his priestly duties, and his own faith would have
driven him to shoulder that weight even if he could somehow have avoided it.
But he was not alone before the harsh demands of his responsibilities, for as
Lord Sean and Lord Tamman had Tibold and the Angel Sandy, Stomald had the Angel
Harry. However grim the burden he faced, however terrible the cost war and its
horrors exacted, she was always there, always willing to give him of her own
strength and catch him when he stumbled. And that, he thought, was why he had
come to feel these things he should not—must not—feel.
Yet knowing what he
should not do and stopping himself from doing it were two very different
things. She seemed so young, and she was different from the Angel Sandy. She
was . . . softer, somehow. Gentler. The Angel Sandy cared deeply—no one who'd
seen her face the night after Yortown could doubt that—yet she had a talmahk's
fierceness the Angel Harry lacked. No one could ever call either angel weak,
but the Angel Sandy and Lord Sean were kindred souls who threw off uncertainty
like a too-small garment whenever it touched them. Their eyes were always on
the next battle, the next challenge, yet it was the Angel Harry to whom those
in trouble instinctively turned, as if they, as Stomald, sensed the compassion
at her heart. Any angel must, of course, be special, but Stomald had seen how
even the most hardened trooper's eyes followed the Angel Harry. The army would
have followed Lord Sean or the Angel Sandy or Lord Tamman against Hell itself,
but the Angel Harry owned their hearts.
As she did Stomald's,
and yet . . .
The priest sighed, and
his eyes darkened as he admitted the truth. His love for the Angel Harry was
wrong, for it was not what a man should dare to feel for one of God's holy
messengers.
She heard his soft
exhalation and turned, and he was shocked by the tears in her one good eye. She
wiped them as quickly as she'd turned, but he'd seen them, and before he
remembered what she was, he reached out to her.
He froze, hand extended,
shocked by his own temerity. What was he thinking? She was an angel,
not simply the beautiful young woman she appeared. Had he not learned to rely
upon her strength? To turn to her for comfort when his own weariness and
the sorrow of so much death pressed upon him? How dared he reach out to comfort
her?
But he saw no anger in
her eye, and his heart soared with curiously aching joy as she took his hand.
She squeezed it and turned her head to look back down at the map table, and
Stomald stood there, holding her hand, and confused emotions washed through
him. It felt so right, so natural, to stand with her, as if this were the place
he was meant to be, yet guilt flawed his contentment. He was aware of her
beauty, of her wonderful blend of strength and gentleness, and he longed, more
than he'd ever longed for anything other than to serve God Himself, for this
moment to last forever.
"What is it?"
he asked finally, and the depth of concern in his voice surprised even him.
"I'm just—"
She paused, then gave her head a little shake. "I'm just worried about
Sean," she said softly. "The way the river's rising, how far they
still have to go, the odds when they get there . . ." She drew a deep
breath and looked at him with a wan smile. "Silly of me, isn't it?"
"Not silly,"
Stomald disagreed. "You worry because you care."
"Maybe." She
still held his hand, but her other hand ran a finger down the line of Lord
Sean's march, and her voice was low. "I feel so guilty sometimes, Stomald.
Guilty for worrying so much more about Sean than anyone else, and for having
caused all this. It's my fault, you know."
Stomald flinched, and
self-loathing filled him as he recognized his own jealousy. He was jealous
of her concern for Lord Sean! The sheer impiety of his emotions frightened him,
but then the rest of what she'd said penetrated, and he shook off his preoccupation
with his own feelings.
"You didn't cause
this. It was our fault for laying impious hands upon you." He hung his
head. "It was my fault, not yours, My Lady."
"No it
wasn't!" she said so sharply he looked up, dismayed by her anger. Her
single eye bored into him, and she shook her head fiercely. "Don't ever
think that, Stomald! You did what your Church had taught you to do, and—"
She paused again, biting her lip, then nodded to herself. "And there's
more happening here than you know even yet," she added with quiet
bitterness.
Stomald blinked at her,
touched to the heart once more by her readiness to forgive the man who'd almost
burned her alive, yet confused by her words. She was an angel, with an angel's
ability to know things no mortal could, yet her voice suggested she'd meant
more than that. Perplexity filled him, and he reached for the first thing that
crossed his mind.
"You care deeply
for Lord Sean, don't you, My Lady?" he asked, and could have bitten off
his tongue in the instant. The question cut too close to his own forbidden
longings, and he waited for her anger, but she only nodded.
"Yes," she
said softly. "I care for them all, but especially for Sean."
"I see," he
said, and the dagger turning in his heart betrayed him. He heard the pain in
his own voice and tried to turn and flee, but her fingers tightened about his,
stronger than steel yet gentle, trapping him without harming him, and against
his will, his gaze met hers.
"Stomald, I—"
she said, then shook her head and said something else. She spoke to herself, in
her own language, the one she spoke to the Angel Sandy and their champions.
Stomald couldn't understand her words, but he recognized a curious finality, an
edge of decision, and his heart hammered as she drew him over to a stool. He
sat upon it at her gesture, uncomfortable, as always, at sitting in her
presence, and she drew a deep, deep breath.
"I do care
for Sean, very much," she told him. "He's my brother."
"Your—?"
Stomald gaped at her, trying to understand, but his mind refused to work. He'd
speculated, dreamed, hoped, yet he'd never quite dared believe. Lord
Sean was mortal, however he might have been touched by God, yet if he was her
brother, if mortal blood could mingle with the angels', then—
"It's time you knew
the truth," she said quietly.
"The . . . the
truth?" he repeated, and she nodded.
"There's a reason
Sandy and I have tried to insist that you not treat us as angels, Stomald. You
see, we aren't."
"Aren't?" he
parroted numbly. "Aren't . . . aren't what, My Lady?"
"Angels." She
sighed, and her expression shocked him. She was staring at him, her remaining
eye soft, as if she feared his reaction, but he could only stare back. Not
angels? That was . . . it was preposterous! Of course they were angels!
That was why he'd preached their message to his people and the reason Mother
Church had loosed Holy War upon them! They had to be angels!
"But—" The
word came out hoarse and shaking, and he wrapped his arms about himself as if
against a freezing wind. "But you are angels. The miracles you've
worked to save us, your raiment—the things we've all seen Lord Sean and Lord
Tamman do at your bidding—!"
"Aren't miracles at
all," she said in that same soft voice, as if pleading for his
understanding. "They're—oh, how can I make you understand?" She
turned away, folding her arms below her breasts, and her spine was ramrod
stiff. "We . . . can do many things you can't," she said finally,
"but we're mortal, Stomald. All of us. We simply have tools, skills, you
don't, yet if you had those tools, you could do anything you've seen us do and
more."
"You're . . .
mortal?" he whispered, and even through the whirlwind confusion uprooting
all his certainty, he felt a sudden, soaring joy.
"Yes," she
said softly. "Forgive me, please. I . . . I never meant to deceive you,
never meant—" She broke off, shoulders shaking, and his heart twisted as
he realized she was weeping. "We never wanted any of this to happen,
Stomald." Her lovely voice was choked and thick. "We only . . . we
only wanted to get home, and then I ran into Tibold, and he shot me and brought
me back to Cragsend, and somehow it all—"
She shook her head
fiercely, and turned back to face him.
"Please,
Stomald. Please believe we never, ever, meant to hurt anyone. Not you, not your
people, not even the Inner Circle. It just . . . happened, and we couldn't let
the Church destroy you for something we'd caused!"
"Get home?"
Stomald rose from the stool and crossed to stand directly before her, staring
into her tear-streaked face, and she nodded. "Home . . . where?" he asked hesitantly.
"Out there."
She pointed at the sky invisible beyond the roof of the tent, and for just an
instant sheer horror filled the priest. The stars! She was from the
stars, and the Writ said only the demons who had cast Man from the firmament—
Sick panic choked him.
Had he done the very thing the Inner Circle charged him with? Had he
given his allegiance to the Great Demons who sought only the destruction of all
God's works?
But then, as quickly as it
had come, the terror passed, for it was madness. Whatever else she might be,
the Angel Harry—or whoever she truly was—was no demon. He'd seen too much of
her pain among the wounded and dying, too much gentleness and compassion, to
believe that. And the Writ itself said no demon, greater or lesser, could speak
the Holy Tongue, yet she spoke it to him every day! All his life, Stomald had
been taught the inviolability of the Writ, but now he faced a truth almost more
terrifying than the possibility that she might actually be a demon, for if she
came from the stars, the Writ said she must be a demon, and yet the Writ
also proved she couldn't be one.
He felt the cornerstone
of his life turning under his feet like wet, treacherous sand, and fear washed
through him. But even as that fear sought to suck him under, he clung to his
faith in her. Angel or no, he trusted her. More than trusted, he
admitted to himself. He loved her.
"Tell me," he
begged, and she stepped forward. She rested her hands on his shoulders and
gazed into his face, and he felt his fear ease as her fingers squeezed gently.
"I will. I'll tell
you everything. Some of it will be hard to understand, maybe even impossible—at
first, at least—but I swear it's true, Stomald. Will you trust me enough to
believe me?"
"Of course,"
he said simply, and the absolute certainty in his tone was distantly surprising
even to him.
"Thank you,"
she said softly, then drew a deep breath. "The first thing you have to
understand," she said more briskly, "is what happened—not just here
on Pardal, but out there, as well—" her head jerked at the tent roof once
more "sixteen thousand of your years ago."
* * *
It took hours. Stomald
lost count of how many times he had to stop her for fuller explanation, and his
brain spun at the tale she told him. It was madness, impossible, anathema to
everything he'd ever been taught . . .
and he believed every word. He had no choice, and a raging sense of
wonder mingled with shock and the agonizing destruction of so much certainty.
" . . . so that's the size of it,
Stomald," she said finally. They sat on facing stools, and the candles had
burned low in the lanterns set about the tent. "We never meant to harm
anyone, never meant to deceive anyone. We tried to tell you Sandy and I
weren't angels, but none of you seemed able to believe it, and if we'd insisted
and shattered your cohesion when the Church was determined to kill you all
because of something we'd started—" She shrugged unhappily, and he
nodded slowly.
"Yes, I can see
that." He rubbed his thighs, then licked his lips and managed a strained
smile. "I always wondered why you and the An—why you and Sandy
insisted that we not call you 'angel' when we spoke to you."
"Can . . . can you
forgive us?" she asked quietly. "We never wanted to insult your
beliefs or use your faith against you. Truly we didn't."
"Forgive you?"
He smiled more naturally and shook his head. "There's nothing to forgive,
My Lady. You are who you are and the truth is the truth, and if the Writ is
wrong, perhaps you are God's messengers. From what you say, this world
has spent thousands upon thousands of years blind to the truth and living in
fear of an evil that no longer exists, and surely God can send whomever He
wishes to show us the truth!"
"Then . . . you're
not angry with us?"
"Angry, My
Lady?" He shook his head harder. "There are many parts of your tale I
don't understand, but Lady Sandy was right. Once events had been set in motion,
I and all who followed me would have been destroyed by Mother Church without
your aid. How could I be angry at you for saving my people? And if the Writ is
wrong, then the bishops and high-priests must learn to accept that, as well.
No, Lady Harry. I don't say all our people could accept what you've told me.
But the day will come when they can, and will, know the truth, and when they
are once more free to travel the stars without fear of demons and damnation,
they will no more be angry with you than I could ever be."
"Stomald," she
said softly, "you're a remarkable man."
"I'm only a village
under-priest," he objected, uncomfortable and yet filled with joy by the
glow in her eye. "Beside you, I'm an ignorant child playing in the mud on
the bank of a tiny stream."
"No, you're not.
The only difference between us is education and access to knowledge your world
denied you, and I grew up with those things. You didn't, and if our positions
were reversed, I doubt I could have accepted the truth the way you have."
"Accepted, My
Lady?" He laughed. "I'm still trying to believe this isn't all a
dream!"
"No, you're
not," she repeated with a smile, "and that's what makes you so
remarkable." Her smile turned suddenly into a grin. "I always
wondered how Dad really felt when Dahak started explaining the truth about
human history to him. Now I know how Dahak must've felt making the
explanation!"
"I should like to
meet this 'Dahak' one day," Stomald said wistfully.
"You will,"
she assured him. "I can hardly wait to take you home and introduce you to
Mom and Dad, as well!"
"Take . . . ?"
He blinked at her, then stiffened as she reached out and cupped the side of his
face in those steel-strong, moth-gentle fingers.
"Of course,
Stomald," she said very, very softly. "Why do you think I wanted to
tell you the truth?"
He stared at her in
disbelief, and then she leaned forward and kissed him.
Tamman stood sipping a
steaming mug of tea and tried not to yawn. Brashan's predicted thunderstorms
had rolled up the valley yesterday, and the entire camp was ankle-deep in mud.
Pardalian field sanitation was far better than that of most preindustrial
armies, and he and Sean had improved on that basic platform, but it was simply
impossible to put forty or fifty thousand human beings into an encampment
without consequences. Coupled with decent diet, the latrines were holding
things like dysentery within limits, yet the ground had been churned into
sticky soup and everyone was thoroughly wet and miserable.
He stretched, then
lifted his face gratefully to the morning sun. The rain had moved further up
the valley, and it was still raising the level of the Mortan, but sunlight
poured down over him, and he felt his spirits rise even as concern over Sean's
slow progress simmered in the back of his brain.
Feet sucked through the
mud towards him, and he turned and saw Harriet and Stomald. High-Captain Ithun
had mentioned that the priest and "Ang—Lady Harry" had spent
hours in the command tent last night, and he'd wondered why Harry hadn't
mentioned it to him herself. Now he detected a subtle change in their body
language as they approached him, and his eyebrows rose.
"Tamman."
Harriet nodded as he touched his breastplate in the gesture of respect he and
Sean always gave "the angels," but there was something different
about that as well, and he wondered just what the hell she and Stomald
had been discussing last night. Surely she hadn't—?
The question must have
showed on his face, for she met his gaze unflinchingly and nodded. His eyes
widened, and he looked around quickly.
"Would you and the
boys pardon us a moment, Ithun?" he asked.
"Of course, Lord
Tamman." The man who'd become his exec after the Battle of Yortown nodded
and waved to the rest of his staff. They waded away from the campfire through
the morning mist, and Tamman turned back to Harriet.
A moment of silence
stretched out between them, and Stomald's expression confirmed his worst
suspicions. The man knew. It showed in his wary eyes . . . and how close he
stood to Harriet. Tamman felt his lips quirk, and he snorted. He'd seen this
coming weeks ago, and it wasn't as if he'd expected Harry to be his love
forever. Neither of them was—no, he corrected himself, neither of them had
been—ready to settle down like Sean and Sandy, and he'd told himself he was
mature enough to handle it. Well, perhaps he was, but it still stung. Not that
he could blame Stomald. The priest was a good man, even if his first meeting
with Harry had been an attempt at judicial murder, and he shared the
same compassion which was so much a part of Harry.
None of which changed
the fact that she hadn't so much as discussed her decision to tell him the
truth! The possible repercussions of that little revelation in the middle of a
holy war hardly bore thinking on, and her defiant expression showed she knew
it. He considered half a dozen cutting remarks, then made himself set them all
aside, uncertain how many of them stemmed from legitimate concern and how many
from bruised male ego.
"Well," he
said finally, in Pardalian, "you look like you have something to tell me."
"Lord Tamman,"
Stomald replied before Harriet could, "Lady Harry told me the truth last
night." Tamman eyed him wordlessly, and the priest returned his gaze
steadily. "I have told no one else, and I have no intention of telling anyone
until the Inner Circle is defeated and you and your companions have gained
access to this . . . computer." His tongue stumbled over the unfamiliar
word, but Tamman felt his own shoulders relax. His worst fear had been
Stomald's invincible integrity; if the priest had decided Israel's crew
had defiled his religion, the results could have been unmitigated disaster.
"I see,"
Tamman said slowly, then pursed his lips. "May I ask why not,
Father?"
"Because Lady Sandy
was right," Stomald said simply. "We're trapped in a war, and if I
was wrong to think Lady Harry and Lady Sandy angels, the Inner Circle is even
more wrong in what it believes. There will be time to sort things out
once the Guard is no longer trying to kill us all, My Lord."
The priest smiled wryly,
and Tamman smiled back. Damned if he could have taken the complete
destruction of his worldview as calmly as Stomald seemed to be taking it!
"At the same time,
My Lord," Stomald went on a bit more hesitantly, "Lady Harry told me
of her relationship with you." Tamman stiffened. Pardalian notions of
morality were more flexible than he'd expected. Unmarried sex wasn't a mortal
sin on Pardal, but it was something the Church frowned upon, yet
Stomald's tone was that of a wary young man, not an irate priest.
"Yes?" he said
in his most conversational tone.
"My Lord,"
Stomald met his eyes squarely, "I love Lady Harry with all my heart. I
don't pretend to be her equal, or worthy of her," Harriet made a sound of
disagreement, but he ignored her to hold Tamman's eyes, "yet I love her anyway,
and she loves me. I . . . do not wish for you to think either of us has
betrayed you or attempted to deceive you."
Tamman gazed back for
several seconds while he wrestled with his own emotions. Damn it, he had
seen this coming, and Harry had been his friend long before she'd become his
lover! They'd both known the forced intimacy of their battleship-lifeboat was
what had made them lovers, and he'd known it was going to end someday,
yet for just an instant he felt a terrible, burning envy of Sean and Sandy.
But then he shook
himself and drew a deep breath.
"I see," he
said again, holding out his hand, and Stomald took it with only the briefest
hesitation. "I won't pretend it does great things for my self-image,
Stomald, but Harry's always been her own person. And, much as it might pain me
to admit it, you're a pretty decent fellow yourself." The priest smiled
hesitantly, and Tamman chuckled. "It's not as if I haven't seen it coming,
either," he said more cheerfully. "Of course, she couldn't tell you
what she felt, but the way she's talked about you to the rest of
us—!"
"Tamman!"
Harriet protested with a gurgle of laughter, and Stomald turned bright red for
just an instant before he laughed.
"She's been
watching you like a kinokha stalking a shemaq for weeks," Tamman said
wickedly, and watched both of them blush, amazed that he could feel such
genuinely unbitter pleasure in teasing Harriet.
"You're riding for
a fall, Tamman!" she warned, shaking a fist at him, and he laughed. Then
she lowered her fist and stepped closer. She put her arms around him and hugged
him tightly. "But you're a pretty decent fellow yourself," she
whispered in his ear.
"Of course I
am," he agreed, and put his own arm around her, then looked back at
Stomald. "You don't need them, but you have my blessings, Stomald. And if
you need a groomsman—?"
"I—" Stomald
began, then stopped, blushed even brighter, and looked at Harriet appealingly.
"I think you're
getting a bit ahead of yourself," she told Tamman, "but assuming we
all get out of this in one piece and I get him home to Mom and Dad, we might
just take you up on that."
* * *
"Shit!"
No one understood the
English expletive, but Sean's officers understood the tone. All of them were
splashed from head to toe in mud, and Sean stood in cold, thigh-deep water that
rose nearly to the Pardalians' waists. The rain had stopped, but the air was
almost unbearably humid, and swarms of what passed for gnats whined about their
ears. The column stretched out behind them, for Sean was leading the way now,
since his implant sensors made it far easier for him to pick a route through
the swamp—or would have if there'd been a way through it, he thought
savagely.
He inhaled and made
himself calm down before he opened his mouth again, then turned to his staff.
"We'll have to
backtrack," he said grimly. "The bottom drops off ahead, and there's
some kind of quicksand to the right. We'll have to cut further north."
Tibold said nothing, but
his mouth tightened, and Sean understood. Their original plans had called for
passing the column's head through the swamp in ten or twelve hours, and so far
they'd been slogging around in it for over twenty. What had seemed a relatively
simple, if unpleasant, task on the map had become something very different, and
it was all his own fault. He had the best reconnaissance capabilities on the
planet, and he should have scouted their route better than this. If he had, he
would have known the foot of the valley's northern wall was lined with
underground springs. The narrowest part of the swamp was also one of the least
passable, and his stupid oversight had mired his entire corps down in it.
"All right,"
he said finally, sighing. "We won't get anywhere standing here looking at
the mud." He thought for a few moments, calling up the map he'd stored in
his implant computers on the way through, then nodded sharply. "Remember
where we stopped for lunch?" he asked Tibold.
"Yes, My
Lord."
"All right. There
was a spit of solider ground running northeast from there. If there's a way
through this glop at all, we'll have to go that way. Turn the column around and
stop its head there. While you're doing that, I'll see if Lady Sandy can pick a
better path than I can."
"At once, My Lord,"
Tibold agreed, and turned to slosh back along the halted column while Sean
activated his com.
"Sandy?" he
subvocalized.
"Yes, Sean?"
She was trying to hide her own anxiety, he thought, and made his own tone
lighter.
"We're gonna have
to backtrack, kid."
"I know. I had a
remote tuned in."
"In that case, you
know where we're headed, and I'm one dumb asshole not to have had you checking
route for us already." He sighed. "Tune up your sensors and see if
you can map us a way through this slop."
"I'm already working
on it," she said, "but, Sean, I don't see a fast way through
it."
"How bad is
it?"
"From what I can
see, it's going to take at least another full day and a half," she said in
a small, most un-Sandy-like voice.
"Great. Just
fucking great!" Sean felt her flinch and shook his head quickly, knowing
she was watching him through her remotes. "Sorry," he said
penitently. "I'm not pissed at you; I'm pissed at me.
There's no excuse for this kind of screwup."
"No one else
thought of it, either, Sean," she pointed out in his defense, and he
snorted.
"Doesn't make me
feel any better," he growled, then sighed. "Well, I guess standing
around pissing and moaning won't make it any better, either. Let's get this
show back on the road—such as it is!"
He turned to slog off in
Tibold's wake, and the swarming clouds of gnats whined about his ears.
* * *
Even Sandy's estimate
turned out to have been overly optimistic. What Sean and Tibold had envisioned
as a twelve-hour maneuver consumed over three of Pardal's twenty-nine-hour
days, and it was an exhausted, sodden, mud-spattered column of infantry that
finally crawled out of the swamp proper into the merely "soft" ground
south of it. Thank God Tibold had warned him against even trying to bring artillery
through that muck, Sean thought wearily. Their five hundred dragoons had lost a
quarter of their branahlks, and Lord only knew what would have happened to
nioharqs. Given his druthers, he decided, he'd take Hannibal's elephants and
the Alps over a Pardalian swamp and anything.
Under the circumstances,
he'd eased the "no miracles" rule, and Sandy and Harry had been busy
using cutters to bring in fresh food. The cargo remotes had stacked it neatly
to await his column's arrival, and the troops gave a weary cheer as they saw
it. There was even a little wood for fires, and the company cooks quickly got
down to business.
"Sean?"
He turned and flashed a
mud-spattered smile as Sandy walked out of the gathering evening. His officers
and men saw her as well, and she waved to them as a soft, wordless murmur of
thanks rose from them. She made a shooing gesture at the waiting rations, and
the troops grinned and returned to their tasks as she crossed to Sean. Unlike
her towering lover, she was spotless. Not even her boots were muddy, and he
shook his head.
" 'Ow can you tell
she's an angel?" he murmured. " 'Cause she's not covered wi' shit
loike the rest of us!" he answered himself.
"Very funny."
She smiled dutifully, but her eyes were worried, and he raised an eyebrow.
"The reinforcing
column got on the road a day sooner than Ortak expected," she said softly
in English, "and it's moving faster than we expected. They'll reach
Malz within four or five days."
"Wi—?" Sean
stared at her, then clamped his teeth hard. "And just why," he asked
after a moment, "is this the first I'm hearing of this?"
"It wouldn't have
done a bit of good to worry you with it while you were mucking around in the
swamp," she replied more tartly. "You were already going as fast as
you could. All you could have done was fret."
"But—" He
started to speak sharply, then made himself stop. She was right, but she was
also wrong, and he controlled his tone very carefully when he went on.
"Sandy, don't ever hold things back on me again, please? There may
not have been anything I could have done, but as long as I'm in command, I need
all the information we've got, as soon as we get it. Is that
understood?"
He held her eyes
sternly, and her nostrils flared with answering anger. But then she bit her
lower lip and nodded.
"Understood,"
she said in a low voice. "I just—" She looked down at her hands and
sighed. "I just didn't want you to worry, Sean."
"I know." He
reached out to capture one of her hands and squeezed it tightly until she
looked up. "I know," he said more softly. "It's just that
this isn't the time for it, okay?"
"Okay," she
agreed, and then her brown eyes suddenly gleamed. "But if you really want
to know everything, then I suppose I should tell you what Harry's been
up to, too."
"What Harry's
been up to?" Sean looked speculatively down at her, then raised his head
as Tibold called his name. The ex-Guardsman pointed to the meal preparations,
and Sean waved for the others to go ahead without him and returned his
attention to Sandy. "And just what," he asked in a deliberately
ominous voice, "has my horrid twin done now?"
"Well, it turned
out fine, but she decided to tell Stomald the truth."
"My God! I turn my
back for an instant, and all of you run amok!"
"Oh, no! Not us—you're
the one who's been running around in the muck!" Sandy gurgled with
laughter as he winced, then sobered—a little. "Besides, Harry had an
excuse. She's in love."
"Think I hadn't
figured that out weeks ago? How'd Tamman take it?"
"Quite well,
actually," Sandy said wickedly. "I wouldn't say he's completely over
it, but I did overhear a couple of the Malagoran girls sighing over how
handsome 'Lord Tamman' is."
"Handsome? Tam?"
Sean cocked his head, then chuckled. "Well, compared to me, I guess he is.
You mean he's, um, encouraging their interest?"
"Let's just say he
isn't discouraging it." Sandy grinned.
"Well, in that
case, I suppose you'd better catch me up on all the gossip before I join the
others for supper."
"Why? I could brief
you while you eat, Sean. None of them understand English."
"I know that,"
Sean said. He picked out a relatively dry spot, spread his Malagoran-style
poncho over it, and waved her to a seat upon it. "The problem, dear, is
that I can't eat very well while I'm laughing. Now give."
"All right, then.
Everybody clear on his orders?"
Sean looked around the
circle of faces in the late afternoon light. He and Tibold had spent weeks
convincing their officers to ask questions whenever there was anything
they didn't understand, but, one by one, each captain nodded soberly.
"Good!" He
folded the map with deliberate briskness, then turned and gazed northeast to
the screen of dragoons deployed across his line of advance. Beyond them, he
could just see a village that was supposed to have been totally evacuated . . .
and hadn't been.
Sandy's warning that
there were still people about had come in time—he hoped. He'd sent flanking
columns of dragoons forward, then had them curl back in from the east, and they
seemed to have caught all the villagers before anyone got away to Malz.
It was the ninth day
since he'd set out for Erastor. By his original estimate, he should already
have been in striking distance of Ortak's rear; as it was, he was still south
of the Mortan, the weather was going bad on him again, and the head of the
Guard relief column should reach the Malz turn-off within four days. His time
margin had become knife-thin, and if any of those peasants had fled with
word of his presence, he was in a world of trouble.
Well, Sandy's stealthed
spies would warn him if the bad guys did figure out he was coming.
Which, unfortunately, wasn't going to help him a lot if they figured it out
after he'd crossed the river and trapped himself between Ortak and High-Captain
Terrahk's relief force.
He shook off his worry
and nodded to his officers.
"Let's get this
show on the road, then," he said, and they slapped their breastplates in
salute and dashed off.
Considering the
unexpected rigors of the swamp crossing, the men were in excellent shape, Sean
thought. Tired, but far from exhausted, and their morale was better than he
would have dared hope. They'd hated the swamps, but despite the delays,
their confidence was unshaken. Which was good, because they had another ten
kilometers to cover this day, and Malz was tied into the semaphore chain which
connected Erastor to points east. Each semaphore station was a looming,
gantry-like structure which let its crew see for kilometers in every direction
and turned it into a watch tower. That meant the chain had to be cut in
darkness, before any warning could be sent in either direction, and defined not
only when Sean had to reach and secure Malz, but when he had to get his troops
across the river to the Baricon-Erastor high road, as well.
He called for his own
branahlk and trotted back towards his infantry. Part of him longed to go with
the dragoons in person, but Sandy's stealthed cutter hovered above them. She'd
tell him if anything went wrong, and he needed to be with his main body, ready
to respond to any warning she might send.
He turned in the saddle
to watch Captain Juahl lead the dragoons east. Juahl was a good man, he told
himself, and he understood the plan. That was just going to have to be enough.
* * *
It was almost midnight,
local time, when Sean's lead rifle regiments reached Malz. Bonfires encircled
the town, and parties of dragoons picketed its unprepossessing walls. It wasn't
a large town—no more than eight thousand even in normal times, and its
population had declined drastically when the Holy Host came through en route to
Yortown—but enough people remained inside those walls to stand off dragoons.
Worse, there were plenty of potential messengers to warn Ortak what was
happening, which was the reason for those pickets and bonfires.
A mounted messenger
trotted up to him and saluted.
"Captain Juahl sent
me to report, Lord Sean," the exhausted young officer said. "We
haven't secured the Malz tower yet—they got the town gates shut and we didn't
have the strength to force them—but Captain Juahl and Under-Captain Hahna
secured the fords and both towers between here and the crossroads. Hahna's
company is posted just east of the crossroads, and we got both towers intact.
Captain Juahl said to tell you our men are ready to pass messages both ways, My
Lord."
"Good!" Sean
slapped the messenger's shoulder, and the young man grinned at him. "Are
you up to riding back to Captain Juahl?"
"Yes, My
Lord!"
"In that case go
tell him I'm delighted with his news. Ask him to thank all of his officers and
men for me, as well, and tell him I'll get infantry support up as fast as I
can."
"Yes, My
Lord!" The messenger saluted again and vanished into the darkness, and
Sean turned to Tibold.
"Thank God for
that!" he said softly, and the ex-Guardsman nodded. Most of the men who'd
managed the Temple's semaphore chain across Malagor had fled the heresy, but
enough had joined it to give Sean the personnel to man the towers he'd hoped to
capture. Now he controlled High-Captain Ortak's mail . . . and the
information flowing east to the oncoming relief column, as well.
"I want you to help
handle the negotiations here," he went on after a moment, waving at the
closed gates. "We haven't had any massacres yet, and I'd sooner not start
now because someone makes a mistake." He tugged on his nose. "Let's
send Folmak's brigade up to Juahl. He's level-headed enough to handle anything
that comes at him unexpectedly. Make sure he's got a copy of our message notes,
and tell him I'll join him in person as soon as possible."
"At once, Lord
Sean." Tibold turned his branahlk and trotted off with a briskness Sean
knew he didn't feel. Today's long march had been worse even than the swamp, and
Tibold had spent part of it marching with each regiment. He insisted it was
good for morale, and Sean believed him. It also meant "Lord Sean" had
to stump along with the troops, too, but he was thirty-five years younger than
Tibold and enhanced, to boot. He was undoubtedly the freshest man in the entire
column, and all he wanted to do was sleep for a week.
Well, if Tibold could manage
to look sharp and fresh, then so could Sean, and he'd damned well better do
just that!
He grinned and
dismounted, tossed his reins to one of his aides, and felt a spasm of pity for
the townsfolk of Malz as he walked towards their closed gates. They had to know
he could burn their town around their ears, and given the Inner Circle's
propaganda, they probably expected him to do just that so their children would
be nicely browned when he sat down to eat them! Convincing the poor bastards to
open up was going to be a pain, but he needed to get it done before somebody
did something stupid. Between them, Stomald and "the angels"—with a
little help from the bloodthirsty field regulations of a certain
Captain-General Lord Sean—had created a remarkably well-behaved army. The fact
that it regarded itself as an elite force and confidently expected to kick the
butt of a much larger army in a few days also helped by giving it a certain
image to live up to, but Sean knew most of its restraint stemmed from the Holy Host's
failure to reach Malagor. The Malagoran Temple Guard had done its share of
village-burning on its abortive march to Cragsend, but half the men who'd done
that were now members in good standing of the Angels' Army, and they'd done
their very best to make amends. Yortown and the seizure of the Thirgan Gap had
precluded the other atrocities religious wars routinely spawned, and the men
felt little need for vengeance. Sean intended to keep it that way, but a
handful of panicky townsmen who took it into their heads to "resist
heresy" or simply thought they were defending their families could easily
provoke a fire fight that might well expand into a full-blown massacre.
But that wasn't going to
happen, he told himself firmly. He was a golden-tongued devil, and Tibold was
going to advise him, and between them, they were going to talk those townsfolk
into opening their gates without a shot being fired.
He stopped well out of
aimed smoothbore range to wait for Tibold, and began to consider just how to
accomplish that ambition.
* * *
"They've got Malz,
and nobody got hurt on either side!" Harriet said as she entered the
command tent, and her relief was so obvious Tamman refrained from observing
that a lot of somebodies were going to get hurt at Erastor in a few days. Harry
was too much like her dad and, appearance aside, not enough like her mom, he
thought sadly.
"That's wonderful
news," Stomald said, and Tamman nodded. It was wonderful news, too,
he thought. At least Sean was finally out of those godawful swamps! None of
them had expected him to lose that much time crossing them, and the entire
operation was badly behind schedule, but it looked like they were going to make
it after all . . . assuming the weather held.
"How are the
fords?" he asked, gazing at the map and trying to hide a grin as Harriet
stepped up beside Stomald and each of them tucked an arm around the other. So
far they'd remembered not to do that in front of anyone but him or Sandy, and
he didn't really want to find out how the troops would react if they slipped up
and did it in public, but there was something incredibly touching about the
shared tenderness in their eyes.
"Um?" Harriet
looked up, then gave her head a shake. "Sorry, Tam. Sean says the fords
are deeper than expected, but manageable if he takes it easy. The dragoons got
across without losses, and the engineers are rigging guide ropes for the rest
of the column. Tibold figures it'll take about five hours to get them all
across once they start, but Sean's taking Folmak's brigade up to the crossroads
tonight still. Well, this morning, I guess."
"So we've cut the
semaphore chain, and it looks like no one knows we have," Tamman
mused, plucking at his lip and gazing sightlessly at the map.
"Sandy and
Brashan—" Harriet glanced at Stomald "—are monitoring their remotes
in Erastor and tracking the relief column. So far, nobody in either place does
know we're there."
"Yeah." Tamman
nodded, then shrugged. "I know we've got them wired for sound, but I can't
help worrying until we link back up with Sean." He studied the map a
moment longer, then straightened. "I think I'll have a word with Ithun. If
something does tip the bad guys, Ortak'll have to pull strength from our side
of his position to do anything about it, and that might just let us slip an
assault column through on him after all."
"Don't do anything
rash without discussing it with Sean, Tam!"
"I won't get creative
on you," he replied with a smile, "but Tibold's rubbing off on both
of us. Like he says, 'Improvised responses work best when you've planned them
well in advance!' "
" 'Bout time someone
convinced you two of that," Harriet sniffed, and his smile turned into a
broad grin.
"We're maturing, we
are," he asserted virtuously. "And, ah, I'll see that no one disturbs
you two while you 'confer,' too," he added wickedly as he opened the tent
flap.
* * *
Sean looked up as
Tibold's branahlk trotted up to the semaphore tower. The ex-Guardsman had
gotten a whole three hours' sleep, and it was almost revolting how much that
had restored him. He was soaked to the waist from fording the Mortan, but he
waved cheerfully.
"The rearguard
should be crossing just about now, Lord Sean," he said. "The lead
brigade should arrive within the hour."
"Banners
ready?" Sean asked.
"Aye, My
Lord." Tibold grinned. The suggestion had come from Sandy, but he approved
of it wholeheartedly. They'd captured more than enough Guard standards at
Yortown to distribute among their regiments, and Sean had already sent Ortak a
message from 'High-Captain Terrahk' to report he was further along than
expected. With the banners for cover and the semaphore crews expecting
to see Terrahk, any towers further up the chain that saw them coming should
report them to Erastor as Ortak's expected relief.
Now Sean nodded to
Tibold and turned back to the man who would command this semaphore garrison.
"Keep a sharp eye
out, Yuthan," he said—for, he estimated, the sixth time, but Yuthan only
nodded soberly. "You're doing an important job, but not important enough
to risk getting cut off. If High-Captain Terrahk turns up, burn the tower and
clear out."
"Aye, Lord Sean.
Don't worry. None of us wants to get killed, My Lord, but we'll keep 'em
confident until we do clear out."
"Good man."
Sean squeezed the Malagoran's shoulder, then mounted his own branahlk and
turned back to Tibold.
"I sent one of
Folmak's regiments a little way west with a company of Juahl's dragoons, just
to be on the safe side," he said, urging his mount to a trot.
"They've got orders to stay out of sight from the next tower, but they're
our front door. They've already hauled in about thirty people."
"That many?"
Tibold was surprised. "I wouldn't have expected Ortak to allow that much
traffic out of Erastor."
"Most of them seem
to be trying to get as far from Erastor as they can," Sean snorted,
"and I sort of doubt Ortak even knows they're doing it. Two-thirds of them
are deserters, as a matter of fact."
"There are always
some," Tibold said with a curled lip.
"I imagine there's
even more temptation than usual if you believe you're up against demons. On the
other hand, they might just think they could convince Ortak not to shoot them
if they hustled back to tell him we're coming. Once the main body gets up here,
have them sent back to Malz and kept there till Yuthan and his boys pull out.
After that, they can do whatever they want."
"I don't envy
them," Tibold said, almost against his will. "With Terrahk coming up
the road, the best they can hope for is to take to the hills before he gets his
hands on them."
"That's their
problem, I'm happy to say," Sean grunted back. "I'll settle for
making sure Terrahk doesn't get his hands on us."
* * *
High-Captain Ortak
reread the message with enormous relief. Terrahk had set a new record for the
march from Kelthar, the capital of Keldark, if he was already at Malz! He'd
shaved another three days off his estimated arrival, and Ortak wondered how
he'd done it. Not that he intended to complain. With those fifty thousand
well-armed and (hopefully) unshaken men to reinforce it, Erastor would become
impregnable. Better yet, Terrahk outranked him. Ortak could turn the
responsibility over to him, and he was guiltily aware of how terribly he wanted
to do just that.
"Any reply,
Sir?" his aide asked, and Ortak leaned back in his chair, then shook his
head.
"None. They're
obviously already moving as fast as they can. Let's not make them think we're too
nervous."
"No, My Lord,"
the aide agreed with a smile, and Ortak waved him out of the room and bent back
to his paperwork. Three more days. All the heretics had to do was hold off for
three more days, and their best chance to smash their way out of Malagor would
be gone forever.
* * *
For all its
self-inflicted technical wounds, Pardal was an ancient and surprisingly
sophisticated world, Sean reflected, and its road network reflected it. He'd
wondered, when they first spotted the Temple from orbit, how a preindustrial
society could transport sufficient food for a city that size even with the
canal network to help, but that was before he knew about nioharqs or how good
their roads were. They'd developed some impressive engineers over the
millennia, and most of them seemed to have spent their entire careers building
either temples or roads. Even here in the mountains, the high road was over
twenty meters wide, and its hard-paved smoothness rivaled any of Terra's
pre-Imperial superhighways.
He drew up and watched
his men march past. Like the Roman Empire, Pardalian states relied on infantry,
and the excellence of their roads stemmed from the same need to move troops
quickly. Of course, come to think of it, the same considerations had created
the German autobahns and the United States interstate highway system, hadn't
they? Some things never seemed to change.
Whatever their
reasoning, he was profoundly grateful to the engineers who'd built this
road. After their nightmare cross-country journey, the men moved out with a
will, relieved to be out of the mud and muck, and they'd made over thirty
kilometers today despite the hours spent crossing the Malz fords.
They'd also nabbed three
more semaphore towers without raising any alarms. He was a bit surprised by how
smoothly that part had gone, but Juahl had devised a system that seemed to work
perfectly. He sent an officer and a couple of dozen men on ahead of the main
body in captured Guard uniforms, and they simply rode straight up to each tower
and asked the station commander to assemble his men. The semaphore crews
belonged to the civil service, not the army. None of them were going to argue
with Guard dragoons, and as soon as the Malagorans had them out in the open,
they suddenly found themselves looking down the business ends of a dozen rifled
joharns at very short range. Since the signal arms were controlled from the
ground, it didn't even matter if the men manning the tower platforms realized
what was happening. They couldn't tell anyone, and so far none of them had been
inclined to argue when the rest of Juahl's men arrived and invited them to come
down.
In the meantime, neither
Ortak nor Terrahk seemed to harbor any suspicion an entire heretic army corps
had nipped in between them. The towers Sean now controlled relayed all normal
message traffic without alterations, but they were intercepting every dispatch
either Guard officer sent the other. It was almost more delicious than what
Sandy's and Brashan's stealthed remotes could tell him, for he was actually
reading his enemies' mail, then dictating the responses he wanted them
to receive. It looked like it was already having an effect, as well. Sandy
reported that Terrahk had slowed his headlong pace just a bit thanks to the
more confident tenor Sean had been giving Ortak's messages. But, of course,
Ortak didn't know that, now did he?
Sean grinned wickedly,
but then he looked up at the sky and his grin faded. The sun was sinking
steadily in the west, and it was about time to bivouac, but what worried him
was the growing humidity. Another front was coming through, and Brashan was
still figuring out Pardal's weather patterns. The mountains made prediction
even harder, and Sean suspected the front was moving faster than expected. But
they should still have enough time, he told himself as he urged his branahlk
back into motion. All he needed was two more of Pardal's twenty-nine-hour days.
* * *
"Two more
days," Tamman murmured. He leaned back in a camp chair in his tent, eyes
closed while his neural feed linked him to Israel and Sandy's remotes
through the com in the stealthed cutter permanently parked in hover above
"the Angel Harry's" commodious tent. He replayed the day's scan
records at high speed and watched mentally as Sean's column sped up the high
road towards Erastor. They were really moving, and they were still a good four
days in front of High-Captain Terrahk. The way the relief column was easing up
would open the gap a bit further, but sometime the day after tomorrow the
Guardsmen were going to reach Malz and find out what had actually been
happening.
They'd have no way to
warn Ortak, and he wondered what Terrahk would do. Would he hustle on forward
as fast as he could? If he knew how many men Sean had, the high-captain might
figure he could take him in the open, but he'd be too far behind to overtake
before Sean reached Erastor, and he'd know it. Just as he'd know that if Sean
blew Ortak out of the way, his own column would be hopelessly inadequate to
face the two hundred thousand screaming heretics the Temple now assumed the
Angels' Army had.
It all came down to a
guess, Tamman mused. Unlike Sean and himself, Terrahk was totally reliant on
mounted scouts, and with the towers between him and Erastor in Malagoran hands,
he'd have no way to know what was happening ahead of him. All he'd know was
that if Ortak had somehow figured out what was coming at him and managed to
throw up any sort of an east-facing defense, he'd need all the help Terrahk
could send him to hold it. Or, conversely, that if Ortak had already been
waxed, the only chance for his own troops' survival would be to run as hard as
they could in the other direction.
Under the circumstances,
Tamman suspected Terrahk would retreat. Abandoning Ortak might cost the Guard
seventy or eighty thousand men, but if he lost his own command throwing good
money after bad, the Temple would also lose its last field force. It was a pity
Sean couldn't ambush Terrahk first and then take on Ortak, but too many
things could go wrong, including the possibility that Sean would find himself
trapped between enemies who outnumbered him by more than five to one. With room
to maneuver and unlimited ammunition, odds like that might be workable; trapped
between the Mortan and the valley's northern rim and with only the ammo his
troops could carry, the situation would have all the ingredients for a
MacIntyre's Last Stand.
Nope. The best outcome
would probably be for Terrahk to keep coming and arrive a couple of days after
he and Sean had crushed Ortak. If they could reunite their own army, they'd
make mincemeat out of Terrahk—assuming they could catch him. At the very least,
they should be able to stay close enough on his heels to keep him from settling
into the prepared positions around Baricon. But Terrahk would know that as well
as they did, which was why Tamman expected the Guardsman to fall back the
instant he figured out what was happening.
He straightened and
opened his eyes. One thing was certain, whatever Terrahk did, he reminded
himself. Before he and Sean could get back into contact, they had to take
Erastor, and he shoved up out of his chair. There was just enough light left
for him and Ithun to make a last recon of Ortak's lines before darkness fell,
and if it turned out that they had to storm those entrenchments to save Sean's
posterior, he wanted all of his officers to know everything they could about
their target.
* * *
More rain swept up the
Keldark Valley, and High-Captain Ortak glared sourly at the clouds. The valley
was always damp, of course. It was the only real opening in the Shalokar Range,
and wet air from the east poured through it like a funnel as it swept up
towards the Malagor Plateau. Some of the Temple's experts argued that as the
air moved higher and grew thinner, the moisture fell out of its own weight.
Ortak didn't fully understand the theory behind it, but all he really needed to
know was that it rained in the valley—a lot—and that it was starting to do it
again.
He growled a soft curse,
then shrugged. Rain was his friend, not the heretics'. Their musketeers
outnumbered his tremendously, and if God was kind enough to soak their priming
powder for them, Ortak had no intention of complaining. Let them come in and
take him on with cold steel!
* * *
"How long is this
going to last?" Sean asked fretfully.
He and Sandy stood fifty
meters from the nearest Malagoran and conferred over their coms with Brashan.
"At least another
two days," the Narhani said soberly. He sat alone on Israel's
command deck, and his long-snouted, saurian face was grave. "I am sorry, Sean.
We thought—"
"Not your
fault," Sean interrupted. "We all knew it was coming. We just
expected it to hold off longer, and then we lost all that time in the swamps.
Our window should have been big enough, Twinkle Hooves."
"True, but it's not
only coming in faster, it's going to rain harder than we'd predicted." The
Narhani sounded worried. Sean was less than one day's march from Erastor, and
the rain—only a drizzle now—would be a downpour by evening. What that would do
to flintlock rifles hardly bore thinking on.
"Can we hold off
till it clears?" Sandy gazed up at Sean, and her voice was anxious.
" 'Fraid not."
Sean sighed. "Ortak expects his 'reinforcements' by nightfall. If we
suddenly stop moving, he's going to wonder why and send someone to find out.
And if he does that—" He shrugged.
"But you can't
fight him without your rifles!" Sandy protested. "You don't have any
pikes at all!"
"No, but we do
still have surprise."
"Surprise! Are you
out of your mind?! There are eighty thousand men up there, Sean! There's
no way you can take their position away from them before they figure out
what's happening!"
"Maybe yes, and
maybe no," Sean said stubbornly. "Don't forget the confusion factor.
The rain's going to cut visibility. We should be able to get a lot closer
before they figure out we aren't really Guardsmen, and there's a good chance
they'll panic when their 'reinforcements' suddenly attack them. They don't have
the kind of communication net a modern army would have, either. It's going to
be mighty hard for them to get themselves sorted out when they have to rely on
messengers to carry orders."
"You're
crazy!" she hissed. "Tamman, Harry—tell him!"
"I think Sandy's
right, Sean," Harriet said quietly. "It's too risky. Besides, even if
he does figure out what's happening, Terrahk's already falling back on Baricon.
Wait till the rain stops. Ortak's not going anywhere, and maybe he'll surrender
when he realizes he's trapped between you and Tam."
"Wrong answer,
Harry," Tamman put in unhappily. "Ortak's not the surrendering kind,
or he wouldn't have stopped at Erastor."
"What else can
he do?" Harriet demanded hotly.
"He can come out
after us," Sean answered. "He knows as well as we do that it's our
rifles that give us the edge. You think he wouldn't take his chances on hitting
us in the open if the rain knocks them out of the equation?"
Sandy started to snap
back, then stopped and bit her lip. She hugged herself and turned her back on
Sean for a long, taut moment, then sighed.
"No," she said
finally, her voice low. "That's exactly what he'll do if he figures out
what's happening."
"You got it,"
Sean said, equally quietly, and kicked his toe into the mud beside the raised
roadbed. "Any way you cut it, we've got to carry through with my marvelous
plan."
"All right,
boys—you heard Lord Sean. Now let's go kick the bastards' asses!"
The officers of the
First Brigade growled in agreement, and Folmak Folmakson grinned fiercely. He
was a long, long way from Cragsend and anxious days waiting for the Church to
condemn him for error just for searching for ways to make his mill a bit more
efficient, and he was passionately grateful for it. Folmak loved God as much as
the next man, but Malagor had been a captive province for twenty generations,
and like many Malagorans, he'd harbored a festering resentment against the
Inner Circle and their absentee bishops. Father Stomald, now. He was
what a priest was supposed to be, and if the rest of the Temple had been like
him . . .
But it wasn't. Folmak
settled into the saddle and checked all four pistols before he tucked them away
in his boots and under his captured Guard cloak. The rain was falling harder,
as Lord Sean had warned, and he'd ordered his sergeants to check each
individual pan to be sure it was securely shut until it was needed. They were
still going to have an appalling number of misfires, but he'd done all he could
to minimize them.
He put away the last
pistol and looked over his shoulder for the signal to advance. Lord Sean stood
surrounded by aides, speaking quietly and urgently to Tibold, hands moving in
quick, incisive gestures, and Folmak remembered his look of surprise when the
men had cheered his orders.
Folmak hadn't been
surprised, but Lord Sean had actually apologized to them, as if it were his
fault they couldn't just stand around and wait till the rain stopped. That sort
of concern made the army love Lord Sean, but it knew what it was about.
Especially Folmak's men. His was the First Brigade, already called "the
Old Brigade," composed of men who'd followed Father Stomald from the very
beginning. They regarded themselves as the elite of Lord Sean's army, though
the Second and Third Brigades were every bit as old—and, Folmak admitted
grudgingly, as good—and they understood what was forcing Lord Sean's hand.
Every man in the column knew they'd taken far longer than expected getting to
Erastor, yet they also knew only Lord Sean and the Angel Sandy could have
gotten them here at all. And the angels' message—that men should be free to
shape their own lives and their own understanding of God's will—had ignited a
furnace in the Malagorans' stubborn hearts. If Lord Sean needed them now, they
were proud to be here, and if he decided to fix bayonets and charge a
hurricane, they'd follow with a cheer.
The regimental pipers
formed in the intervals in the brigade's column, and Lord Sean nodded to his
aides. They spurred up and down the entire length of the corps, and Folmak
waved to his unit commanders.
"Move out!" he
barked, and the Angels' Army slogged through blowing sheets of rain towards
Erastor.
* * *
Sean watched his men
move forward and tried to look confident. Every man in Folmak's brigade had
been issued a Guard cloak, and his vanguard looked as much like Terrahk's relief
force as he could make them, but the rest of his men wore Malagoran ponchos.
One look at them would tell the dullest picket what they were. The rain
wasn't falling as hard as he'd feared—yet—but it was getting worse, and only
First Brigade marched with slung weapons. The rest of his men carried their
bayoneted rifles under their arms like hunters to shield the priming with their
bodies and ponchos and keep rain from running down the muzzles. It was awkward
and it looked like hell, but it was the best he could do to insure their
ability to fire.
He and Tibold had
reorganized the army into six-hundred-man regiments, three to the brigade, and
despite the rain and the slaughter to which he'd led them, each regiment
cheered as it passed him. He slapped his streaming breastplate in answering
salute, and his emotions were a welter of confusion. Shame for the mistakes
which sent them into battle under such a hideous handicap. Pride in how they'd
responded. Dread of the butcher's bill they were going to pay, a sense of awe
that they were willing to pay it for him, and a strange, shivering eagerness.
He'd seen battle and its aftermath now. He knew how horrible it was, how
ugly and vile and brutal, yet part of him was actually eager to begin. Not
glad, but . . . impatient. Anticipating.
He shook his head, angry
with himself. He couldn't think of the word, and he was ashamed of feeling
whatever it was, but that didn't change it. He spurred ahead to overtake
Folmak's brigade, and as he splashed along the road, he wished he could ride
away from his own complex feelings as easily.
* * *
Under-Captain Mathan
stood under the lean-to and gazed out into the rain. It was barely
midafternoon, yet it looked like late evening as charcoal clouds billowed
overhead. His dragoons were glad to be spared the lot of the men manning the
half-flooded entrenchments facing the heretics, but that didn't make their own
duty pleasant. Like most of the Host, they'd lost all their baggage at Yortown,
and they'd had to cobble up whatever they could to replace their Guard-issue
tents. Mathan doubted the foraging parties had left an intact roof for miles
around Erastor, but the valley's frequent rains soaked them to the skin anyway,
whatever they did, and he was heartily sick of it.
He spoke to himself
sternly. He should be down on his knees thanking God for sparing him the
slaughter the demon-worshipers had wreaked on the rest of the Host, not
complaining because of a little rain! He'd certainly told his troopers that
often enough!
He turned to pace briskly.
He could only go a few strides in either direction and stay under the roof, but
the rain had chilled the mountain air, and the activity warmed his blood.
Perhaps he'd feel
happier if his present assignment had some point. With the heretics blocked west
of the Erastor Spur, the pickets east of the main position were little more
than an afterthought. They were out here getting soaked simply because the
field manuals said all approaches, however unlikely, should be covered, and
like most soldiers, they resented being made miserable just because some
headquarters type wanted to be neat and tidy.
A branahlk splashed up
to the shelter, and Sergeant Kithar saluted.
"We've sighted the
head of the column, Sir. Should reach the pickets in about another twenty minutes."
"Thank you,
Sergeant. That's good news." Mathan returned Kithar's salute, then pointed
at the smoky fire crackling under another crude awning. "Warm yourself and
dry off a bit before you head back."
"Thank you,
Sir."
The sergeant hurried
towards the fire, and Mathan folded his hands behind him with a sigh of relief.
High-Captain Ortak had sworn the Temple would reinforce them, but after Yortown
it had been hard for many of his men—including, Mathan admitted, himself—to
believe it would happen in time. Now it had, and he breathed a silent prayer of
thanks.
* * *
Captain Folmak trotted
at the head of his brigade, and his belly was a hard, singing knot. He could
see the first dragoons now, and they looked as miserable as Lord Sean had
predicted. They were waving, and he heard a few cheers, but they also weren't
budging out from under the crude lean-tos they'd erected in a vain effort to
stay dry.
"You know what to
do, boys," he told his grim-faced riflemen. "No shooting if you can
help it, but be damned sure none of them get away!"
"Sight for sore
eyes, aren't they?" Shaldan Morahkson demanded. "I told you
Lord Marshal Surak would reinforce us!"
"Sure you
did," one of his companions jeered. "Between pissing and moaning
about the rain, your saddle sores, and how fucked up the whole war's been, you
told us all about your personal friend the Lord Marshal!"
The others laughed, and
Shaldan made a rude gesture as the lead ranks of the relief column squelched
past. The incoming Guardsmen looked almost as shabby and sodden as Shaldan and
his fellows after their hard march, and he turned his back on the others to
wave and shout at the newcomers, then paused.
"That's
funny."
"What?" his
critic demanded. "Your buddy Lord Marshal Surak screw up somehow?"
"They're all
musketeers," Shaldan said. "Look." He pointed as far down the
column as they could see in the blowing rain. "There must be a thousand,
fifteen hundred of them, and not a pike among 'em!"
"What?" The
other dragoon turned to peer in the direction of Shaldan's pointing finger.
"And another thing.
I've never seen bayonets like those. Have you?"
"I—"
Shaldan never found out
what his fellow meant to say, for even as they stared at the column, it
suddenly broke apart.
* * *
"Take them!"
Under-Captain Lerhak shouted, and his men swarmed out across the picket. There
were cries of alarm from the watching dragoons, and two or three turned to race
for tethered branahlks, but surprise was total. Musket butts and bayonets did
their lethal work, and within ten minutes, every man of High Captain Ortak's
easternmost picket was dead or a prisoner.
Under-Captain Mathan
stretched and called for his mount. He'd already sent a messenger ahead to
Erastor, and if Sergeant Kithar was right, the column should have reached his
forward position by now. Little though a ride in the rain appealed to him, he'd
best go up to greet them like a properly industrious junior officer, and he
trotted away from the lean-to with regret. He was riding directly into the
wind, and the water running into his eyes made it hard to see where he was
going. His branahlk tossed its head and jibed under him, whistling mournfully
to voice its own verdict on the weather, and he tightened his knees to remind
it who was in charge.
He looked back up and
blinked on rain as mounted men in the soaked crimson cloaks of the Guard loomed
out of the dimness. One of them waved, and Mathan started to wave back, then
paused.
He stared at them,
watching them ride closer, unable to believe his eyes. Their saddles and tack
were mismatched, not standard Guard issue, and aside from their cloaks, they
weren't even in uniform. Two of them actually wore what looked like farmer's
boots, not jackboots. But that was impossible. They had to be Guardsmen!
No one else could get at Erastor from the east! Not unless the demons had—
He jerked out of his
shock and wheeled his mount. The branahlk squealed in protest as his spurs went
home, then bounded forward with a teeth-rattling jerk. He had to warn High-Captain
Ortak! He—
Something cracked behind
him, and he didn't even have time to scream as the rifled pistol bullet smashed
him from the saddle.
* * *
"Sir, the relief
column's been sighted."
High-Captain Ortak
looked up and smiled at his aide's report.
"Well, thank God
for that! Call for my branahlk. High-Captain Terrahk deserves to be met in
person."
* * *
"Did you hear
something?" Sergeant Kithar raised his head, ears cocked, and glanced at
the man beside him.
"In this
rain?" The trooper gestured at the water drumming from the eaves of their
rough roof.
"It sounded like a
shot. . . ."
"You're joking,
Sarge! It'd take a special miracle to get a joharn to fire in this stuff!"
"I know, but—"
Kithar was still gazing
out into the rain when Folmak's lead company stormed into the picket's rear
area.
* * *
"Folmak's taken out
the picket."
Sean nodded as his com
implant carried him Sandy's voice.
"Anyone get
away?" he subvocalized back.
"I don't think so.
It's hard to be sure with so many people moving around in the rain, but I don't
see anyone headed away from the picket."
"What's Folmak
doing?"
"Rounding up POWs
and shifting into assault column to hit the bridge. Don't worry, Sean. He knows
what he's doing."
* * *
"So far, so
good," Folmak murmured, then raised his voice. "This is what we came
for, boys! Follow me, and from here on out, make all the racket you can. Let's
make these bastards think the 'Cragsend Demons' are here to eat 'em all! First Brigade,
are you with me?"
"Aye!" The
roar almost blew him from the saddle.
* * *
High-Captain Ortak
dismounted, handed his reins to an orderly, and tried not to scurry as he
hurried for the shelter of the bridge tollhouse. The under-captain commanding
the bridge traffic control detachment jumped up and saluted, but Ortak waved
him back into his chair.
"Sit down, sit
down!"
"Thank you, Sir,
but I prefer to stand." The bridge commander was a very junior officer,
but he knew better than to sit in the presence of a high-captain, whatever the
high-captain in question said.
"Suit yourself,
Captain." Ortak stood in the doorway, peering into the gloomy afternoon.
He could just make out the head of Terrahk's column at the far end of the
bridge, and he wondered why they'd stopped in the rain. Were they dressing
ranks for some sort of parade?
He frowned. The rain and
the rush of river water around the bridge pilings filled his ears, but that
didn't keep him from hearing the cheer. What in the world—? Were they that
happy to be here?
And then, suddenly, the
relief column lunged forward onto the bridge, and High-Captain Ortak stared in
horror as it swept over the half-dozen men watching the far end of the span.
Bayonets flashed in the rain, musket butts struck viciously, and the high-captain
went white, for he could hear the voices clearly, now.
"Malagor and
Lord Sean!" they howled, and twenty-five thousand men stormed into the
Guard's undefended rear behind their screaming war pipes.
* * *
"That's it!"
Tamman snapped to High-Captain Ithun. "They're hitting the bridges now.
Get the columns formed!"
"At once, Lord
Tamman!"
Ithun dashed off, and
Tamman's enhanced eyes swept the entrenchments facing his position. There was
no movement over there yet, but there would be soon. Now if only they'd pull
enough off the parapets to give him an opening!
* * *
For the Yortown
survivors, it was a hideous, recurring nightmare. They'd seen their formations
smashed at Yortown, watched that wall of fire and smoke grinding down from the
north behind the terrifying Malagoran yell, and known—not thought; known—they'd
faced demons, but somehow they'd escaped. They'd fallen back, dug in, waited
for the demon-worshipers to sweep over them, and as the weeks passed, they'd
come, slowly, first to hope and finally to believe it wouldn't happen after
all. They'd stopped the heretics, held them, and at least their rear was secure
if they were forced to retreat again.
But now their rear wasn't
secure. They'd spent days preparing bivouac areas for High-Captain Terrahk's column,
chattered in their relief, swapped lies and rumors about what would happen
next, only to see the forces of Hell do it to them again. Some evil sorcery had
transformed their reinforcements into rampaging demons that stormed into their
positions in a solid, deadly mass of bristling bayonets and the terrible,
shrieking war pipes of Malagor.
Surprise was total,
High-Captain Ortak was nowhere to be found, and officers floundered in shock as
the first, incredible intimations of disaster reached them. Folmak's brigade
slammed over the bridges and butchered its way across the closest encampment.
Guardsmen looked up from routine camp tasks to see eighteen hundred screaming
maniacs scythe into their position, and panic was a deadlier weapon than any
bayonet. Cooks and drovers scattered, half-naked men erupted from tents and
lean-tos and fled into the rain, officers shouted in vain for their men to
rally, and Folmak's riflemen swarmed forward like some dark, unstoppable tide.
Here and there a handful
did rally around an officer or a noncom, but there were too few of them,
and they were too stunned to be effective. The tiny knots of resistance
vanished into the oncoming First Brigade's bayonet-fanged maw, and Folmak
slammed a full kilometer forward before his initial charge even slowed. Behind
him, more men thundered across the Erastor, fanning out to secure the
bridgehead, and behind them the weight of Sean's entire corps swept
forward in double time.
* * *
"They're hitting us
in the rear, I tell you! My God, there're thousands of
them!"
High-Captain Marhn
stared at the gasping, half-coherent officer. Impossible! It was impossible!
Poison-raw terror quivered deep inside, yet he'd been a soldier for over thirty
Terran years. He didn't know what had happened to High-Captain Ortak, and he
couldn't even begin to guess how the heretics could be behind Erastor in
strength or what had happened to High-Captain Terrahk, but he knew what would
happen if this attack wasn't crushed.
"They've already
got the bridges!" The officer was still babbling his terrified message.
"We're trapped, Sir! They're going to—"
"They're going to die,
Captain!" Marhn barked so sharply the officer's mouth snapped shut in pure
reflex. "We've got eighty thousand men in this position, so stop howling
like an old woman and use them, curse you!"
"But—"
Marhn whirled away with
a snarl of disgust just as Captain Urthank, his own second-in-command charged
up, still buckling his armor.
"What—?"
Urthank started, but Marhn cut him off with a savage wave.
"Somehow the
demon-worshipers got 'round behind us. They've taken the bridges, and they're
advancing fast." Urthank paled, and Marhn shook his head. "Get back
there. Send in the Ninth and Eighteenth Pikes. You won't be able to hold, but
slow them up enough to buy me some time!"
"Yes, Sir!"
Urthank saluted and disappeared, and Marhn began bellowing orders to a flock of
messengers.
* * *
The Ninth Pikes thudded
through the mud towards the clamor in their rear, and their eyes were wild.
There'd been no time for their officers to explain fully, but the Ninth were
veterans. They knew what would happen if the heretics weren't stopped.
The Eighteenth turned up
on their left, and whistles shrilled as their officers brought them to a
slithering, panting halt. A forest of five-meter pikes snapped into fighting
position, and eight thousand men settled into formation as the wailing
Malagoran pipes swept down upon them.
Folmak reined in so
violently his branahlk skidded on its haunches as the Guard phalanx
materialized out of the rain. Lord Sean had warned him the surprise wouldn't
last, and he'd managed—somehow—to keep his men together as they swept across
the Guard's rear areas. The clutter of tents and wagons and lean-tos had made
it hard, yet he'd kept his brigade in hand, and he felt a stab of thankfulness
that he had.
But he was also well out
in front, and half his third regiment had been left behind to hold the bridges.
He had little more than fifteen hundred men, barely a sixth of the numbers
suddenly drawn up across his front, and not a single pike among them.
That phalanx wouldn't
stop the regiments coming up behind him, but he couldn't let them stop him,
either. If the Guard realized how outnumbered its attackers were and won time
to recover, it had more than enough power to crush Lord Sean's entire force.
"First
Battalion—action front!" he screamed, and whistles shrilled.
His men responded
instantly. First Battalion of Second Regiment, his leading formation, deployed
into firing line on the run, and the officer commanding the Guard pikes
hesitated. All he knew was that his position was under attack, and the
visibility was so bad he couldn't begin to estimate Folmak's numbers. Rather
than charge forward in ignorance, he paused, trying to get some idea of what he
was up against, and that hesitation gave First Battalion time to deploy in a
two-deep firing line and the rest of Folmak's men time to tighten their own
formation behind them. It was still looser than it should have been, but Folmak
sensed the firming resolution of his opponents. There was no time for further
adjustment.
"Fire!" he
bellowed.
Almost a third of the
First's rifles misfired, but there were three hundred of them. Two hundred-plus
rifles blazed at less than a hundred meters' range, and the Guardsmen recoiled
in shock as, for the first time in Pardalian history, men with fixed bayonets
poured fire into their opponents.
"At 'em,
Malagorans!" Folmak howled. "Chaaaarge!"
* * *
The Guard formation
wavered as the bullets slammed home. At such short range, a rifled joharn would
penetrate five inches of solid wood, and a single shot could kill or maim two
or even three men. The shock of receiving that fire was made even worse by the
fact that it came from bayoneted weapons, and then, against every rule of
warfare, musketeers actually charged pikemen!
The Guardsmen couldn't
believe it. Musketeers ran away from pikes—everyone knew that! But these
musketeers were different. The column behind exploded through the firing line
and hit the Eighteenth Pikes like a tidal bore. Dozens, scores of them, died on
the bitter pikeheads, but while the Guardsmen were killing them, their
companions hurled themselves in among the pikes, and the Guard discovered a
lethal truth. Once a phalanx's front was broken, once the Malagorans could get
inside the pikes' longer reach, bayoneted rifles were deadly melee weapons.
They were shorter, lighter, faster, and these men knew how to use them to
terrible effect.
* * *
"Drive 'em!"
Folmak shrieked. "Drive 'em!" and First Brigade drove them.
The Malagoran yell and the howl of their pipes carried them onward, and once
they'd closed, they were more than a match for any pikemen.
Bayonets stabbed, men
screamed and cursed and died, and mud-caked boots trod them into the mire.
Folmak's men stormed forward with a determination that had to be killed to be
stopped, and the Guardsmen—shaken, confused, stunned by the impossibility of
what was happening—were no match for them.
The Eighteenth broke.
Those of its men who tried to stand paid for their discipline, for they
couldn't break free, couldn't get far enough away to use their longer weapons
effectively, and First Brigade swarmed them under like seldahks. Six minutes
after that first volley had exploded in their faces, the Eighteenth Pikes were
a shattered, fleeing wreck, and Folmak swung in on the flank of the Ninth.
Even now, he was
outnumbered by better than two-to-one, and the melee with the Eighteenth had
disordered his ranks. Worse, the Ninth was made of sterner stuff, and its
commander had managed to change front while the Eighteenth was dying. His men
were still off balance, but they howled their own war cries and lunged forward,
slamming into Folmak's brigade like a hammer, and this time they hadn't been
shaken by a pointblank volley.
Folmak's lead battalion
had already been more than decimated. Now it reeled back, fighting stubbornly
but driven by the longer, heavier weapons of its foes, and the officers of both
sides lost control. It was one howling vortex, sucking in men and spitting out
corpses, and then, suddenly, Sean's Sixth Brigade slammed into the Ninth from
the other side.
It was too much, and the
Guardsmen came apart. Unit organization disintegrated. Half the Ninth simply
disappeared, killed or routed, and the other half found itself surrounded by
twice its own number of Malagorans. They tried to fight their way out, then
tried to form a defensive hedgehog, but it was useless. Despite the rain,
scores of riflemen still managed to reload and fire into them, and even as they
died, more Malagoran regiments rushed past. They weren't even slowing the enemy
down, and their surviving officers ordered them to throw down their weapons to
save as many of their men as they could.
* * *
High-Captain Marhn's
face was iron as more and more reports of disaster came in. The heretics had
swept over the entire bivouac area, then paused to reorganize and fanned out in
half a dozen columns, each storming forward towards the rear of the
entrenchments. A third of his men had already been broken, and the panicky
wreckage of shattered formations boiled in confusion, hampering their fellows
far more than their enemies. The last light was going, and the Host's entire
encampment had disintegrated into a rain-soaked, mud-caked madness no man could
control.
He had no idea how many
men the heretics had. From the terrified reports, they might have had a
million. Worse, the units they were hitting were his worst-armed, weakest ones,
the men who'd been reformed out of the ruin of Yortown. They'd been placed in reserve
because their officers were still trying to rebuild them into effective
fighting forces, and the demon-worshipers were cutting through them like an ax,
not a knife.
He clenched his jaw and
turned his back, shutting out the confused reports while he tried to find an
answer. But there was only one, and it might already be too late for it to
work.
"Start pulling men
out of the redoubts," he grated. Someone gasped, and he stabbed a finger
at a map. "Form a new line here!" he snapped, jabbing a line across
the map less than four thousand paces behind the earthworks.
"But, Sir—"
someone else began.
"Do it!"
Marhn snarled, and tried to pretend he didn't know that even if he succeeded,
it could stave off disaster for no more than a few more hours.
* * *
"They're moving men
from the trenches, Sean!" Sandy shouted over the com.
"Good—I
think!" Even with Sandy's reports and his own implant link to her sensors,
Sean had only the vaguest notion what was happening. This was nothing like
Yortown. It was an insane explosion of violence, skidding like a ground car on
ice. His men were moving towards their objectives in what looked like a
carefully controlled maneuver, but it was nothing of the sort. No one could
control it; it was all up to his junior officers and their men, and he could
hardly believe how well they were carrying out their mission.
Even in the madness and
confusion, he felt a deep, vaulting pride in his army—his army!—as his
outnumbered men cut through their enemies. He was losing people—hundreds of
them, probably more—and he knew how sick and empty he'd feel when he counted
the dead, but he had no time for that now. A desperate counterattack by the
broken remnants of several Guard pike units had taken his HQ group by surprise
and smashed deep into it before a reserve battalion could deal with it, and
only Sean's enhancement had kept him alive. His armor had turned two pikeheads,
and his enhanced reactions had been enough to save his eye, but a dripping
sword cut had opened his right cheek from chin to temple, and Tibold limped
heavily from a gash in his left thigh.
Now he waved his
battered aides to a halt, and the reserve battalion—whose commander had made
himself Sean's chief bodyguard without orders—fanned out in a wary perimeter.
"How much
movement?" he asked Sandy in English, speaking aloud and ignoring the
looks his men gave him.
"A lot, all up and
down the center of his lines."
"Tam?"
"I see it, Sean.
We're moving now."
"Give 'em time to
pull back! Don't let them catch you in the open!"
"Suck eggs! You
just keep pushing 'em hard."
"Hard, the man
says!" Sean rolled his eyes heavenward and turned to Tibold. "They're
pulling men out of the trenches to stop us, and Tamman and Ithun are moving up
to hit them in the rear."
"Then we have to push
them even harder," Tibold said decisively.
"If we can!"
Sean shook his head, then grabbed an aide. "Find Captain Folmak. If he's
still alive, tell him to bear right. You!" he jabbed a finger at another
messenger. "Find Fourth Brigade. It's over that way, to the right. Tell
Captain Herth to curl in to the left to meet Folmak. I want both of them to
hammer straight for their reserve artillery park."
The aides repeated their
orders and ran off into the maelstrom, and Sean grimaced at Tibold.
"If this is a
successful battle, God save me from an unsuccessful one!"
* * *
"Sir!" Marhn
looked up as a gasping, mud-spattered messenger lurched into his command post.
"High-Captain! The heretics are coming from the west, as well!" The
messenger swayed, and Marhn realized the young officer was wounded.
"Captain Rukhan needs more men. Can't . . . can't hold without them,
Sir!"
Marhn stared at the
young man for one terrible, endless moment. Then his shoulders slumped, and his
watching staff saw hope run out of his eyes like water.
"Sound
parley," he said. Urthank stared at him, and Marhn snarled at him.
"Sound parley, damn you!"
"But . . . but,
Sir, the Circle! High Priest Vroxhan! We can't—"
"We aren't; I
am!" Marhn spat. His hand bit into Urthank's biceps like a claw.
"We've lost, Urthank. That attack from the rear blew the guts out of us,
and now they've broken our front as well. How many more of our men have
to die for a position we can't hold?"
"But if you
surrender, the Circle will—" Urthank began in a quieter, more anxious
voice, and Marhn shook his head again.
"I've served the
Temple since I was a boy. If the Circle wants my life for saving the lives of
my men, they can have it. Now, sound parley!"
"Yes, Sir."
Urthank looked into Marhn's face for a moment, then turned away. "You
heard the High-Captain! Sound parley!" he barked, and another officer fled
to pass the order.
"Here, boy!"
Marhn said gruffly, catching Rukhan's wounded messenger as he began to
collapse. He took the young man's weight in his arms and eased him down into a
camp chair, then looked back up at Urthank. "Call the healers and have
this man seen to," he said.
Lieutenant Carl Bergren
was grateful for his bio-enhancement. Without it, he'd have been sweating so
hard the security pukes would have arrested him the moment he reported for duty
tonight.
His adrenaline tried to
spike again, but he pushed it back down and told himself (again) the risk was
acceptable. If it all blew up on him, he could find himself facing charges for
willful destruction of private property and end up dishonorably discharged with
five or ten years in prison, which was hardly an attractive proposition. On the
other hand, it wasn't as if anyone were going to be hurt—in fact, he was going
to have to separate any passengers from the freight—and it wasn't every night a
mere Battle Fleet lieutenant earned eight million credits. That payoff was
sufficient compensation for any risks which might come his way. He told himself
that firmly enough to manage a natural smile as he walked into the control room
and nodded to Lieutenant Deng.
"You're early
tonight, Carl." Deng had learned his English before he was enhanced, and
its stubbornly persistent British accent always seemed odd to Bergren coming
from a Chinese.
"Only a couple of
minutes," he replied. "Commander Jackson's on Birhat, and I stole her
parking spot."
"A court-martial
offense if ever I heard one." Deng chuckled, and rose to stretch.
"Very well, Leftenant, your throne awaits."
"Some throne!"
Bergren snorted. He dropped into the control chair and flipped his feed into
the computers, scanning the evening's traffic. "Not much business
tonight."
"Not yet, but
there's something special coming through from Narhan."
"Special? Special
how?" Bergren's tone was a bit too casual, but Deng failed to notice.
"Some sort of
high-priority freight for the Palace." He shrugged. "I don't know
what, but the mass readings are quite high, so you might want to watch the
gamma bank capacitors. We're getting a drop at peak loads, and Maintenance
hasn't found the problem yet."
"No?" Bergren
checked the files in case Deng was watching, but he already knew all about the
power fluctuation. He didn't know how it had been arranged, but he knew why,
and he damped another adrenaline surge at the thought. "You're
right," he observed aloud. "Thanks. I'll keep an eye on them."
"Good." Deng
gathered up his personal gear and cocked his head. "Everything else
green?"
"Looks that
way," Bergren agreed. "You're relieved."
"Thanks. See you
tomorrow!"
Deng wandered out, and
Bergren leaned back in his chair. He was alone now, and he allowed a small
smile to hover on his lips. He had no idea who his mysterious patron was, nor
had he cared . . . until tonight. Whoever it was paid well enough to support
his taste for fast flyers and faster women, and that had been enough for him.
But the services he'd performed so far had all been small potatoes beside
tonight, and his smile became a thoughtful frown.
He hadn't realized,
until he received his latest orders, how powerful his unknown employer must be,
but pulling this off required more than mere wealth. No, whoever could
arrange something like this had to have access not simply to highly restricted
technology but to Shepard Center's security at the very highest levels. There
couldn't be many people who had both those things, and the lieutenant had
already opened a mental file of possible candidates. After all, if whoever it
was had paid so well for relatively minor services in the past, he'd pay still
better in the future for Bergren's silence.
A soft tone sounded, and
he shrugged his thoughts aside to concentrate on his duties. He plugged into
the computer net and checked the passenger manifest against the people actually
boarding the mat-trans. Two of them were technically overweight for their
baggage, but it was well within the system's max load parameters, and he
decided to let it pass. He made the necessary adjustments to field strength and
checked his figures twice, then sent the hypercom transit warning to Birhat. An
answering hypercom pulse told him Birhat was up and ready, awaiting reception
of the controlled hyper-space anomaly he was about to create, and he sent the
transit computer the release code. The control room's soundproofing was
excellent, but he still heard the whine of the charging capacitors, and then
his readouts peaked as the transmitter kicked over. Another clutch of
bureaucrats, temporarily converted into something they were no doubt just as
happy they couldn't understand, disappeared into a massive, artificially
induced "fold" in hyper-space. The waiting Birhat station couldn't
"see" them coming, but, alerted by Bergren's hypercom signal, its
receivers formed a vast, funnel-shaped trap in hyper-space. At eight
hundred-plus light-years, even the vastest funnel was an impossibly tiny
target, but Bergren's calculations flicked the disembodied bureaucrats expertly
into its bell-shaped mouth. In his mind's eye, the lieutenant always pictured
his passengers rattling and bouncing as they zinged down the funnel and
then—instantaneously, as far as they could tell, but 8.5 seconds later by the
clocks of the rest of the universe—blinked back into existence on distant
Birhat.
Now he sat waiting, then
nodded to himself as Birhat's hypercommed receipt tone sounded seventeen
seconds later. He noted the routine transit in his log and checked the
schedule. Traffic really was light tonight, and it was getting lighter as the
hour got later. Shepard Center Station was only one of six mat-trans stations
Earth now boasted, and it handled mostly North American traffic, though it also
caught a heavier percentage of the through-traffic from Narhan to Birhat and
vice versa. The receiving platforms were far busier than the outbound stations,
but, then, it was midmorning in Phoenix on Birhat and only early evening in
Andhurkahn on Narhan. He had a good five minutes before his next scheduled
transmission, and he returned once more to his speculations.
* * *
Lawrence Jefferson sat
in his private office at home. His split-image com screen linked him to another
mat-trans half a planet from Bergren's—half showing the installation's control
room; the other half a huge, tarpaulin-covered shape waiting on the
transmission platform—and he poured more sherry into his glass as he watched
both images. No one at the other end knew he was observing them, and he
supposed his high-tech spyhole was a bit risky, but he had no choice, and at
least the Lieutenant Governor of Earth had access to the best technology
available. His link had been established using a high security fold-space com
that bounced its hyper frequency on a randomized pattern twice a second. That
made simply detecting it all but impossible and, coupled with the physical
relays through which it also bounced, meant tapping or tracing it was
impossible. Besides, anyone who happened to spot it would report it to the
Minister of Planetary Security, now wouldn't they?
He chuckled at the
thought and sipped sherry as he watched the purposeful activity in the control
room. No one—aside from the men and women who'd built and staffed it for
him—even knew it existed, and all but three of them were on duty tonight. The
three absent faces had been killed in a tragic flyer accident almost two years
previously, and though their deaths had been a blow, their fellows had taken up
the slack without difficulty. Now his carefully chosen techs checked their
equipment with absolute concentration, for the upcoming transmission—the one
and only transmission the installation would ever make—had to be executed
perfectly.
It would never have done
for Jefferson to admit he was nervous. Nor would it have been true, for
"nervous" fell far short of what he felt tonight. This was the
absolutely critical phase, the one which would make him Emperor of Humanity—if
it worked—and anxiety mingled with a fierce expectation. He'd worked over a
decade—more than twenty-five years, if he counted from his first contact with
Anu—for this moment, and even as a part of him feared it would fail, the
gambler part of him could hardly wait to throw the dice.
It was odd, but, in a
way, he'd actually be sorry if it worked. Not because he didn't want the crown,
and certainly not because he regretted what he had to do to get it, but because
the game would be over. He would have carried out the most audacious coup in
the history of mankind, but all the daring, the concentration and subtle
manipulation, would be a thing of the past, and he could never share the true
magnitude of his accomplishment with anyone else.
He shook his head at his
own perversity, and a small smile flickered. The curse of his own makeup, he
chided himself, was that he could never be entirely content, however well
things went. He always wanted more, but there were limits, and he supposed he'd
just have to settle for absolute power.
* * *
Bergren straightened in
his chair as five Narhani entered the outbound terminal with a huge,
tarpaulin-draped object on a counter-grav dolly. The centaurs fussed with their
burden, placing it carefully on the platform and taking their places about it
in a protective circle, and, despite all his implants could do, the lieutenant
swallowed nervously as he flashed a mental command to the power sub-net. It was
a routine testing order, but tonight it had another effect, and he winced as
the induced surge flashed through the gamma bank of capacitors and an audio
alarm shrilled.
The Narhani on the
platform looked up, long-snouted heads twisting around in confusion as the
high-pitched warble hurt their ears, and Bergren sent quick, fresh commands to
his computer to shut it down. Then he leaned forward and keyed a microphone.
"Sorry, gentlemen,"
he told the Narhani over the speakers in the terminal area. "We've just
lost one of our main capacitor banks. Until we get it back, our transmission
capacity's down to eighty percent of max."
"What does that
mean?" the senior Narhani asked, and Bergren shrugged for the benefit of
the control room security recorders.
"I'm afraid it
means you're over the limits for our available power, sir," he replied
smoothly.
"May we shift to
another platform?"
"I'm afraid it
wouldn't matter, sir. As you know, this system is very energy intensive. For
this much mass, any of the platforms would draw on the same capacitor reserve,
so you might as well stay where you are."
"But did you not
say you cannot send us?" The Narhani sounded confused, and Bergren hid a
smile.
"No, sir. I just
can't transmit the entire load at once. I'll have to send your freight through
in one transmission, then send you and the other members of your party through
in a second, that's all."
"I see." The
Narhani spokesman and his companions spoke softly and quickly in their own
language. Bergren didn't know what the object they were accompanying was, but
he knew they were a security detachment, and he forced himself to sit calmly,
hiding any trace of anxiety over what they might decide. After a moment, the
spokesman looked back up and raised the volume of his vocoder.
"Can we not send at
least one of our number through with our freight?"
"I'm afraid not,
sir. We'll be right at the limits of our available power, and Regs prohibit me
from sending passengers under those conditions."
"Is there risk to
our freight?" The question was sharp for a Narhani.
"No, sir,"
Bergren soothed. "Not if it's not alive. The regulations are so specific
because a power fluctuation that won't harm inanimate objects can cause serious
neural damage in living passengers. It's just a precaution."
"I see." The
spokesman looked back at his companions for a moment, then twitched his crest
in the Narhani equivalent of a shrug. "We would prefer to wait until your
power systems have been repaired," he told Bergren, "but our schedule
is very tight. Can you assure us our freight will arrive undamaged?"
"Yes, sir,"
Bergren said confidently.
"Very well,"
the Narhani sighed. He spoke to his companions in their own language again, and
all five of them stepped off the platform and moved back behind the safety
line.
"Thank you,
sir," Bergren said, and his fold-com implant sent a brief, prerecorded
burst transmission to a waiting relay as he began to prep for transmission.
* * *
"Alert
signal," a woman said quietly in the control room on Jefferson's screen.
The two men at the main console nodded acknowledgment without ever opening
their eyes, and one of them activated the stealthed sensor arrays watching
Shepard Center from orbit.
"Good signal,"
his companion announced in the toneless voice of a man concentrating on his
neural feed. "We've got their field strength. Coming up nicely now."
"Synchronizer
on-line," the third tech said. "Power up and nominal. Switching to
auto sequence."
* * *
Carl Bergren watched his
readouts through his feeds. This was the tricky part that was going to earn him
that big stack of credits. The settings had to be almost right, and he
straightened his mouth as he felt it trying to curl in a grin of tension. The
power levels were already off the optimum curve, thanks to the failure of the
gamma bank, and he very carefully cut back the charge on the delta bank. Not by
much. Only by a tiny, virtually undetectable fraction. But it would be
enough—if whoever was in charge of the other part of the operation got his
numbers right—and he sent the alert signal to Birhat and waited for the
response.
* * *
Lawrence Jefferson
leaned towards his com, clutching his wineglass, and his heart pounded. This
was the moment, he thought. The instant towards which he'd worked so long.
"Their field's
building now," the sensor tech murmured. "Looking good . . . looking
good . . . stand by . . . stand by . . . coming up to peak . . . now!"
* * *
Carl Bergren sent the
release code, and the capacitors screamed. The shrouded object on the platform
vanished as the mat-trans sent a mighty pulse of power into hyper-space, and he
held his breath. The transmission he'd sent out was almost precisely four
millionths of a percent too weak to reach Birhat. It would waste its power
twenty light-minutes short of the funnel waiting to catch it for the reception
units, but no one would ever know if—
* * *
The control room on
Lawrence Jefferson's com screen was silent, its personnel frozen. Not even a
mat-trans was truly instantaneous over an eight-hundred-light-year range, and
Jefferson held his breath while he waited.
* * *
A soft tone beeped, and
Carl Bergren let out a whooshing breath as the Birhat mat-trans operator
acknowledged receipt. He'd done it! The person at the other end of the hypercom
link didn't realize someone else had invaded the system. He thought he'd just
received Bergren's transmission!
The lieutenant
suppressed an urge to wipe his forehead. Deep inside, he hadn't really believed
his employer could pull it off, and it was hard to keep his elation out of his
voice as he activated his mike.
"Birhat has
confirmed reception, sir," he told the Narhani spokesman. "If you'd
step onto the platform, I can send you through now, as well."
"We did it!"
someone shouted gleefully. "They accepted the transmission!"
The staff of Jefferson's
illicit mat-trans whistled and clapped, and the Lieutenant Governor checked the
computer tied into his com. Good. The exact readouts of the transmission, which
just happened to carry the same identifier code as Lieutenant Bergren's system,
had been properly stored. He'd have to wait until the regular Shepard Center
data collection upload late next week to exchange them for Bergren's actual log
of the transmission, but that part of the pipeline had already been tested and
proved secure. It was inconvenient, since he would have preferred to make the
switch sooner, yet there was nothing he could do about it. The mass readings of
the transit would prove the statue Birhat had just received had not, in fact,
been the solid block of marble Bergren had just destroyed, and for his
Reichstag fire to work, it was vital that Battle Fleet itself discover that
fact when the time came.
He smiled at the
thought, then looked back at his link to the hidden control room and its
celebrating personnel. Two of them had cracked bottles of champagne, and he
watched them pouring their glasses full while they chattered and laughed with
the release of long-held tension. They'd worked hard for this moment—and, of
course, for the huge pile of credits they'd been promised—and the Lieutenant
Governor leaned back in his chair with a sigh of matching relief. They deserved
their moment of triumph, and he let them celebrate it for another few minutes,
then pressed a button.
Half a world away, the
explosive charges three long-dead technicians had installed at his orders
detonated. One of the control room personnel had time for a single scream of
terror before the plunging roof of the subterranean installation turned him and
all his fellows into mangled gruel.
* * *
Carl Bergren dutifully
logged a full report on the capacitor bank failure and completed his shift
without further incident. He turned over to his relief at shift change and
signed out through the security checkpoints, then walked slowly to his parked
flyer while he pondered the entire operation. Whoever had arranged it, he
thought, had to have incredible reach and command equally incredible resources.
He'd had to gain access to the routing schedules weeks in advance to be sure
Bergren would be on duty when the transmission came through. Then he'd had to
get someone in to sabotage the capacitors, and he'd had to make sure the
sabotage was untraceable. And he'd had to have the resources to build
his own mat-trans and find a way to monitor the Shepard Center system
precisely enough to time his own transmission perfectly.
It was big, Bergren told
himself as he unlocked his flyer, climbed in, and settled into the flight
couch. It was really big, and there couldn't be more than a dozen
people—probably less—who could have put it all together. Now it was just a
matter of figuring out which of those dozen or so it had really been, and
little Carl Bergren would live high on the hog for the rest of his natural life.
He smiled and activated
his flyer's drive, and the resultant explosion blew two entire levels of the
parking garage and thirty-six innocent bystanders into very tiny pieces. Forty
minutes later, an anonymous spokesman for the Sword of the Lord claimed responsibility
for the blast.
The last reeking powder
smoke drifted away, and Sean MacIntyre surveyed a scene that had become too
familiar. The only thing that had changed were the colors the dead wore, he
thought bitterly, for the eastern Temple Guard had been reduced to barely forty
thousand men, and they were being held back to cover the Temple itself. He was
fighting the secular lords' armies now, and he shuddered as he watched the
"merely" wounded writhe among the corpses.
His army was out of the
Keldark Valley at last and, as he'd known it would, marching circles about its
opponents. High-Captain Terrahk had fallen back on Baricon, but he'd lacked the
men to hold an attack from the west. There were too many avenues of approach, and
when Tamman blasted his way through a gap with fifteen thousand men and got
around his flank, Terrahk had retreated desperately. His attempt to stand had
cost him his entire rearguard—another eight thousand men (most, Sean was
thankful, captured and not killed)—and Sean had broken out into the rolling
hills of the Duchy of Keldark.
The more open terrain
offered vastly improved scope for maneuver, but every step he advanced also
drew him further from the valley and exposed his supply route to counterattack.
At the moment, the Temple was too hard pressed to think about cutting his
communications, and he kept reminding himself they didn't really have
"cavalry" in the classic Terran sense, but he also kept thinking
about what a Pardalian Bedford Forrest or Phil Sheridan could do if it ever got
loose in his rear. His edge in reconnaissance would make it hard for them to
get past him, but he simply didn't have the men to garrison his supply line
properly. He could have freed them up, but only by reducing his field army,
which, in turn, would have reduced his ability to keep advancing.
He sighed and sent his
branahlk mincing forward. The beast whistled unhappily at the battlefield
stench, and Sean shared its distaste. Whoever had commanded the Temple's forces
in this last battle should be shot, he thought grimly, assuming one of his riflemen
hadn't already taken care of that. He supposed it was a sign of the Temple's
desperation, but ordering forty-five thousand pikemen and only ten thousand
musketeers to face him in the open had been the same as sending them straight
to the executioner.
Had Sean armed his men
in the classic Pardalian proportion of pikes to firearms, he could have fielded
close to the quarter-million men the Temple credited him with. They had all the
weapons they'd captured from the Malagoran Guard plus, effectively, all the
weapons of Lord Marshal Rokas's Holy Host, including its entire artillery park,
but he'd opted to call forward only enough reinforcements—and replacements, he
thought bitterly, recalling the five thousand casualties Erastor had cost—to
put sixty thousand infantry and dragoons and two hundred guns in the field. Two
hundred battalions of rifles, most veterans of Yortown, Erastor, and Baricon,
supported by a hundred and fifty arlaks and fifty chagors, had been more than
enough to slaughter the secular levies of Keldark, Camathan, Sanku, and Walak.
He controlled all of northeastern North Hylar, now, from the Shalokars to the
sea, and he wondered dismally how many more men were going to die before the
Temple agreed to negotiate. God knew he and Stomald had been asking—almost begging—it
to ever since the fall of Erastor! Couldn't the Inner Circle understand they
didn't want to kill its troops? Brashan still couldn't get any of his
remotes inside the hundred-kilometer zone around the Temple, so they couldn't
know what was passing in Vroxhan's council meetings, but the prelates seemed
willing to send every fighting man in North Hylar to his death before they'd
even talk to "demon-worshipers"!
The litter-bearers were
already busy. Theirs was the most horrible duty of all, yet they went about it
with a compassion which still surprised him. The Angels' Army recognized its
tactical superiority as well as its commander did, and, like Sean, most of its
troops knew the men littering the field had been utterly outclassed. His own
casualties, dead and wounded alike, had been under a thousand, and most of his
men had come, in their own ways, to share his sickness at slaughtering their
foes. It was too one-sided, and the men they were killing weren't the ones they
wanted. With every battle, every army they smashed, their hatred of the Inner
Circle grew, yet it wasn't a religious hatred. "The Angels" had
always been careful not to deliver an actual religious message—other than
backing the Malagoran hankering for freedom of conscience—and since Harry's
revelation of the truth, Stomald had begun stressing the Temple's political
tyranny and enormous, self-serving wealth far more strongly. The Angels' Army
longed to settle accounts once and for all with the old men in Aris who kept sending
other people out to die, but more even than that, it wanted simply to be rid of
them.
Sean drew rein and
watched a group of litter-bearers troop past with their pitiful, broken
burdens. Walking wounded limped and staggered back with them, and at least
Harry, coached by Brashan and Israel's med computers, had been teaching
the Malagoran surgeons things they'd never dreamed were possible. The
introduction of ether, alone, had revolutionized Pardalian medicine, and Sean
had sworn a solemn oath that the first thing he would have sent to Pardal from
Birhat would be medical teams with proper regeneration gear. He couldn't
breathe life back into the dead, but he could, by God, give the maimed,
whichever side they'd fought upon, their lives back!
His lip curled as he
wondered how much of that fierce determination was an effort to assuage his own
guilt. With today's body count, the war he and his friends had inadvertently
started had cost over a hundred thousand battlefield deaths. He had no
idea how many more had perished of the diseases that always ravaged
nonindustrial armies, and he was terrified of what the number would finally be.
He could trace every step of the journey which had led them to this, and given
their options as they took each of those steps, he still saw no other course
they might have chosen, yet all this death and brutal agony seemed an obscene
price to buy five marooned people a ticket home.
He drew a deep breath.
It seemed an obscene price because it was, and he would pay no more of
it than he must. The Temple had ignored his semaphore offers to parley and
refused to receive his "demon-worshiping" messengers, but he had one
last shot to try.
* * *
High Priest Vroxhan sat
in his high seat, and his lips worked as if to spit upon the men who faced him.
High-Captain Ortak, High-Captain Marhn, High-Captain Sertal . . . the list went
on and on. Over fifty senior officers stood before him, the surviving
commanders of the armies the demon-worshipers had smashed in such merciless
succession, and he longed to fling the entire feckless lot to the Inquisitors
as their failure deserved.
But much as he wished
to, and however richly they'd earned it, he couldn't. The morale of his
remaining troops was too precarious, and if wholesale executions might stiffen
the spines of the weak, it also might convince them the Temple was lashing out
in blind desperation. Besides, Lord Marshal Surak had spoken in their defense.
He needed their firsthand observations if he was to understand the terrible
changes the accursed demon-worshipers had wrought in the art of war.
Or, at least, he says he
does. Vroxhan closed his eyes and clenched his fists on the arms of his
chair. A bad sign, this suspicion of everyone. Does it mean I am
desperate? He clutched his faith to him and made himself open his eyes once
more.
"Very well,
Ortak," he growled, unable to make himself give the failure the honor of
his rank. "Tell us of these demon-lovers and their terms."
Ortak winced, though it
was hard to tell—his face was as heavily bandaged as the stump of his right
arm—and reached for very careful words.
"Holiness, their
leaders bade me say they ask only for you to speak with them. And—" he
drew a deep breath "—Lord Sean said to tell you you may speak to him now,
or amid the ruins of this city, but that you will speak to him at
last."
"Blasphemy!"
old Bishop Corada cried. "This is God's city! No one who traffics
with the powers of Hell will ever take it!"
"Your Grace, I tell
you only what Lord Sean said, not what he can accomplish," Ortak replied,
but his tone said he did think the heretics could take even the Temple,
and Vroxhan's hand ached to strike him.
"Peace,
Corada," he grated instead, and smoothed the written message Ortak had
brought across his lap as the bishop retreated into sullen silence. His eyes
burned down at it for a moment, then rose to Ortak once more. "Tell me
more of this Lord Sean and the other heretic leaders."
"Holiness, I've
never seen their like," Ortak said frankly, and the other returned
prisoners nodded agreement. "The man they call Lord Sean is a giant, head
and shoulders taller than any man I've ever seen, with eyes and hair blacker
than night. The one they call Lord Tamman is shorter and looks less strange,
but for the darkness of his skin, yet all of us have heard stories—from our own
men who have seen them in battle, not just the heretics—of the miraculous
strength both share."
" 'Sean,' 'Tamman,'
" Vroxhan snorted. "What names are these?"
"I don't know,
Holiness. Their men say—" Ortak bit his lip.
"What do 'their
men say'?" Bishop Surmal purred, and Ortak swallowed at the look in the
High Inquisitor's eyes.
"Your Grace, I
repeat only what the heretics claim," he said, and paused. Pregnant
silence shivered until High Priest Vroxhan broke it.
"We
understand," he said coldly. "We will not hold you responsible for
lies others may tell." He didn't, Ortak noted sinkingly, say what else the
Circle would hold him responsible for, but at this point he was willing
to settle for whatever mercy he could get.
"Thank you, Holiness,"
he said, and drew a deep breath. "The heretics say these men are warriors
from a land beyond our knowledge, chosen by . . . by the so-called 'angels' as
their champions. They say all of their new weapons and tactics were given to
them by Lord Sean and Lord Tamman. That the two of them are God-touched and can
never be defeated."
A savage hiss ran
through the assembled prelates, and Ortak felt sweat slick his face under its
bandages. He made himself stand as straight as his wounds allowed, meeting High
Priest Vroxhan's burning eyes, and prayed Vroxhan had meant his promise not to
hold him responsible.
"So," the high
priest said at last, his voice an icicle. "I note, Ortak, that you have
not yet mentioned these so-called 'angels.' " Ortak dared not reply, and
Vroxhan smiled a thin, dangerous smile. "I know you've seen them. Tell us
of them."
"Holiness, I have
seen them," Ortak admitted, "but what they actually are, I cannot
say."
"What do they appear
to be, then?" Surmal snapped.
"Your Grace, they
wear the seeming of women. There are two of them, the 'Angel Harry' and the
'Angel Sandy.' " A fresh stir at the outlandish names swept the Circle,
and the high-captain went on doggedly now that he'd begun. "The one they call
Sandy is smaller, with short hair. From all I could learn, it was she who
routed the Guard units initially sent to crush the heresy, and she and Lord
Sean appear to be the heretics' true war leaders. The one they call Harry is
taller than most men, and—forgive me, Your Grace, but you asked—of surpassing
beauty, yet wears an eye patch. From what the heretics told us, it was she who
was wounded and captured by the villagers of Cragsend and the one they call
Sandy who led the demons to her rescue."
"And did they tell you
they were God's messengers?" Surmal demanded.
"No, Your
Grace," Ortak said cautiously.
"What?"
Vroxhan snapped to his feet and glared at the high-captain. "I warn you,
Ortak! We have the written messages of the traitor Stomald himself to claim
they are!"
"I realize that,
Holiness," Ortak's mouth was dust dry, yet he made his voice come out
level, "but Bishop Surmal asked what they say. I did not myself
speak with them, yet their own followers seem perplexed by their insistence
that they not be called 'angel.' The heretics do so anyway, but only
among themselves, never to the ang— To the so-called angels themselves."
"But—" Corada
started, then shook his head and went on almost plaintively. "But we have
reports they wear holy vestments at all times! Why would they do that if they
don't claim to be angels? And why would even heretics follow those who claim to
be mere mortal women yet profane the cloth? What do these madmen want of
us?"
"Your Grace,"
Ortak said, frightened and yet secretly grateful for the opening, "I can't
tell you why they wear the garb they choose or why the heretics follow them,
but Lord Sean himself has told me they seek only to defend themselves. That he
and his companions came to the aid of the heretics only because Mother Church
had proclaimed Holy War against them."
"Lies!" Surmal
thundered. "We are Mother Church, God's chosen shepherds for His
people! When heresy stirs, it must be crushed, root and branch, lest the whole
body of God's people be poisoned and their souls lost to damnation forever! He
who defies us in this defies God Himself, and whatever this 'Lord Sean' claims,
he and his fellows are—must be!—demons sent to destroy us all!"
"Your Grace,"
Ortak said quietly, "I wasn't called to the priesthood, but to serve God
as a soldier, in accordance with the commands of the Temple. It may be that
I've failed in that service, despite all I could do, yet a soldier is all I
know how to be. I tell you not what I believe, but what I was told by Lord
Sean. Whether or not and how he may have lied is for you to judge, Your Grace;
I only answer your questions as best I may."
Vroxhan raised his hand,
cutting off Surmal's fresh, angry retort, and his hooded eyes were thoughtful.
Fresh silence lingered for over a minute before he cleared his throat.
"Very well,
Ortak—speak as a 'soldier' then. What is your estimate of this Lord Sean as
a soldier?"
Ortak gazed back up at
the high priest, and then Vroxhan frowned in surprise as he slowly and
painfully lowered himself to his knees. High-Captain Marhn dared the assembled
prelates' wrath by assisting his wounded commander, but Ortak never took his
eyes from Vroxhan's.
"Holiness, heretic
or no, demon-worshiper or demon-spawn as he may be, I tell you that not once in
a hundred generations has Pardal seen this man's equal as a war captain.
Wherever he may spring from, whatever the source of his knowledge, he is a
master of his trade, and the men he commands will follow where he leads against
any foe."
"Even against God
Himself?" Vroxhan asked very softly.
"Against any
foe, Holiness," Ortak repeated, and closed his eyes at last.
"Holiness, my life is forfeit, if you choose to claim it. I gave of my
very best for God and the Temple, yet I speak not in any effort to excuse my
failure or save myself when I tell you no Guard captain is this man's equal.
His army is far smaller than any of us believed possible, yet no captain has
held a single field against him. As a soldier I know only the art of battle,
Holiness, but that I do know. Do with me as you will, yet for the sake
of Mother Church and the Faith, I beg you to heed me in this. Do not take
this man lightly. Were every Guardsman in both Hylars, Herdaana, and Ishar
gathered in one place, still I fear he would defeat them. Demon or devil
he may be, but as a war captain he is without peer on all Pardal."
The kneeling
high-captain bent his head, and shocked silence filled the chamber.
* * *
"So at last the
enemy has a face and a name," Vroxhan said softly. He and the Inner Circle
had withdrawn to their council chamber, accompanied only by Lord Marshal Surak.
"For all the good
it does us," Corada replied heavily. "If Ortak is correct—"
"He isn't
correct!" Surmal snapped, and turned to Vroxhan. "I claim Ortak for
the Holy Inquisition, Holiness! Whatever else he may or may not have done, he
has fallen into damnation by the respect he grants this demon. For the sake of
Mother Church and his own soul, he must answer to the Inquisitors!"
Surak stirred, and
Vroxhan looked up at him.
"You disagree, Lord
Marshal?" he asked in a dangerous voice.
"Holiness, I serve
the Temple. If the Circle judges that Ortak must answer, then answer he must,
but before you decide, I beg you to weigh his words most carefully."
"You agree
with him?" Corada gasped, but Surak shook his head.
"I didn't say that,
Your Grace. What I said is that his words must be weighed. Mistaken or not,
Ortak is the most experienced officer to have met the demon-worshipers and
survived, and he has spoken to them. Perhaps this has corrupted his soul
and led him into damnation, yet his information is our only firsthand
report of the heretics' leadership. And," Surak looked at Surmal,
"with all due respect, Your Grace, punishing him will not make any truth
he may have uttered untrue."
"Truth? What truth?"
Vroxhan demanded before Surmal could respond.
"The truth that the
demon-worshipers have defeated every army sent against them . . . and that we
have no more armies to send, Holiness." Deathly silence fell, and Surak
went on in a grim, hard voice. "I have forty thousand Guardsmen to
garrison the Temple itself. Aside from them, there are less than ten thousand
of the Guard in all eastern North Hylar. The secular lords of the north have
been defeated—no, My Lords, crushed—as completely as Lord Marshal Rokas
and High-Captain Ortak, and the better part of the levies of Telis, Eswyn, and
Tarnahk with them. We have fifty thousand of the Guard west of the Thirgan Gap
and another seventy thousand in South Hylar, yet they can reach us here only by
ship, and it will take many five-days to bring any sizable portion of that
force to bear. The secular levies of the remaining eastern lands amount to no
more than sixty thousand. They, and the men I have here to guard the Temple,
are all we can throw against the heretics, and every officer who
returned with Ortak reports the same of the demon-worshipers' army. It is far
smaller than our original estimates, yet every man in it appears to be armed
with a rifle which fires more rapidly than a joharn, not less."
"Which means?"
Vroxhan prompted when the lord marshal paused.
"Which means,
Holiness, that I can't stop them," Surak admitted in a voice like crushed
gravel. The prelates stared at him in horror, and he squared his shoulders.
"My Lords, I am your chief captain. My responsibility to you before God
Himself is to tell you the truth, and the truth is that somehow—I do not
pretend to know the manner of it—this 'Lord Sean' has built an army which can
crush any force on Pardal."
"But we're God's
warriors!" Corada cried. "He won't let them defeat us!"
"He has so far,
Your Grace," Surak replied flatly. "Why He should let this happen I
can't say, but to pretend otherwise would violate my sworn oath to serve God
and the Temple to the best of my ability. I've searched for an answer, My
Lords, in prayer and meditation as well as in my map rooms and with my
officers, without finding one. At present, the heretics are less than three
five-day's march from the Temple itself, and the last army in their path has
been destroyed. If you command it, I will gather every man in the Temple and every
man the remaining secular levies can send me and meet the heretics in battle,
and my men and officers will do all that mortal men can do. Yet it is my duty
to tell you our numbers may actually be lower than the heretics', and I fear
our defeat will be complete unless God Himself intervenes."
"He will! He
will!" Corada cried almost desperately.
Surak said nothing, only
looked at Vroxhan, and the high priest's hands clenched under the council
table. He could almost smell the panic Surak's words had produced, yet even in
his own fear, he knew the lord marshal had spoken only the truth. Why? Why was
God letting this happen? The thought battered in his brain, but God sent
no answer, and the silence after Corada's outburst stretched his nerves like an
Inquisitor's rack.
"Are you telling
us, Lord Marshal," he said at last, in a carefully controlled voice,
"that the Temple of God has no choice but to surrender to the
forces of Hell?"
Surak flinched ever so
slightly, but his eyes were level.
"I am telling you, Holiness,
that with the forces available to me, all I and my men can do is die in the
Faith's defense as our oaths require us to. We will honor those oaths if no
other answer can be found, yet I beg you, My Lords, to search your own hearts
and prayers, for whatever answer God demands of us, I do not believe it lies
upon the field of battle."
"What if . . . what
if we accept the heretics' offer to parley?" Bishop Frenaur said
hesitantly. The entire Circle turned on him in horror, but the Bishop of fallen
Malagor met their eyes with a strength he hadn't displayed since Yortown.
"I don't mean we should accept their terms," he said more sharply,
"but the Lord Marshal tells us his forces are too weak to defeat them in
battle. If we pretend to negotiate with them, could we not demand a
cease-fire while we do so? At the least, that would win time for our forces in
western North Hylar and our other lands to reach us!"
"Negotiate
with the powers of Hell?" Surmal cried, but to Vroxhan's surprise, old
Corada straightened in his chair with suddenly hopeful eyes. "Our very
souls would—" Surmal went on wildly, but Corada raised his hand.
"Wait, brother.
Perhaps Frenaur has a point." The High Inquisitor gaped at him, and the
old man went on in a thoughtful voice. "God knows the peril we face. Would
He not expect us to do anything that we can, even to pretending to treat with
demons, to buy time to crush them in the end?"
"Your Grace,"
Surak said gently, "I doubt the heretics would fall into such a trap.
Whatever the source of their intelligence, it's fiendishly accurate. They would
know we were bringing up additional forces and act before we could do so,
and—forgive me, My Lords, but I must repeat this once more—even if we brought
up all of our strength, I fear their army could defeat us if we took the
field against them."
"Wait. Wait, Lord
Marshal," Vroxhan murmured, and his brain raced. "Perhaps this is
God's answer to our prayers," he said slowly, intently, and his eyes
snapped back into focus and settled on Surak's face. "You say we cannot
defeat this 'Lord Sean' in the field, Lord Marshal?"
"No,
Holiness," the soldier said heavily.
"Then perhaps the
answer is not to meet him there," Vroxhan said softly, and his smile was
cold.
"It sounds too good
to be true." Sandy paced up and down the command tent, hands folded behind
her, and her face was troubled.
"Why?" Tamman
retorted. "Because it's what we've asked them to do for weeks?"
"Because it doesn't
fit with anything else they've done since this whole thing
started!" she shot back sharply.
"Perhaps not, My
Lady," Stomald said, "but it does accord with the orders
they've sent their commanders. Perhaps Lord Sean's messengers have finally
convinced Vroxhan to see reason."
"Um." Sandy's
grunt was unhappy, and Sean sat back in his camp chair. He shared her wariness,
but Stomald was right; their remotes had snooped on the Temple's orders to all
its commanders to stand fast until instructed otherwise. Lord Marshal Surak
had, in effect, frozen every force outside Aris itself, in sharp reversal of
his efforts to funnel every available man to the front.
He reached out a long
arm to lift the Temple's illuminated letter from the table and reread it
carefully.
"I have to agree
with Stomald and Tam," he said finally. "It sounds genuine,
and everything we've observed indicates they mean it."
"Maybe, but we
haven't observed everything, now have we?" Sandy shot back. Her
eyes flicked to Tibold, the only person in the tent who didn't know the truth
about their origins—and the reason they couldn't snoop on the Temple
directly—and Sean nodded unhappily. But, damn it, it did all hang
together, and he was sick unto death of slaughtering armies of pawns!
"Tibold?" He
glanced at the ex-Guardsman. "You're the only one who's lived in the
Temple or seen their high command firsthand. What do you think?"
"I don't know, My
Lord," Tibold replied frankly. "Like Lady Sandy, I can't help
thinking it sounds too good to be true, yet they've followed all the proper
forms. Promises of safe passage. An offer of hostages for the safety of our
negotiators. They've even agreed to let us march our entire army to the walls
of the Temple itself!"
"Why not?"
Sandy demanded. "We've proven we can march anywhere we want and defeat any
army they can field, but they know we don't have a siege train. The risk we
could storm the Temple's walls is minimal, so why not invite us to come
ahead when they can't stop us anyway? Can you think of a better way to make us
overconfident?"
"And the
hostages?" Harriet asked. "They're offering to send us a third of the
Guard's senior officers, a hundred upper-priests, twenty bishops, and a
member of the Circle itself! Would they do that if they weren't serious? And
doesn't it make sense for them to at least try to find out what we want?"
"If they wanted to
know that, all they had to do was ask us months ago!" Sandy objected.
"That's true
enough," Sean agreed. "On the other hand, months ago they thought
they could wipe us out. Now they know they can't." He shook his head.
"The situation's changed too much to be certain of anything, Sandy—aside
from the fact that they've finally agreed to parley."
"I don't like
it," she said unhappily. "I don't like it at all. And I especially
don't like the fact that they didn't ask for Stomald to attend but did
ask for both you and Tam." She glared at him. "If they get you two,
they cut off the army's head," she added in English, but Sean shook his
head.
"By this time you
and Harry could lead the troops as well as Tam and I," he said in English.
"Maybe so, but do they
know that?" she shot back. Sean started to reply, then settled for shaking
his head once more, and Stomald eased cautiously into the conversation.
"I understand your
concern, My Lady, but I must be the man they most hate in all the world,"
he pointed out. "If there's one man they would do anything to keep beyond
the precincts of the Temple, that man is me." He, too, shook his head.
"No, My Lady. Lord Sean and Lord Tamman are our war leaders. If they
prefer—as it would seem from their language that they do—to keep any parley on
a purely military level, leaving any doctrinal questions untouched for the
moment, then my exclusion makes perfect sense."
"Father Stomald's
right, My Lady," Tibold said. "And the oaths of good faith they've
offered to swear upon God and their own souls are not such as any priest would
lightly break."
Sandy tossed her head
unhappily and paced faster for several minutes, then sank into another camp
chair and rubbed her temples tiredly.
"I don't like
it," she repeated. "It looks good, and there's a logical—or at least
plausible—answer to every objection I can raise, but they've turned reasonable
too fast, Sean. I know they're up to something."
"Maybe so," he
said gently, "but I don't see any choice but to find out what it is. We're
killing people, Sandy—thousands and thousands of them. If there's any hope at
all of stopping the fighting, then I think we have to explore it. We owe that
to these people."
She sat rigid for a
moment, and then her shoulders slumped.
"I guess you're
right," she said, and her low voice was weary.
* * *
"They've accepted,
Holiness," Lord Marshal Surak said.
He looked less than
pleased, but Vroxhan was God's chosen shepherd. It was his overriding duty to
defeat the forces of Hell and preserve the power of God's Church, and nothing
he did in such a cause could be "wrong," whatever Surak thought. He
stood at the council chamber window, watching distant, jewel-bright talmahks
drift lazily above the cursed ruins of the Old Ones beyond the wall, and said a
silent prayer for all of God's martyrs, then turned back to the Guard's
commander.
"Very well, Lord
Marshal. I shall draft our formal response to their acceptance while you see to
the details."
"As you command,
Holiness," Surak said, and bent to kiss the hem of the high priest's robe
before he withdrew.
* * *
The city Pardalians
called the Temple was an impressive sight as the Angels' Army halted just
beyond cannon shot of its walls. The broken towers of a ruined Imperial city
rose behind it, the shortest of the shattered stubs still three times the
walls' height, and a single structure dominated its center. Most of the Temple
was built of native stone, exquisitely dressed and finished with mosaic
frescoes exalting the glory of God (and His Church), but the Sanctum was a
massive bunker of white, glittering ceramacrete, untouched by any adornment. It
clashed wildly with the spires and minarets about it, yet there was a strange
harmony to it, as if the rest of the city had been deliberately planned and
built to complement the Sanctum by its very contrast.
Sean stood on a small
hill while the command tent went up behind him, and clouds of dust drifted
across a cloudless blue sky as the army prepared its camp. Promise of truce or
no, he and Tibold were taking no chances, and each brigade kept one regiment
under arms while the other two collected their mattocks and shovels. By the
time night fell, the entire army would be covered by earthworks which would
have made a Roman general proud, and they outnumbered the city's garrisoning
Guardsmen by fifty percent. Whatever else might happen, he was confident no
surprise attack would overwhelm his men.
He frowned and tugged on
his nose as a familiar mental itch stirred anew. He wasn't about to admit that
part of him shared Sandy's misgivings. If he told her that, she'd be quite
capable of singlehandedly turning the whole damned army around and marching
back north, so he had no intention of breathing a word of it, but it was one
reason he approved of the army's readiness to dig itself in. His troops were as
hopeful as he that the fighting might end, yet they were wary and alert, as
well, and that was good.
He sighed. They couldn't
operate remotes in the Temple, and Brashan's orbital arrays were restricted to
pure optical mode lest active systems set off the automated defenses, but those
arrays had reported zero movement of troops into the area, exactly as High
Priest Vroxhan had promised, and the Guardsmen actually inside the walls seemed
to be going about routine duties and drill. There were some signs of heightened
readiness, but that was inevitable with the dreaded demon-worshipers encamped
just outside the Temple's North Gate.
No, he told himself
again, everything they could see looked perfect. The parley might achieve
nothing, but at least the Temple seemed ready to negotiate in good faith, and
that was a priceless opportunity.
He turned from the
walls. The hostages were due to arrive early tomorrow, and he wanted another
word with Tibold. The last thing they needed was for some hothead on their
side to wreck things by abusing one of the hostages!
* * *
High Priest Vroxhan
stood on the walls and watched the fires of the heretic host glitter against
the night. He knew the demon-worshipers were less numerous than that seeming
galaxy of fires might suggest, yet his heart was heavy at the thought of
allowing such blasphemers so close to God's own city. And, he admitted, at the
price of his own plan to break them for all time.
He turned his head as a
foot sounded on the wall's stone. Bishop Corada stood beside him, gazing out
over their enemies while the night breeze ruffled his fringe of white hair, and
his face was far calmer than Vroxhan felt.
"Corada—" he
began, but the old man shook his head serenely.
"No, Holiness. If
it's God's will that I die in His service, well, I've had a long life, and the
risk is necessary. We both know that, Holiness."
Vroxhan rested a hand on
the bishop's shoulder and squeezed, unable to find the words to express the
emotions in his heart. The suggestion had been Corada's own, yet that made it
no easier, and the old man's courage shamed him. Corada smiled at him and
reached up to pat the hand on his shoulder gently.
"We've come a long
way together, you and I, Holiness," he said. "I know you used to
think me a blustering old bag of piss and wind—" Vroxhan started to
interrupt, but Corada shook his head. "Oh, come now, Holiness! Of course
you did—just as I used to think old Bishop Kithmar, when I was your age. And,
truth to tell, I suppose in many ways I am an old bag of piss and wind.
We tend to get that way as we grow older, I think. Still," he gazed back
out over the forest of campfires, "sometimes old dodderers like me can see
a bit more clearly than those of you with your lives still before you, and
there's something I want to say to you before . . . well—" He shrugged.
"What?" The
hoarseness of Vroxhan's own voice surprised him, and Corada sighed.
"Just this,
Holiness: perhaps not all the demon-worshipers have said should be
disregarded."
"What?"
Vroxhan stared at the old man, the staunchest defender of the Faith of them all
after High Inquisitor Surmal himself, in shock.
"Oh, not this
nonsense about 'angels'! But the very thing that made it possible for them to
come this far is the kernel of truth amid their lies. We know we serve God, for
His Voice would tell us if it were otherwise, yet Mother Church has grown too
distant from her flock, Holiness. Stomald is a damnable, heretical traitor, yet
his lies could never have succeeded did the people of Pardal truly see us as
their shepherds. I know Malagor has always been restive, but have you not heard
reports of the heretics' denunciations of the Temple? Of its wealth? Of its
secular power and the arrogance of Mother Church's bishops?"
The old man turned
earnestly to his high priest and reached out to rest both hands on Vroxhan's
shoulders.
"Holiness, this
business of bishops who see their flocks but twice a year, of temples gilded
with gold squeezed from the faithful, of princes who rule only on Mother
Church's sufferance—these things must change, or what we face today will not
end tomorrow. Mother Church must rededicate herself to winning her flock's love
and devotion or, in time, other heretics will arise, and we will lose not
simply our people's obedience, but their souls, as well. I'm an old man,
Holiness. Even without the risk I run tomorrow, the problems I foresee wouldn't
come to pass before I was safely buried, but I tell you now that we have
become corrupt. We have tasted the power of princes, not just of priests, and
that power will destroy all Mother Church stands for if we allow it. In my
heart, I've come to believe that is God's purpose in allowing the
demon-worshipers to come so near to success. To warn us that we—that you—must
make changes to see that it never happens again."
Vroxhan stared at the
simple-hearted old man, tasting the iron tang of Corada's sincerity, and his
heart went out to him. The purity of his faith was wonderful to behold, yet
even as tears stung Vroxhan's eyes, he knew Corada was wrong. The authority of
Mother Church was God's authority, hard won after centuries of struggle. To
return to the old ways when the cold steel of power had not underlain her
decrees was to court the madness of the Schismatic Wars and permit the very
lies and heresies which had spawned the army beyond the Temple's walls to
flourish unchecked. No, God's work was too vital to entrust to the
simple-minded, pastoral bishops Corada's tired old heart longed for, yet Vroxhan
could never say that to him. Could never explain why he was wrong, why his
beautiful dream could be no more than a dream, forever. Not when Corada had so
willingly accepted his own fate to preserve Mother Church and the sanctity of
the Faith. And because he could never tell Corada those things, High Priest
Vroxhan smiled and touched the old man's cheek with gentle fingers.
"I shall think upon
what you've said, Corada," he lied softly, "and what I can do, I
will. I promise you."
"Thank you,
Holiness," Corada said even more softly. He gave the high priest's
shoulders one last squeeze and raised his head. His nostrils flared as he
inhaled the cool sweetness of the night's air, and then he released the high
priest, bowed once to him, and walked slowly away into the darkness.
* * *
"Well, here they
come," Sean muttered to Tamman.
"Yeah. Hard to
believe we may actually have made it."
The two of them stood
together, flanked by their senior captains, and watched the column emerge from
the city gates. A score of Guard dragoons led the way, joharns peace-bonded
into their saddle scabbards with elaborate twists of scarlet cord. Twice as
many infantry followed under the snapping crimson banners of the Church, and
behind them came the mounted officers of the Guard and the clerics the Circle
had designated as hostages. A hundred priests and twenty bishops in the full
blue-and-gold glory of their vestments surrounded a litter of state, and Sean's
enhanced vision zoomed in on the litter. Bishop Corada, fourth in seniority in
the Inner Circle, sat amid its cushions, and Sean sighed in relief. Corada's
presence as a hostage for the safety of the Angels' Army's negotiators had been
the crowning proof of the Circle's sincerity, and he was vastly relieved to see
him at last.
"Looks like they're
serious after all, Sandy," he subvocalized over his com.
"We'll see."
Her response was so grim he winced, and he wished with all his heart that she
could be here this morning. But that was impossible. The Temple would neither
meet with nor even acknowledge "the angels' " existence, and Sandy
and Harriet had taken themselves elsewhere with the dawn.
He brushed the thought
aside as the head of the column reached him. The escorting honor guards tried
to hide their anxiety behind professional smartness, but their nervously roving
eyes betrayed them, and Sean couldn't blame them. They were pure window
dressing, a sop to the importance of the hostages. If anything went wrong, the
"heretical" force about them would crush them like gnats and never even
notice it had done so.
A white-haired,
magnificently uniformed officer with the heavy golden chain of a high-captain
dismounted and advanced on the waiting Malagorans. He'd obviously been briefed
on who to look for, and Sean wasn't exactly hard to spot as he towered over the
Pardalians about him.
"Lord Sean,"
the Guardsman touched his breastplate in formal salute, "I am High-Captain
Kerist, second-in-command to Lord Marshal Surak."
"High-Captain
Kerist." Sean returned the salute, then nodded to the pavilions which had
been erected near at hand. "As you see, High-Captain, we've prepared a
place for you and our other visitors"—Kerist's eyes glittered with wintry
amusement at Sean's choice of nouns— "to await our return. I trust you'll
all be comfortable, and please inform one of my aides if you have any needs
we've failed to anticipate."
"Thank you,"
Kerist said. He gave quiet orders to the escort, and the hostages moved towards
the pavilions. Sean watched them go and felt a small temptation to go over and
introduce himself to Corada, but only a small one. The Circle's decision to
meet in the Church Chancery rather than the Sanctum signaled its intent to keep
this a matter between soldiers, at least initially, and there was no point
risking misunderstandings.
"This is Captain
Harkah, my nephew," Kerist said, indicating a much younger officer who'd
dismounted beside him. "He'll be your guide to the parley site."
"Thank you,
High-Captain. In that case, Lord Tamman and I should be going. I hope to have
the chance to speak further with you when I return."
"As God wills, Lord
Sean," Kerist said politely, and Sean hid a smile as they exchanged
salutes once more and the high-captain moved away to join the other hostages.
An entire regiment of riflemen stood sentry duty around the pavilions, both to
insure their privacy and to keep them out of mischief, and Sean glanced at
Tamman.
"Let's do it,"
he said shortly in English.
"May the Force be
with us," Tamman replied solemnly in the same language, and despite his tension,
Sean grinned, then turned to Tibold.
"I wish you were
coming along," he said with quiet sincerity, "but with me and Tam
both in the city, I need you here."
"Understood, Lord
Sean." Tibold spoke calmly, but there was a parental anxiety in his eyes as
he faced his towering young commander. "You be careful in there."
"I will. And you
stay ready out here."
"We will."
"Good."
Sean squeezed the
ex-Guardsman's hand firmly, then mounted his own branahlk. He would vastly
prefer to have met the Temple's representatives in some neutral spot well away
from either army, but things didn't work that way here. The Inner Circle would
treat with the heretics only from within the walls of its city, and Pardalian
negotiating tradition supported its position. As part of its offer to parley,
the Circle had extended the traditional invitation for Sean and Tamman to bring
along a powerful bodyguard, as well as providing hostages for their safety. At
Tibold's insistence, Sean had held out for the biggest security force he could
get, and a full brigade would accompany them into the city. Neither he nor
Tibold expected eighteen hundred men to make much difference if things went
sour, but they should at least be a pointed warning to any fanatic tempted to
disagree with the Circle's decision to negotiate.
The rest of the Angels'
Army was at instant readiness for combat. They hadn't been blatant about it,
but they hadn't hidden it, either. In fact, they wanted the Temple to
know their guard was up.
Sean drew rein beside
Tamman and Captain Harkah and nodded to High-Captain Folmak. The
miller-turned-brigadier and his First Brigade deserved to be here for this
moment, and he smiled hugely.
"Ready to proceed,
Lord Sean!" he barked.
"Then let's,"
Sean replied, and the pipes began to drone as the column moved off.
Sean, Tamman, and
Captain Harkah followed the vanguard as First Brigade marched down the North
Way, one of the four principal avenues that converged on the Sanctum itself,
and Sean marveled at the city's size and beauty. The Church had lavished
Pardalian centuries of wealth and artistry upon its capital, and it showed. Yet
for all the Temple's beauty, Sean sensed an underlying arrogance in its
spacious buildings and broad streets. This was more than a city of religion; it
was an imperial capital, mistress of its entire world, exulting as much in its
secular power as in the glory of God. It made him uncomfortable, and he
wondered how much of that stemmed from distaste and how much from knowing the
trap this city could become if something went wrong.
He watched the Guard
pikemen who lined the street as an honor guard. They were only a single rank
deep, too spread out to pose any threat, but he noted the wary eye Folmak's
officers kept upon them. Tibold had insisted that the negotiators'
"bodyguards" should march with loaded weapons, and Sean hadn't
argued. Now he wondered if he should have. If someone thought he saw a
threatening movement and opened up . . .
He snorted at his own
ability to find things to worry about and reminded himself every man in
Folmak's brigade was a veteran. Poised on a hair trigger or no, they knew
better than to fire without orders—unless, of course, some maniac was crazy
enough actually to attack them!
He turned his head and
smiled at Tamman, hoping he looked as calm as his friend, and made himself
relax.
High Priest Vroxhan
stood on the Chancery roof and gazed impatiently up the axe-straight North Way.
He'd chosen this spot for the parley because it stood on the south side of the
Temple's largest square, the Place of Martyrs, and despite his tension he
smiled grimly at the aptness of that name.
The van of the heretic
column came into sight, and the high priest's hard eyes blazed. Soon, he
thought. Very soon, now.
* * *
"Sean!"
Sean's head snapped up
as Sandy screamed his name. Not over the com—in person!
He whipped around in the
saddle, and his face twisted in mingled disbelief and fury as a very small
figure in the breastplate and body armor of an officer spurred her branahlk forward.
"What the hell
do you think—?" he began in English, but then her expression registered.
"Sean, it's a
trap!" she shouted in the same language.
"What?"
Her branahlk sent the
last few men scampering aside as she forced it up beside him.
"Aren't you using
your implants?!"
"Of course not! If
the computer picked them up—"
"Damn it, there's
no time for that! Kick them up—now!"
He stared at her, then
brought up his implanted sensors, and his face went pale as they picked up the
solid blocks of armed men closing in down the side streets which paralleled the
North Way.
For one terrible moment,
his brain completely froze. They were ten kilometers from the gates, halfway to
the city's center. If he tried to turn around, those flanking pikes would close
in through every intersection and cut his column to pieces. But if he didn't
retreat—
He jerked his mind back
to life, and his thoughts flashed like lightning. The column was still moving
forward, unaware of the trap into which he'd led it, and so were the Guard formations
closing in upon it. They were almost into a huge, paved square—it was over a
kilometer and a half across, and he could see the enormous fountains at its
center splashing merrily in the sunlight—and the Temple's intention was
obvious. Once his men were out into the open, the ambushers would close in from
all directions and crush them. But no attackers were following behind
them, so if the Guard wanted to hit them—
"Warn Harry and
Stomald!" he snapped, and turned in the saddle. "Folmak!"
"Lord Sean?"
Folmak's face was perplexed. He couldn't understand English, but he'd
recognized their tones, and his combat instincts had quivered instantly to
life.
"It's a
trap—they're going to ambush us when we hit that square up ahead." The
captain paled, but Sean went on urgently. "We can't go back. Our only
chance is to go ahead and hope they don't guess we know what's coming. Drop
back and pass the word. They're still several streets over, keeping out of
sight, and they'll probably wait to close in until most of the column's into
the square, so here's what we're going to do—"
* * *
"A trap?"
Tibold Rarikson stared at the Angel Harry in horror. She couldn't be serious!
But her strained face and the fear in her single eye told him differently. He
stared at her for one more moment, then wheeled away, shouting for his
officers.
* * *
High Priest Vroxhan
smiled triumphantly as the heretics began entering the Place of Martyrs. He
could just see the first Guardsmen moving into position, and other troops,
invisible to him here, had closed the North Way far behind the
demon-worshipers. So "Lord Sean" was a war captain without peer, was
he? Vroxhan barked a laugh as he recalled Ortak's whining warning.
If the heretics believe
"Lord Sean" and "Lord Tamman" unbeatable, they're about to
learn differently! And let us see how their morale responds when we drag their
accursed "angels' " champions to the Inquisition in chains!
His smile grew cruel as
the heretics continued into the square. In just minutes, Lord Marshal Surak's
handpicked commanders would send their men forward and—
His smile died. The
infidels had stopped advancing! They were— What were they doing?
* * *
"Form square! Form
square!"
Under-Captain Harkah
twisted around in disbelief as Sean's amplified voice bellowed the command and
whistles shrilled. Two companies of Folmak's lead battalion—primed by quiet
warnings from their officers—faced instantly to the left and right and marched
directly away from one another. The rest of the regiment advanced another fifty
meters, then spread across the growing space between them in a two-deep firing
line. It wasn't a proper square—more of a three-sided, hollow rectangle, short
sides anchored on the north side of the Place of Martyrs—and it grew steadily
as more men double-timed out of the North Way and slotted into position.
"Lord Sean!"
the Guardsman cried. "What do you think—?!"
His question died as he
suddenly found himself looking down the muzzle of Sean's pistol at a range of
fifteen centimeters.
"In about ten
minutes," Sean said in a deadly voice, "the Temple Guard is going to
attack us. Are you trying to tell me you didn't know?"
"Attack—?"
Harkah stared at Sean in disbelief. "You're mad!" he whispered.
"High Priest Vroxhan himself swore to receive you as envoys!"
"Did he?" The
muzzle of Sean's pistol twitched like a pointer. "Is that his negotiating
team?" he grated.
Harkah whipped around in
the indicated direction, and his face went bone-white as the leading ranks of
Guard pike companies suddenly appeared, filling every opening on the east,
west, and south sides of the Place of Martyrs. There were thousands of them,
and even as he watched, they flowed forward and fell into fighting formation.
"Lord Sean,
I—" he began, then swallowed. "My God! The hostages! Bishop
Corada! Uncle Kerist!"
"You mean you didn't
know?" Despite his fury, Sean found himself tempted to believe Harkah's
surprise—and fear for his uncle—were genuine.
"This is
madness!" Harkah whipped back to Sean. "Madness! Even if it
succeeds, it will do nothing to the rest of your army!"
"Maybe High Priest
Vroxhan disagrees with you," Sean said grimly.
"It can't be His
Holiness! He swore upon his very soul to protect you as his own people!"
"Well, someone
wasn't listening to him." Sean's voice was harsh, and he nodded to one of
Folmak's aides. The Malagoran rode up beside Harkah, and the Guard captain
didn't even turn his head as his pistols and sword were taken. "For the
moment, Captain Harkah, I'll assume you didn't know this was
coming," Sean said flatly. "Don't do anything to make me change my
mind."
Harkah only stared
sickly at him, and Sean turned his branahlk and trotted into the center of his
shallow square. He was too outnumbered to hold back a reserve; aside from
individual squads to cover the smaller streets opening onto the Place of
Martyrs in his rear, all three regiments of the First Brigade were in firing
line, and the Guardsmen had paused. Even from here he could see their surprise
at the speed with which the Malagorans had fallen into formation, and he swept
his eyes over his own men.
"All right, boys!
We're in the shit, and the only way out is through those bastards over there!
Are you with me?"
"Aye!"
The answer was a hard, angry bellow, and he grinned fiercely.
"Fix
bayonets!" Metal clicked all about him as bayonets glittered in the
morning light. "No one fires until I give the word!" he shouted, and
drew his sword. "Pipers, give 'em a tune!"
* * *
Vroxhan cursed in fury
as the heretics snapped from an extended, vulnerable column into a compact,
bayonet-bristling square in what seemed a single heartbeat. He'd seen the Guard
at drill enough to recognize the lethal speed with which the demon-worshipers
had reacted, and he snarled another curse at his own commanders for their
hesitation. Why weren't they charging? Why weren't they closing with the
heretics to finish them before they got set?
And then, clear in the
stillness, he heard their accursed bagpipes wailing the song which had been
banned since the Schismatic Wars, and swore more vilely yet as he recognized
the wild, defiant music of "Malagor the Free."
* * *
"Here they
come!" Sean shouted as the Guard pikes swept down. "Wait for the
word!"
"God wills
it!"
The deep, bass thunder
of the Guard's battle cry roared its challenge, and the phalanx lunged forward
in a column eighty men across and a hundred men deep. That formation wasn't
even a hammer; it was an unstoppable battering ram, hurled straight at the
heart of Sean's square in a forest of bitter pikeheads driven by the mass of
eight thousand charging bodies. Something primitive and terrified gibbered deep
within him with the sure and certain knowledge that it couldn't be stopped,
that it had to break through, shatter the formation that spelled
survival, and he felt the pound of his heart and the fountains' spray on his
cheek as his eyes darted to where Sandy sat taut and silent on her own branahlk
at his side. A terrible spasm of fear for the woman he loved twisted him, but
he drove it down. He couldn't afford it, and his eyes hardened and moved back
to the oncoming enemy.
"All right,
boys!" He raised his voice but kept it calm, almost conversational.
"Let 'em get a little closer. Wait for it. Wait for it! Wait—" His
brain whirred like a computer as the range dropped to two hundred meters, and
then he rose in his stirrups and his sword slashed down.
"By platoons—fire!"
The sudden, stupendous
concussion rocked the Temple, and a pall of smoke choked the morning. First
Brigade had sixteen hundred men, a total of eighty platoons, in a line four
hundred meters long and two ranks deep, and the standard reload time for Sean's
riflemen was seventeen seconds. But that was the minimum the drill
sergeants demanded; an experienced man could do it in less under the right
conditions of weather and motivation, and today, Folmak's brigade did it in
twelve. The fire and smoke started at the line's extreme left and rolled down
its face like the wrath of God, each platoon firing its own volley on the heels
of its neighbor to the left; by the time the rolling explosion reached the
line's right end, the left end had already reloaded and the lethal ballet began
afresh.
One hundred and twenty
shots crashed out each second—all aimed at a target only eighty men wide. Only
superbly trained troops with iron discipline could have done it, but First
Brigade was the Old Brigade. It had the training and discipline, and
cringing ears heard nothing but the thunder, not even the wail of the pipes or
the screams as whole ranks of Guardsmen went down in writhing tangles. Sheer
weight of numbers kept the men behind them coming, but the shattering volleys
were one smashing, unending drumroll. Waves of flame blasted out from the
square like a hurricane, and the Guard had never experienced anything like it.
The shock value of such massed, continuous, rifle fire was unspeakable, and the
Guard's charge came apart in panic and dead men.
* * *
High-Captain Kerist's
head whipped up. The whiplash crack of massed volleys was faint with distance,
but he'd seen too many battlefields to mistake it. He jerked up out of his camp
chair, wine goblet spilling from his fingers, and twisted around to stare in
horror at the Temple's walls.
He was still staring
when another sound, lower but much closer to hand, snapped his eyes back to his
immediate surroundings, and he paled. The sound had been the cocking of
gunlocks as an entire regiment of heretics appeared out of the very ground, and
he looked straight into the muzzles of their bayoneted weapons.
The honor guard froze,
and sweat beaded Kerist's brow. Horrified gasps went up from the priests and
bishops, but the Guard officers among the hostages stood as frozen as Kerist,
and unbearable tension hovered as a Malagoran officer stepped forward.
"Drop your
weapons!" The honor guard hesitated, and the Malagoran snarled. "Drop
them or die!" he barked.
The guards' commander
turned to Kerist in raw appeal, and the high-captain swallowed.
"Obey," he
rasped, and watched the Malagoran riflemen tautly as his men dropped their
weapons.
"Move away from
them," the Malagoran officer said harshly, and the Guardsmen backed up.
"Any man who's still armed, step forward and drop your weapons. If we find
them on you later, we'll kill you where you stand!"
Kerist squared his
shoulders and moved forward. His sword was peace-bonded into its sheath, and he
slipped the baldric over his head and bent to lay it with the discarded pikes
and joharns, then turned to his officers.
"You heard the
order!" His own voice was as harsh as the Malagoran's, and he breathed a
silent prayer of thanks as the senior Guardsmen walked slowly forward to obey
and no shots were fired. The Malagoran waited until every sword had been surrendered,
then raised his voice once more.
"Now, all of you,
back to the central pavilion!" The hostages and their disarmed guards
obeyed, stumbling in fear and confusion. Only Kerist held his position, and the
Malagoran officer's lip curled dangerously. He advanced on the high-captain
with sword in one hand and pistol in the other. "Perhaps you didn't hear
me." His voice was cold, and metal clicked as he cocked the pistol and
aimed it squarely between Kerist's eyes.
"I heard, and I
will obey," Kerist said as levelly as he could, "but I ask what you
intend to do with us?"
A faint flicker of
respect glimmered in the Malagoran's eyes. He lowered his pistol, but his face
was hard and hating.
"For now,
nothing," he grated. "But if Lord Sean and Lord Tamman are killed,
you'll all answer with your lives for your treachery."
"Captain,"
Kerist said quietly over the distant musketry, "I swear to you that I know
nothing of what's happening. Lord Marshal Surak himself assured me your envoys
would be safe."
"Then he lied to you!"
the Malagoran spat. "Now go with the others!"
Kerist held the other
man's eyes a moment longer, then turned away. He marched back to the huddled,
frightened hostages, his spine straight as a sword, and men scattered aside as
he made his way directly to Bishop Corada. He could smell the terror about him,
yet there was no terror, not even any fear, in Corada's eyes, and somehow that
was the most terrifying thing of all.
"Your Grace?"
The high-captain's voice was flat, its very lack of emphasis a demand for an
explanation, and Corada smiled sadly at him.
"Forgive us,
Kerist, but it was necessary."
"His Holiness lied?"
Even now Kerist couldn't—wouldn't—believe God's own shepherd would perjure his
very soul, but Corada only nodded.
"We are all in
God's hands now, my son," he said softly.
* * *
The shattering roar of
massed musketry faded into a terrible chorus of screams and moans as the last
Guardsman reeled back, and Sean coughed on reeking smoke. He hadn't really
thought they could do it, but the First had held. The closest Guardsmen were
heaped less than twenty meters from his line, but none had been able to break
through that withering curtain of fire. Thank God I listened to Uncle Hector
explain how the Brits broke Napoleon's columns! This was the first time
he'd actually tried the tactic, and sheer surprise had done almost as much as
the weight of fire itself to break the Guardsmen.
Which means the bastards
won't be as easy to break next time, but—
"Lord Sean!"
He turned in surprise as Captain Harkah approached him. The Guardsman was pale
as he stared out at the carnage, but his mouth was firm.
"What?" Sean
asked shortly, his mind already trying to grapple with what to do next.
"Lord Sean, this has
to be some madman's work. Lord Marshal Surak personally assured my uncle you
and Lord Tamman would be safe, and—"
"Time, Captain! I
don't have time for this!"
"I—" Harkah
closed his mouth with a click. "You're right, Lord Sean. But the last
thing my uncle told me to do was guide you safely to the Chancery. Whatever's
happening here, those are my orders—to see to your safety. And because
they are, you have to know that the Guard maintains an artillery park only ten
blocks in that direction." He pointed east, and Sean's eyebrows rose in
surprise, for he was telling the truth. Brashan's orbital arrays had mapped the
city well enough for Sean to know that.
"And?" he said
impatiently.
"And if they bring
up guns, not even your fire can save you," Harkah said urgently. "You
can't make a stand here, My Lord—not for long. You must move on,
quickly!"
Sean frowned. Improbable
as it seemed, perhaps the young man was telling the truth about his own
ignorance. And perhaps it wasn't so improbable after all. Harkah and, for that
matter, all the hostages, could have been sacrificial lambs, sent to the
slaughter themselves to lead him to it.
But whatever the truth
of that, Harkah was right. He might be able to hold off pikes here—as long as
his ammunition lasted—but it was a killing ground for artillery.
"Thank you for the
warning," he said more courteously to the captain, then waved him back and
brought up his com. "Harry?"
"Sean!
You're alive!" his twin gasped.
"For now," he
said flatly.
"How bad—?"
"We're intact and,
so far, we haven't lost anyone, but we can't stay here. We have to move. Are
you in touch with Brashan?"
"Yes!"
"What's our rear
look like?"
"Not good,
Sean." It was Brashan's voice, and the Narhani sounded grim. "It
looks like they've got at least ten thousand pikemen filling in to cut you off
from the gates. You'll never be able to cut your way through them."
Sean grunted, and his
brain raced. Brashan was right. A street fight would cramp his formations,
preventing him from bringing enough fire to bear to blast a path, and once it
got down to an unbroken pike wall against bayoneted rifles his men would melt
like snow in a furnace. But if he couldn't retreat and he couldn't stay here,
either, then what—?
"What's Tibold
doing, Harry?"
"We're going to
storm the gates," Harriet said flatly, and Sean winced. the Temple's
curtain wall was ten meters thick at the base, and the tunnel through it was
closed by three consecutive portcullis-covered gates and pierced with murder
holes for boiling oil. He shuddered, but at least he hadn't smelled any smoke
when he came through. If Tibold moved fast, he might get through and
take the gatehouses before the defenders got set.
Might.
He bit his lip, weighing
his own fear and desire to live against the terrible casualties Tibold might
suffer, then drew a deep breath.
"All right, Harry,
listen to me. Tell Tibold he can go ahead, but he is not—I repeat, he is not—to
throw away lives trying to get us out if he can't break in quickly!"
"But, Sean—"
"Listen to
me!" he barked. "So far only one brigade's in trouble; don't let him
break the entire army trying to save us. We're not worth it."
"You are! You
are!" she protested frantically.
"No, we're
not," he said more gently. He heard her weeping over the com and cleared
his throat. "And another thing," he said softly. "You
stay out of the fighting, whatever happens."
"I'm coming in
after you!"
"No, you're
not!" He closed his eyes. "Sandy and Tam are both in here with me. If
we don't make it, you and Brashan are all that's left, and you're the
only one who can talk to the army. Brash sure can't! If they get you, too, the
bastards win!"
"Oh, Sean,"
she whispered, and her pain cut him like a knife.
"I know, Harry. I
know." He smiled sadly. "Don't worry. I've got good people here; if
anyone can make it, we can. But if we don't—" He drew a deep breath.
"If we don't, I love you. Take Stomald home to Mom and Dad, Harry."
He cut the com link and
turned back to Tamman, Sandy, and Folmak.
"Tibold's going to
try to storm the gates." Folmak didn't ask how he knew that, and the other
two simply nodded. "If he makes it in, he may be able to fight his way
through to us, but in the meantime, we've got to fort up. There's a Guard
artillery depot to the east. If they bring the guns up, we're in trouble, and
it's as good a place as any to head for for now. Tam, you know the spot?"
Tamman nodded. "Good. Folmak, give Lord Tamman your lead regiment. He'll
seize the depot, and the rest of us will cover his back. Clear?"
"Clear, Lord
Sean," the Malagoran said grimly.
"Then let's move
out before they come at us again."
"Get those guns up!
Move! Move, damn you!"
Tibold Rarikson raged
back and forth, eyes blazing, as the Angels' Army swarmed like an angry hive.
It was insane to launch a major assault with no preplanning, yet he forced his
fear aside and drove his men like one of the demons the Temple claimed they
worshiped. He knew Lord Sean had beaten off the first attack, but he also knew
his commander was trapped inside a city of two million enemies.
A stream of arlaks
rumbled past him, nioharqs lowing, and he gripped his hands together behind
him. The top of the Temple's wall mounted its own guns, but it was far narrower
than its base, which limited recoil space. The Guard could put nothing heavier
than arlaks up there, and he had room to deploy far more pieces than they could
bring to bear. Unfortunately, their guns were protected by stone
battlements, whereas his people lacked even the time to dig gun pits. Spurts of
smoky thunder already crowned the wall, yet he had no choice but to send his
own artillery forward. The North Gate had slammed shut in his face; without
scaling ladders, his only hope was to batter it down, and he already knew how
hideous his losses were going to be.
Regiments ran to join
the assault column, but there was no time to insure proper organization. It was
all going to be up to the battalion and company commanders, and Tibold breathed
a prayer of thanks for the months of combat experience those men had gained.
"Tibold!"
He turned in surprise as
the Angel Harry grabbed his right arm. Before he could speak, she'd yanked it
out and strapped something around it.
"My Lady?" He
peered at the strange bracelet in confusion. It was made of some material he'd
never seen before, with a small grill of some sort and two lights that blazed
bright green even in full sunlight.
"This is called a
'com,' Tibold. Speak into this—" the angel tapped the grill "—and
Sean and I will be able to hear you. Hold it close to your ear, and you'll be
able to hear us, as well." Tibold gawked at her, then closed his mouth and
nodded. "I'll try to tell you what's happening in the city as you
advance," she went on urgently, her beautiful face strained, "but
there're so many buildings the information I can give you may be limited. I'll
do my best, and at least you can talk to Sean this way."
"Thank you, My
Lady!" Tibold gazed into her single anxious eye for a moment, then
surprised himself by throwing his arms around her. He hugged her tightly, and
his voice was low. "We'll get them out, My Lady. I swear it."
"I know you
will," she whispered, hugging him back, and his eyes widened as she kissed
his whiskered cheek. "Now go, Tibold. And take care of yourself. We all
need you."
He nodded again and
turned to run for the head of the column.
His guns were
unlimbering in a solid line, sixty arlaks hub-to-hub in a shallow curve before
the gate. Defending guns lashed at them, but even at this short range and
packed so tightly, an individual arlak was a small target for the best gunner.
Their crews were another matter. He heard men scream as round shot tore them
apart, but like his infantry, these men had learned their horrible trade well.
Fresh gunners stepped forward to take the places of the dead as gun captains
primed and cocked their locks, and Tibold raised the strange bracelet—the
"com"—to his mouth.
"Lord Sean?"
"Tibold? Is that
you?" Lord Sean sounded surprised, and the Angel Harry's voice came over
the link, speaking the angels' language.
"I gave him a
security com, Sean. If the computer hasn't reacted to your implants or our com
traffic—"
"Good girl!"
Sean said quickly, and shifted to Pardalian. "What is it, Tibold?"
"We're ready to
come after you. Where are you?"
"We've occupied a
Guard ordnance depot near the Place of Martyrs." Despite his obvious
tension, Lord Sean managed a chuckle. "Good thing the First has ex-Guard
joharns. There must be a million rounds of smoothbore ammo in the place when
the rifle bullets run out!"
"Hold on, Lord
Sean! We'll get you out."
"We'll be here,
Tibold. Be careful."
Tibold lowered the com
and turned to his artillery commander.
"Fire!"
* * *
High Priest Vroxhan
stormed into the conference room Lord Marshal Surak had converted into a
command post, and his face was livid. Guns thudded in the background from the
direction of North Gate, but the furious high priest ignored them as he bore
down on Surak.
"Well, Lord
Marshal?" he snapped. "What do you have to say for yourself? What
went wrong?"
"Holiness,"
Surak held his temper only with difficulty, despite Vroxhan's rank, "I
told you this would be difficult. Most of my men knew no more of what we intended
than the heretics did—or High-Captain Kerist." His voice was sharp, and
Vroxhan blinked as the lord marshal's eyes blazed angrily into his. "You
insisted on 'surprise,' Holiness, and you got it—for everyone!"
The high priest began a
hot reply, then strangled it stillborn. He could deal with Surak's insolence
later; for now, he needed this man.
"Very well, I stand
rebuked. But what happened to the attack in the Place of Martyrs?"
"Somehow the
heretics realized what was coming. Something must have warned them only after
they entered the city, or they simply wouldn't have come, but they guessed in
time to form battle-lines before our pikes could hit them. As for what happened
then, you saw as well as I, I'm sure, Holiness. No other army on Pardal could have
produced that much fire; our men never expected anything like it, and they
broke. I estimate," he added bitterly, "that close to half of them
were killed or wounded first."
"And now?"
"Now we have them
penned up in the Tanners Street ordnance depot." The lord marshal
grimaced. "That, unfortunately, means they now have plenty of ammunition
when their own runs out, but we control all the streets between them and the
gates. Their musketry won't help them much in a street fight, and we can starve
them out, if we must. Assuming we have time."
"Time?"
Vroxhan repeated sharply, and Surak nodded grimly.
"The rest of their
army's about to assault North Gate, Holiness, and at your orders, we didn't
tell the men on the wall what we intended, either."
"You mean they may
actually break into the Temple?!" Vroxhan gasped.
"I mean, Holiness,
that our guns are manned and we're rushing in more infantry, but if they hit
fast enough, they may get through the tunnel before we can ready the oil. If
that happens, then, yes, they can break in."
"Dear God!"
Vroxhan whispered, and it was the lord marshal's turn to smile. It was a grim
smile, but it wasn't defeated.
"Holiness, I would
never have chosen to fight them here, but it may actually work in our
favor." Vroxhan looked at him in disbelief, and the lord marshal made an
impatient gesture. "Holiness, I've told you again and again: it's their
range and firepower that makes them so dangerous in the field. Well, there's no
open terrain in the Temple. The streets will break up their firing lines, every
building will become a strong point, and they'll have to come at us head-on,
with bayonets against our pikes. This may be the best chance we'll ever have to
crush their main field army, and if we do, we can capture their weapons and find
out how they've improved their range and rates of fire."
Vroxhan blinked, and
then his face smoothed as understanding struck.
"Exactly, Holiness.
If we hold them here, smash this army, copy their weapons, and then concentrate
our own strength from other areas, we can win this war after all."
"I—" Vroxhan
began, then stiffened at the sudden, brazen bellow of far more artillery than
North Gate's defenders could bring to bear.
* * *
A wall of smoke spewed
upward as the arlaks recoiled, and splinters flew as their shot smashed into
the city gates. Scores of holes appeared in the stout timbers, but they held,
and the gunners sprang into the deadly ballet Lord Sean and Lord Tamman had
taught them. Sponges hissed down bores, bagged charges and fresh shot followed,
and the guns roared again.
The defending artillery
fired in desperate counterbattery, but fewer guns could be crammed in along the
walls, they couldn't match the Malagorans' rate of fire, and the wind carried
the thick clouds of smoke up towards them in a solid, blinding bank. The
Guard's guns could kill and maim Tibold's gunners, but they couldn't silence
his pieces, and the gates sagged as hurricanes of eight-kilo shot smashed them.
The outermost portcullis and gate went down in ruins, but the gunners went on
firing, pouring a maelstrom of shot down the narrow gullet of the gate tunnel.
Tibold could no more see what was happening to the second and third gates than
the next man, but that massive barrage had to be ripping them apart in turn.
He paced back and forth,
gnawing his lip and trying to gauge his moment. If he waited too long, the
defenders would be ready to deluge his men with oil; if he committed his column
too soon, it would find itself halted by intact gates, and aside from hastily
impressed wagon tongues, it had no battering rams. The losses he was going to
take from the wall's artillery as he charged would be terrible; if his men had
to retreat under fire from a gate they couldn't breach, they would also be
useless.
Another salvo rolled out
from his gun line, and another. Another. He paced harder, hovering on the brink
of committing himself and then dragging himself back. He had to wait. Wait as
long as he dared to be sure—
He jerked in pain as the
"com" on his wrist suddenly bit him. He snatched his hand up in front
of him, staring at the bracelet, and the Angel Harry's taut voice came from it.
"The middle gate
must be down, Tibold! We can see shot coming through the innermost ones, and
they're hanging by a thread!"
See them? How could
even an angel see—? He bit off the extraneous question and held the com to his
lips.
"What else can you
see, Lady Harry?" he demanded.
"They've got a line
of infantry waiting for you." Harriet deliberately spoke in a flat, clear
voice despite her fear for Sean while she relayed the reports from Brashan's
hastily redeployed orbital arrays. "It looks like two or three thousand
pikes, but only a few hundred musketeers. They've brought up a battery—we can't
tell if they're chagors or arlaks—in support. That's all so far, but more guns
and men will be there within twenty minutes. If you're going, you have to go
now, Tibold!"
* * *
The head of Tibold's
column was the Twelfth Brigade. Its men stood two hundred meters behind their
own guns, and they were white-faced and taut, for they understood the carnage
waiting in and beyond that narrow tunnel. There were none of the usual jokes and
anxious banter men used to hide their fear from one another. This time they
stood silent, each man isolated in his own small world of gnawing tension
despite the men standing at his shoulders. The thunder of their own guns pulsed
in their blood like the beating of someone else's heart, and already they had
over a hundred dead and wounded from the arlaks on the Temple's wall. They were
too far out for grapeshot, and the defenders had been concentrating on efforts
to silence Tibold's artillery, but that was going to change the instant the
infantry started forward.
Their heads jerked up as
High-Captain Tibold appeared before them. He faced them with blazing eyes, and
his leather-lunged bellow cut through even the thunder of the guns.
"Malagorans!"
he shouted. "You know all Lord Sean and the angels have done for us; now
he, Lord Tamman, and the Angel Sandy have been betrayed! Unless we cut our way
to them, they, and all our comrades with them, will die! Men of the Twelfth, will
you let that happen?"
"NOOO!"
the Twelfth roared, and Tibold drew his sword.
"Then let's go get
them out! Twelfth Brigade, at a walk, advance!"
Whistles shrilled, pipes
began to wail, and the men of the Twelfth gripped their rifles in sweat-slick
hands and moved forward.
The artillerists on the
walls didn't notice them at first. Smoke clogged visibility, and the thunder of
their own guns covered the whistles and the drone of the pipes. But the
Malagoran arlaks had to check fire as the advancing infantry masked their fire,
and the Guard knew then. Powder-grimed gunners relaid their pieces, grapeshot
replaced round, and they waited for the smoke to lift and give them a target.
"Double time!"
the Twelfth's officers screamed, and the column picked up speed. They had six
hundred paces to go, and they moved forward at a hundred and thirty paces a
minute as the wind parted the smoke.
The defenders watched
them come, and musketeers dashed along the wall, spreading out between the
guns. The Guard didn't have many of them left, but four hundred settled into
firing position and checked their priming as the Twelfth's advance accelerated.
Six hundred paces. Five hundred. Four.
"Malagor and
Lord Sean!" the Twelfth's commander bellowed, and his men howled the
high, terrible Malagoran yell and sprang into a full run.
A curtain of flame
blasted out from the wall, twenty guns spewing grapeshot into a packed
formation at a range of barely three hundred meters. Hundreds of men went down
as quarter-kilo buckshot smashed through them, but other men hurdled their shattered
bodies at a dead run, and their speed took them in under the artillery's
maximum depression before the gunners could reload. Guard musketeers leaned out
over the parapet, exposing themselves to fire straight down into them as they
reached the base of the wall, and the artillery poured fresh fire into the men
behind them, but six full regiments of riflemen laced the battlements with
suppressive fire. Scores of Guard musketeers died, and artillerists began to
fall, as well, as bullets swept their embrasures. Fresh smoke turned morning
into Hell's own twilight, men screamed and cursed and died, and the Twelfth
Brigade's bleeding battalions slammed into the shot-riddled outer gate.
Massive, broken timbers
collapsed under the impact of hurtling bodies and plunged downward, crushing
dozens of men and pinning others, but the Twelfth lunged onward. There was no
blazing oil from the murder holes, but Guardsmen fired joharns and pistols
through them into the reeking, smoke-filled horror of the tunnel. The second
gate still stood precariously, too riddled to last but enough to slow the
Twelfth's headlong pace for just a moment, and another ninety men were piled
dead before it when it finally went down.
The Twelfth drove
onward, carried by a blood-mad fury beyond sanity and driven by the weight of
numbers behind them, and a storm of musket fire met them as they slammed
through the third and final gate at last. Arlaks bellowed, blasting them with
case shot at less than sixty meters, and men slipped and fell on blood-slick
stone as the brigade broke out into the open. Men fired their rifles on the
run, still charging forward, and slammed into the waiting pikes like a
bleeding, dying hammer.
The impact staggered the
Guardsmen. Their longer weapons gave them a tremendous advantage in this
headlong clash, but the Malagorans rammed onward, and more and more of them
swept out of the tunnel. They overwhelmed the front ranks of pikes, burying
them under their own bodies, and the Guard gave back—first one step, then
another—before the stunning ferocity of that charge. They weren't fighting men;
they were fighting an elemental force. For every Malagoran they killed, two
more surged forward, and every one of those charging maniacs fired at
pointblank range before he closed with the bayonet. Behind them, other men with
lengths of burning slow match lit fuses, and powder-filled, iron hand grenades
arced through the smoky air to burst amid the Guard's ranks. Here and there,
their front broke, and Malagorans funneled forward into the holes, bayonets
stabbing, taking men in the flank even as the Guard's charging reserve cut them
down in turn. There was no end to the flood of howling heretics, and
Guardsmen began to look over their shoulders for the reinforcements they'd been
promised.
More Malagorans charged
through the gate tunnel, and still more. The space between the wall and the
pikes was a solid mass of men, each fighting to get forward to kill at least
one Guardsman before he died. The casualty count was overwhelmingly in the Guard's
favor, but the Malagorans seemed willing to take any losses, and at
last, slowly, the pikes began to crumble. Here a man went down screaming; there
another began to edge back; to one side, another dropped his pike and turned to
run; and the Malagorans drove forward with renewed ferocity as they sensed the
shifting tide.
The Guard's officers did
everything mortal men could do, but mortal men couldn't stop that frenzied
charge, and what had begun slowly spread and accelerated. A stubborn withdrawal
became first a retreat, then a rout, and the Malagorans swarmed over any man
who tried to stand while others fought their way meter by bloody meter up the
stairs on the wall's inner face. The last of the pikemen, abandoned by their
fellows, turned to run, and the baying Malagoran army swept into the city.
Two hundred of the
Twelfth Brigade were still on their feet to join it.
* * *
"We're through the
gate, Lord Sean!" Tibold shouted into the com. "We're through the
gate!"
"I know,
Tibold." Sean closed his eyes, and tears streaked his face, for he was
tied into Brashan's orbital arrays. The smoke and chaos made it impossible to
sort out details from orbit, even for Imperial optics, but he didn't need
details to know thousands of his men lay dead or wounded.
"Watch it,
Tibold!" Harriet's voice cut into the circuit. "The men you routed
just ran into their reinforcements. You've got ten or twenty thousand fresh
troops coming at you, and the survivors from the gates are rallying behind
them!"
"Let them
come!" the ex-Guardsman exulted. "We hold the gate now. They can't
keep us out, and I'll take them in a straight fight any day, Lady Harry!"
"Sean, you've got
more men coming at you, too," Harriet warned.
"I see 'em,
Harry."
"Hang on, Lord
Sean!" Tibold said urgently.
"We will,"
Sean promised grimly, and opened his eyes. "Pass the word, Folmak. They're
coming in from the east and west."
* * *
"What's happening,
Lord Marshal?" Vroxhan demanded edgily as a panting messenger handed Surak
a message. The lord marshal scanned it, then crumpled it in his fist.
"The heretics have
carried the gates, Holiness."
"God will
strengthen our men," Vroxhan promised.
"I hope you're
right, Holiness," Surak said grimly. "High-Captain Therah reports the
heretics took at least two thousand casualties, and they're still driving
forward, not even pausing to regroup. It would seem," he faced the high
priest squarely, "their outrage at our treachery is even greater than I'd
feared."
"We acted in the
name of God, Lord Marshal!" Vroxhan snapped. "Do not dare presume to
question God's will!"
"I didn't question His
will," Surak said with dangerous emphasis. "I only observe that men
enraged by betrayal can accomplish things other men cannot. Our losses will be
heavy, Holiness."
"Then they'll be
heavy!" Vroxhan glared at him, then slammed his fist on a map of the Temple
with a snarl. "What of the heretic leaders?"
"A fresh attack is
going in now, Holiness."
* * *
The ordnance depot's
stone wall was for security, not serious defense. Two wide gateways pierced it
to north and south, but Folmak's men had loopholed the wall, barricaded the
gates with paving stones and artillery limbers, and wheeled captured arlaks
into place to fire out them. It wasn't much of a fort, but it was infinitely
preferable to trying to stand in the streets or squares of the city.
The surviving Guardsmen
of the original ambush surrounded the depot, reinforced by several thousand
more men and four batteries of arlaks. Now their guns moved up along side
streets that couldn't be engaged from the gateways. The Guard's gunners had
learned what happened to artillerists who unlimbered in range of rifles, and
they dragged their batteries into the warehouses that flanked the depot.
Hammers and axes smashed crude gunports in warehouse walls, and arlak muzzles
thrust out through them.
Sean saw it coming, but
there was nothing he could do to prevent it. Ammunition parties had hauled
cases of Guard musket balls out of the depot and issued them to his men, who
had orders to use the smoothbore ammunition for close range fighting and
conserve their rifle ammunition, and he stood in a window of the depot
commander's office and watched stone dust and wooden splinters fly from the
warehouse walls as picked marksmen fired on the small targets the improvised
gunports offered. Some of their shots were going home, and no doubt at least a
few were actually hitting someone, but not enough to stop the enemy's
preparations.
And then the arlaks
began to bark.
Eight-kilo balls fired
at less than sixty meters slammed into the depot wall, and it had never been
meant to resist artillery. Lumps of rock flew, and he clenched his jaw.
"They're going to
blow breaches, then put in the pikes," he told Folmak harshly. "Start
a couple of companies building barricades behind the wall. Use whatever they
can find, and see about parking some more arlaks among them. We'll let them
blow their breach, then open up when they come through."
"At once, Lord
Sean!" Folmak slapped his breastplate and vanished, and Sandy crossed to
Sean.
"I wish to hell you
hadn't come," he rasped. "Goddamn it, what did you think you were doing?"
"Saving your butt,
among other things!" she shot back, but her words lacked their usual
tartness, and she touched his elbow. "How bad is it, Sean?" she asked
in a softer voice. "Can we hold?"
"No," he said
flatly. "They'll just keep throwing men at us—or stand back and batter us
with artillery. Sooner or later, the First is going down."
"Unless Tibold gets
here first," she said through the thunder of the guns.
"Unless Tibold gets
here first," he agreed grimly.
Case shot screamed down
the street as the Malagoran chagors recoiled, and High-Captain Therah winced as
it scythed through his men. Teams of heretic infantry had hauled the light guns
forward, and if their shot was only half as heavy as the Guard's arlaks threw,
the smaller, lighter chagors were also far more maneuverable. Worse, the
heretics could fire with impossible speed—faster than a Guard musketeer!—and
the deadly guns had cost Therah's men dearly.
He still didn't know
what had happened, but the heretics' conviction that any treachery had been the
Temple's lent them a furious, driving power Therah had never faced in seven
long Pardalian years as a soldier. Half of them were screaming "Lord Sean
and no quarter!" as they charged, and all of them were fighting
like the very demons they worshiped. By his most optimistic estimate, the Guard
had already lost six or seven thousand men, and there was no end in sight. But
the heretics were paying, too, for their fury drove them into headlong,
battering attacks.
Which didn't mean they
weren't winning. His men knew the city better than they, yet somehow they
spotted every major flanking move. Smaller parties seemed able to evade their
attention and hit their flanks out of alleys and side streets, yet such piecemeal
attacks could only slow them, and the hordes of terrified civilians choking the
streets shackled his own movements.
But he was learning,
too, he thought grimly. His musketeers were no match for heretic riflemen in
the open, so every precious musket was dug into the taller buildings along the
heretics' line of advance. Their slower-firing smoothbores were just as deadly
at close range, and their firing positions at second- and third-story loopholes
shielded them from return fire. Therah was positive the heretics' losses were
far higher than his own, yet still they drove forward, flowing down
every side street, spreading out at every intersection. They bored ever deeper
into the Temple, like a holocaust, and as the conflict spread, it grew harder
and harder to control it or even grasp what was going on.
The chagors fired
another salvo, and then the heretic infantry charged with their terrible,
baying war cry. Their accursed pipes shrilled like damned souls, and their
bayonets cut through the staggered ranks of his surviving pikemen. The heretics
howled in triumph—and then their howls were drowned by the roar of arlaks. The
pikes had held just long enough for the artillerists behind them to complete
their chest-high barricade of paving stones, and the guns spewed flame through
gaps in the crude barrier. Grape shot splashed walls and pavement with blood,
and not even demon-worshipers could stand that fire. They fell back, running
for their own guns, and a bitter duel sprang up between their chagors and the
Guard arlaks. Field pieces thundered at one another at a range of no more than
eighty paces, straight down the broad avenue of the North Way, and Therah
turned away from the window to glare down at his map.
The heretic point was
halfway to the Place of Martyrs, but he could hold. He knew he could.
Their casualties were even greater than his, and, aside from the North Way
itself, he'd stopped their advance along most of the main avenues within three
or four thousand paces of North Gate. Now his guns were dug in across the North
Way, and if he didn't expect them to hold for long, successive positions were
being built behind them. He could bleed the heretics to death as they battered
their way through one strongpoint after another, but only if he had more men!
It was the side streets.
His strength was being eaten up in scores of small blocking forces, racing to
cut off each new penetration. Every man he committed to holding them there was
one less to cover the main thoroughfares, but if he didn't block the
side routes, the heretics filtered forward—taking their accursed chagors with
them—and cut in behind his main positions. He needed more men, yet Lord Marshal
Surak refused to release them. A full third of the available Guard was still
hammering away at the heretics' leaders or covering routes they might use to
join their fellows if they somehow broke out of the artillery depot. The men
Therah did have were fighting like heroes, but something was going to break if
he couldn't convince Surak to reinforce him.
"Signalman!"
He didn't even look up as a signals officer materialized beside him.
"Signal to Lord Marshal Surak: 'I must have more men. We hold the main
approaches, but the demon-worshipers are breaking through the side streets.
Losses are heavy. Unless reinforced, I cannot be responsible for the
consequences.' " He paused, wondering if he'd been too direct, then
shrugged. "Send it."
He looked back out the
window just as a ball from a heretic chagor struck an arlak on the muzzle. The
gun tube leapt into the air like a clumsy talmahk, then crashed back down to
crush half a dozen men, and he swore. His gunners were killing the heretic
artillerists, but despite their barricade, they were being ground away by the
demon-worshipers' greater rate of fire.
"Message to Under-Captain
Reskah! He's to move his battery up to Saint Halmath Street. Have him deploy to
take the heretics in flank as they advance on the Street of Lamps position.
Then get another messenger to Under-Captain Gartha. He's to bring his
pikes—"
High-Captain Therah went
on barking orders even as his staff began to gather up their maps in
preparation to fall back yet again.
* * *
Sean crouched behind his
own rock pile with Sandy as the latest assault fell back into the smoke. The
depot wall had become little more than a tumbled heap of broken stone, but his
men were dug in behind it, and dead and dying Guardsmen littered the
approaches. The wooden warehouses to the east were a roaring mass of flames,
but the ones on the west side were stone, and the Guard arlaks in them were
still in action.
Folmak crawled up beside
him, keeping low as musket balls whined and skipped from the crude breastwork.
The ex-miller's breastplate was dented, and his left arm hung in a bloody
sling, but he carried a smoking pistol in his right hand. He flopped down
beside Sean and passed the weapon back to his orderly to reload before he
tugged a replacement from his sash.
"We're down to
about nine hundred effectives, My Lord." The Malagoran coughed on the
smoke. "I make it three hundred dead and six hundred wounded, and the
surgeons are out of dressings." He turned his head to watch Sandy rip open
an iron-strapped crate of musket ammunition with one bio-enhanced hand and
managed a grim smile. "At least we've still got plenty of ammunition."
"Glad something's
going right," Sean grunted, and rose cautiously to fire at a Guardsman.
The man threw up his arms and sprawled forward, and Sean dropped back beside
Folmak as answering fire cracked and whined about his ears.
He rolled on his back to
reload the pistol, and his thoughts were grim. The Guard was coming at them
only from the west now, but it was still coming. As Lee had proven at Cold
Harbor and Petersburg, dug in riflemen could hold against many times their own
numbers, but each assault crashed a little closer to success, like waves
devouring a beach, and his line was a little thinner as each fell back. Another
two or three hours, he thought.
He drew the hammer to
the half-cocked safety position and primed the pistol while he stared up into
the smoke-sick afternoon sky. He could hear the thunder of battle from the
north in the rare intervals when the firing here slowed, and he was still tied
into Brashan's arrays. The satellites could see less and less as smoke and the
spreading fires blinded their passive sensors, but he was still in touch with
Tibold and Harriet, as well. The ex-Guardsman had battered his way halfway to
the Place of Martyrs, but at horrible cost. No one could be certain, and he
knew people tended to assume the worst while the dying was still happening, but
even allowing for that, Harriet estimated Tibold had lost over a sixth of his
men. The Angels' Army was being ground away, and there was nothing he could do
about it. Even if the army had tried, it was in too deep to disengage, and he
knew Tibold would refuse to so much as make the attempt as long as he, Tamman,
or Sandy were still alive.
Which they wouldn't be
for too very much longer, he thought bitterly.
"Sean! Movement to
the north!"
He rolled onto his side
and rose on an elbow, peering to his right as Tamman's warning came over the
com, but not even enhanced eyes could see anything from here.
"What kind of
movement?" he asked, and there was a moment of silence before Tamman
replied slowly.
"Dunno, Sean. Looks
like . . . By God, it is! They're moving back!"
"Moving back?"
Sean looked at Sandy. Her smoke-grimed face was drawn, but she shrugged her own
puzzlement. "Are they shifting west, Tam?"
"No way. They're
pulling straight back. Just a sec." There was another pause as Tamman
crawled through the rubble to a better vantage point. "Okay. I can see 'em
better now. Sean, the bastards are forming a route column! They're moving
straight towards the Place of Martyrs!"
Sean was about to reply
when a junior officer flung himself on his belly behind the rock pile. The
young man was breathing hard and filthy from head to toe, but he slapped his
breastplate in a sort of abbreviated salute.
"Lord Sean! They're
moving back on the south side."
"How far
back?"
"Their musketeers
are still in the buildings, but their pikemen are falling clear back behind
them, My Lord."
Sean stared at him and
forced his cringing brain to work. The Guard had to know it was grinding the
First away, so why fall back now? It couldn't be simply to reorganize, not if
Tamman was right about the column marching north for the Place of Martyrs. But
if not that, then—
"They're
reinforcing against Tibold," he said softly. Folmak looked at him for a
moment, then nodded.
"They must
be," he agreed, and Sean looked at the under-captain.
"How many pikes did
they pull off the south side?"
"I'm not certain, My
Lord—" the Malagoran began, and Sean shook his head.
"Best guess. How
many?"
"At least five
thousand."
"Tam? How many from
your side?"
"I make it what's
left of seven or eight thousand pikes. They've left musketeers to keep us busy,
but I'd guess there's no more than a thousand pikemen to support them."
Sean frowned, then
switched to Tibold's com frequency.
"Tibold, they're
pulling men away from us. We're guessing it at ten to twelve thousand
pikes."
"Away from
you?" The ex-Guardsman was hoarse and rasping from hours of bellowing
orders, but there was nothing wrong with his brain. "Then they're sending
them here."
"Agreed. What will
that do to you?"
"It won't be good,
Lord Sean," Tibold said grimly. "My lead brigades are down to
battalion strength by now. We're still moving forward, but it's by finger
spans. If they bring that many fresh men into action—" He broke off, and
Sean could almost see his shrug.
"How long for them
to get to you?"
"Under these
conditions? At least an hour."
"All right, Tibold.
I'll get back to you."
"Sean?" He
looked up as Sandy said his name, and her eyes bored into his.
"Give me a
minute." He turned to Folmak and pointed to the gaunt, fortress-like main
arsenal building which sheltered their wounded.
"How many men do
you need to garrison the arsenal?"
"Just the
arsenal?" Sean nodded, and the Malagoran rubbed his filthy face with his
good hand. "Three hundred to cover all four walls and give me some snipers
upstairs."
"Only three
hundred?" Sean pressed, and Folmak smiled grimly.
"We've already
prepared it for our last stand, Lord Sean, and we've got half a dozen of their
arlaks on each wall at ground level. I've got a couple of hundred wounded who
can still shoot, and a hundred more who can still load for men who aren't hurt,
and we've got plenty of rifles no one needs anymore. I can hold it with three
hundred, My Lord. Not forever, but for a couple of hours, at least."
"Make it four
hundred."
"Yes, My
Lord." Folmak nodded but never looked away from his commander. "Why,
My Lord?" he asked bluntly.
"Because I'm taking
the rest of your people on a little trip, Folmak." Sean bared his teeth at
the Malagoran's expression. "No, I'm not crazy. The Guard wants us,
Folmak. They wouldn't ease up on us if they had any choice, so if they're pulling
men from here to throw at Tibold, they've probably already pulled in everyone
they can scrape up from anywhere else."
"And?" Folmak
asked repressively.
"And everyone
they've got left is almost certainly between us and Tibold. If I can break out
to the south while they're all going north, I may just be able to pay a little
visit to High Priest Vroxhan in person and, ah, convince him to call
this whole thing off."
"You're mad, My
Lord. High-Captain Tibold would have my guts for tent ropes if I let you try
something like that!"
"We'll all have to
be alive for that to happen, and you and I won't be unless I can at
least distract them from reinforcing against Tibold. Think about it, Folmak. If
I break out in their rear, headed away from them, they're bound to turn at
least some of their men around to nail me, and we can raise all kinds of hell
before they catch up to us. While we're doing that, Tibold may actually manage
to break through."
"You're mad,"
Folmak repeated. He locked stares with Sean, but it was the ex-miller whose
eyes finally fell. "You are mad," he said sighing, "but
you're also in command. I'll give you what's left of the Second Regiment."
"Thank you."
Sean gripped the Malagoran's shoulder hard for a moment. "In that case,
you'd better go start getting things organized."
"Which way will you
go?"
"We'll start out to
the east. The fires have them disorganized on that side."
"Very well. I'll
see about getting some guns into position to lay down fire before you go. At
least—" the First's commander summoned a smile "—there's no wall to
block our fire any longer!"
He turned to crawl away,
shouting for his surviving messengers, and a small, dirty hand gripped Sean's
elbow.
"He's right, you're
out of your damned mind!" Sandy hissed. "You'll never get past their
perimeter, and even if you do, you don't even know where to find Vroxhan
in all this!" She waved her other hand blindly at the smoke, and the
gesture was taut with anger.
"No, I don't,"
Sean agreed quietly, "but I know where the Sanctum is."
"The—?" Sandy
froze, staring into his eyes, and he nodded.
"If Tam and I get
into the Sanctum—and we might just pull it off while everybody's fighting on
the north side of town—we can take over the computer. And if we shut down the
inner defense net, then Brash and Harry can get fighters in here and knock the
guts out of the Guard."
"You'll never make
it," she whispered, her face ashen under its grime, but her voice was
already defeated by the knowledge that he had to try.
"Maybe not, but we
can sure as hell worry the bastards!" he said with a savage grin.
"Then I'm coming
with you," she said flatly.
"No! If we
break out, most of them'll come after us. There won't be enough to take Folmak
out, and I want you here where it's safe!"
"Fuck you, Sean
MacIntyre!" she shouted in sudden fury. "Goddamn it to hell, do you
think I want to be safe while you're out there somewhere?"
She jabbed a hand at the billowing smoke, and he watched in amazement as tears
cut clean, white tracks down her filthy face. "Well, the hell with you, Your
Highness! I'm an officer, too, not a goddamned 'angel'! And I am
coming with you! If something happens to you and Tam, maybe I can get to
the computer!"
"I—" Sean
started to snap back, then closed his eyes and bent his head to stare down at
his clenched fists. She was right, he thought drearily. He wanted—God,
how he wanted!—to make her stay behind, but that was because he loved her, and
it didn't change the fact that she was right.
"All right,"
he whispered finally, and looked up, blinking on his own tears. He reached out
to cup the side of her face and managed a wan smile. "All right, you
insubordinate little bitch." She caught his wrist, pressing her cheek
tightly into his palm for just a moment, then released him and rolled to her
knees.
"You tell Harry and
Tibold what we're up to. I'll go help Tam get things organized."
The firing eased as most
of the attacking infantry marched away from the shattered ordnance depot. Three
thousand men still surrounded it, but their orders now were to hold the
heretics, not crush them. Their musketeers were conserving ammunition, and
their artillery caissons were almost empty. Fresh ammunition wagons were on
their way, but for now the Guardsmen concentrated on simply keeping the
Malagorans pinned down.
Sean breathed a silent
thanks for the lighter fire, but this was going to be tricky, and all of
Folmak's regimental commanders and four of his six battalion COs were
casualties. Losses among junior officers had been equally heavy, and getting
the men sorted out took time. If the bad guys guessed what was coming and threw
in an attack at just the wrong moment . . .
Folmak would retain what
remained of his Third Regiment and half the First; the rest of the First would
reinforce the Second for the breakout. The choice of units had been dictated by
where the men were. The Third held what was left of the western wall, and
they'd fall back to the main arsenal, covered by a hundred or so men already in
the building, when Sean attacked to the east.
It was taking too long,
he thought, but his people were moving as fast as humanly possible and then
some. He crouched behind another pile of stone—this one had once been a
workshop—and watched men filter into position around him. What had been
regiments were now battalions, and battalions had become companies, but, one by
one, officers raised their arms to indicate their readiness, and he drew a deep
breath.
A dozen arlaks,
double-shotted and loaded with grape for good measure, had been dragged into
position under cover of the smoke. One man crouched behind each gun, watching
Sean with intent eyes, and he slashed his arm downward.
A lethal blast screamed
down the only eastbound street not blocked by flames as the gunners jerked
their lanyards, then snatched up their own rifles. Shrieks of agony answered
the unexpected salvo, and the torn, filthy survivors of B Company, Third Battalion,
Second Regiment, First Brigade, lunged over the ruin of the depot wall with the
high, shrill Malagoran yell.
The rest of the Second
Regiment foamed in their wake, and Sean yanked Sandy to her feet and vaulted
over the wall with the second wave. Tamman was ahead of them, leading B Company
down the narrow street between two infernos which had once been warehouses, and
rifles and muskets cracked in the hellish glare. The Malagorans charged through
a cinder-raining furnace to strike the defenders before they recovered from the
unexpected bombardment, and bayonets and pikes flashed in the bloody light of
the flames.
Tamman crashed into the
Guardsmen at B Company's head. A pike lunged at him, and he smashed it aside
with a bio-enhanced arm and snatched the luckless pikemen bodily off his feet.
The Guardsman wailed in terror, and Tamman hurled him away. More pikemen flew
as the improvised projectile bowled them over, and Company B closed for the
kill, firing as they came. A quarter of them went down, but the others carried
through, and the blocking Guard infantry disintegrated before their bayonets.
"We're through,
Sean!" Tamman yelled over the com.
"Don't stop to
celebrate! Keep moving!"
The Second Regiment
broke out of the fire-fringed street into the open on the heels of their foes.
A reserve of two or three hundred Guardsmen looked up in astonishment as the
ragged apparitions materialized, then took to its own heels in panic as the
bayonets swept down upon it. Sean's column burst through the perimeter around
the depot and vanished into the burning city, and Folmak Folmakson, listening
to the fading sound of combat to the east as the last of his own men dashed
into the arsenal, whispered a prayer for its safety.
* * *
Harriet MacIntyre stood
at the rear of the army's encampment, white-faced and clinging to Stomald's
hand as she watched mountains of smoke rise from the Temple. Her com was tied
to Sean's, following her twin and her friends through the bedlam of the city's
streets, and she longed with all her heart to be with them. But she couldn't
be. She had to wait here, praying that they reached their objective. One
hundred and ten kilometers further north, Brashan had abandoned his post aboard
Israel and rode the cockpit of an Imperial fighter, poised just outside
the computer's kill zone with a second fighter slaved to his controls. If Sean
and the others could shut down the computer, he and Harriet could end the
fighting in minutes . . . if they could shut down the computer.
* * *
Tibold Rarikson swore
vilely as fresh combat roared on his right. He didn't fully understand what
Lord Sean and the angels intended, and he was aghast at the risk his commander
was running, but he was a soldier. He'd accepted his orders, yet he bitterly
regretted the loss of intelligence from the Angel Harry. Her reports had become
increasingly general as the confusion and smoke spread, but they'd given him a
priceless edge. Now she could no longer provide them, and the Guard had finally
gotten around his flank.
His men gave ground stubbornly,
fighting every span of the way, but the Guard pikes ground forward. He sent
three relatively fresh regiments racing west from his reserve and hoped it
would be enough.
* * *
"What—?"
High Priest Vroxhan
whirled towards the window as shots sounded right outside the Chancery, and his
jaw dropped as bullets spun men around in the Place of Martyrs. A heretic
attack here? It couldn't be!
But it was happening.
Even as he watched, ragged, battle-stained men erupted into the open, fell into
line, and poured a devastating, steadily mounting fire into the single
understrength Guard company in the square. He stared at the carnage, unable to
believe what he was seeing, then looked up as he sensed a presence at his side.
"Lord
Marshal!" he gasped. "Have they broken through Therah?"
"Impossible!"
Surak jerked a spyglass open and raised it to his eye, then swore and closed it
with a snap. "They're from the depot, Holiness. No one else could have
gotten here, and there's a man out there who's so tall he has to be
'Lord Sean.' "
"What are they
doing out here?"
"Trying to escape .
. . or to divert reinforcements from the North Gate. Either way, there's not
enough of them to be a threat."
"Can they
escape?"
"It's possible,
Holiness. Not likely, but possible, especially if they go south instead of
trying to link up with Tibold."
"Stop them! Stop
them!" Vroxhan shouted.
"With what,
Holiness? Aside from your personal guard, my headquarters troop, and the
detachment at the Sanctum, every man I have is headed for North Gate."
Vroxhan started to speak
once more, then closed his mouth and watched the heretics finish routing the
hapless Guard company and reform into column. As Surak had predicted, they
headed south, and the high priest clenched his fists in sullen hate. They were
getting away. The leaders of this damnable heresy were escaping him, and
as soon as they were safe, the rest of their army would break off its attack.
Bile rose in his throat, and he raised his eyes from the vanishing
demon-worshipers to the huge, white block of the Sanctum. Why? he
demanded of God. Why are You letting this happen? Why—
And then his thoughts
froze in a sudden flash of terrified intuition. Escape? They weren't trying to escape!
As if God Himself had whispered it in his ear, Vroxhan knew where they were
headed, and his blood ran chill.
"The Sanctum!"
he gasped. The lord marshal looked at him blankly, and Vroxhan grabbed him and
shook him. "They're headed for the Sanctum itself!"
"The— Why should
they be, Holiness?"
"Because they're demon-worshipers!"
Vroxhan half-screamed. "My God, man! They serve the powers of Hell—what if
their masters have given them some means to destroy the Voice? If we
lose its protection, how will we stop the next wave of demons from the
stars?"
"But—"
"There's no time,
Lord Marshal! Signal the Sanctum detachment now! Tell them they must
keep the heretics from entering, then send every man you can find after
them!"
"But there's only
your own guard, Holiness, and—"
"Send them! Send
them!" Vroxhan shook the lord marshal again. "No! I'll take them
myself !" he cried wildly, and whirled away from Surak.
* * *
Tamman led the way. His
men didn't like it, and they kept trying to get past him, to put themselves
between him and any possible enemies, but he waved them sharply back whenever
they did. He wasn't being heroic; he needed to be up front to scout their path
with his implants.
The chaos in the streets
was even worse than he'd feared. There were few Guardsmen about, but thousands
of civilians had fled the fighting, and most of them seemed to be headed for
the Sanctum to pray for deliverance. In fairness, they had the sense to scatter
the instant they saw armed men coming up behind them, but even with panic to
spur them on, they took time to get out of his way. Worse, with so many
civilians moving around, it was hard to spot any Guard formations he might
encounter.
The column moved
quickly, when it could move at all, but its progress was a series of breathless
dashes separated by slow, wading progress through the noncombatants, and Tamman
was sorely tempted to order his men to open fire to chase the crowds off
faster. He couldn't, but he was tempted.
He crossed a small
square and looked up. The huge block of the Sanctum loomed ahead of him.
Fifteen more minutes, he thought; possibly twenty.
* * *
"Faster!
Faster!" Vroxhan shouted.
"Holiness, we can
go no faster!" Captain Farnah, his personal guard's commander protested,
waving at the civilians who clogged their path. "The people—"
"What do the people
matter when demon-worshipers go to profane the very Sanctum of God?!"
Vroxhan snapped, and his eyes were mad. He'd lost sight of the heretics while
his guards mustered; they were up ahead somewhere, headed for the Sanctum. That
was all he knew . . . and all he needed to know. "Clear the path,
Captain! You have pikes; now clear the path!"
Farnah stared at him, as
if unable to believe his orders, but Vroxhan snarled at him, and the Guardsman
turned away. He shouted orders of his own, and within seconds Vroxhan heard the
screams as the leading pikemen lowered their weapons, faces set like iron, and
swept ahead. Men, women, even children were smashed aside or died, and the
seven hundred men of Vroxhan's personal guard marched over their bodies.
* * *
The fighting on Tibold's
right rose to a crescendo as the Guard threw his flank back eight hundred paces
in a driving, brutal attack. But then the charging pikemen ran into pointblank,
massed chagor fire, and the regiments Tibold had sent from the reserve crashed
into them. It was the Guard's turn to reel back, yet they retreated only half
the distance they'd come, then held sullenly, and now more Guard reinforcements
were hammering his left.
He swore again, more
vilely than ever. He was losing his momentum. He could feel the army's advance
grinding to a halt amid the blazing ruins.
* * *
"Watch the wall! Men
on the wall!" Tamman shouted as fifty musketeers suddenly rose over
the parapet of the ornamental wall about the Sanctum. The square outside it was
packed with civilians who screamed in terror as the Guardsmen leveled their
muskets to pour fire into B Company's skirmish line, but Tamman's warning had
come before they were in position. A withering blast of rifle fire met them,
and, more horribly, the civilians between the two forces soaked up much of
their own fire. Despite the cover of the waist-high parapet, they took heavier
losses than the skirmishers, and then the rest of B Company came up with C
Company in support, and their fire swept the wall clear.
Shrieking civilians
stampeded madly, trampling one another in their terror, and Second Regiment
drove across the blood-slick pavement for the gates. They were locked, but
their delicate ivory panels and gold filigree were no match for the rifle butts
of desperate men, and Second Regiment smashed its way through their priceless
artistry like a ram.
Thirty or forty pikemen
were trying to form up before the Sanctum's huge doors when the gates went
down. They saw the "heretics" coming and fought to get set, but the
Malagorans spread back out into a ragged firing line without orders. A sharp,
deadly volley crashed out, and half the Guardsmen went down. The survivors fell
back into the Sanctum itself, and Tamman started to lead his men after them,
then skidded to a halt as Sean came up over his com.
"Trouble behind us,
Tam! Five or six hundred men coming up fast!"
"I'm at the entry
now," Tamman replied. "What do I do?"
"Secure the doors
and put the rest of your men on the wall. We're going to have to detach a
rearguard to keep these bastards off us."
"On it,"
Tamman agreed, and started shouting fresh orders.
* * *
"Holiness! The
heretics!"
Vroxhan looked up at
Farnah's shout, and then the first crackling musket fire rolled back from
ahead. A bend in the street blocked his view, but he saw clouds of powder smoke
and heard the screams of the wounded. Almost half his guard were musketeers, and
they scattered into doorways and shop fronts, diving for cover to return fire
while the pikemen jerked back around the corner to get out of range.
"Keep moving!"
he snapped, but Farnah shook his head sharply.
"We can't,
Holiness. They're inside the Sanctum's wall, and there must be three or four
hundred of them with their damned rifles. We can't advance across the square
against their fire. It's suicide."
"What do our lives
matter compared to our souls?" Vroxhan raged.
"Holiness, if we
advance, we die, and if we die, we can accomplish nothing to save the
Sanctum," Farnah grated in a voice of iron.
"Damn you!"
Vroxhan's hand slashed across the captain's face. "Damn you! Don't
you dare tell me—"
He cocked his arm to
swing again, but then he paused. He froze, oblivious to the naked fury on
Farnah's reddened, swelling face, then grabbed the captain's arm.
"Wait! Let
them hold the walls!"
"What do you
mean?" Farnah half-snarled, but Vroxhan was already turning away.
"Bring half your
men and follow me!"
* * *
Sean looked back as the
rifles began to crack. He hated himself for leaving those men to hold that wall
without him, yet he had no choice. They could hold it as well without him as
with him, but only he, Sandy, or Tamman could access the computer.
They had only thirty men
with them, the survivors of B and C Companies' original two hundred, as they
clattered into the Sanctum. The original command bunker had been encircled,
over the centuries, with chapels and secondary cathedrals, libraries and art
galleries. It was a crazed rabbit warren of gorgeous tapestries and priceless
artwork, and bloody boots thudded on rich carpet and floors of patterned marble
as they pounded through it.
"Left, left,
left," Sean muttered to himself as he felt the energy flows of the ancient
command complex through his implants. "It has to be to the left,
damn it, but where—"
"Got it,
Sean!" Tamman shouted. "This way!"
Tamman swung sharply
left down a stairway, and Sean caught Sandy's hand and half-dragged her after
their friend, eyes gleaming as walls of marble and paneled wood gave way to
bare ceramacrete. The command center was buried beneath the bunker, and boots
and combat gear clattered in the deep well of the stairs. Here and there a man
lost his footing and fell, but someone always dragged him back up, and the
gasping urgency of their mission drove them on.
"Hatch!"
Tamman yelled, and the men behind him suddenly slowed as they beheld the great,
gleaming portal of Imperial battle steel. The Sanctum's guardians had ordered
the computer to close the hatch, and for just an instant, religious dread held
the Malagorans, but Tamman was oblivious to it as his implants sought the
access software, and he grunted in triumph.
"No ID code,"
he muttered in English as Sean and Sandy pushed up beside him. "Guess the
guys who set up this crazy religion figured the priesthood might forget it. Let
me—ahh!"
His neural feed found
the interface, and the Malagorans sighed as the huge hatch slid silently aside.
They stared into the holiest of Pardalian holies, and their eyes were awed as
they gazed at the man who'd opened the way.
"Come on!"
Sean drew two pistols and shouldered past Tamman.
"Blasphemer!"
someone screamed, and a sledgehammer punched into his breastplate as a musket
roared, but the tough Imperial composites held. One of his pistols cracked
viciously, and High Inquisitor Surmal's head exploded. His corpse tumbled back
into the depths of the main display, blood pooling under the glitter of
holographic stars, and Sean looked around quickly. None of the equipment was
proper military design, and the Pardalians hadn't helped by covering the walls
with Mother Church's trophies. Banners and weapons from the Schismatic Wars
were everywhere, making it almost impossible to pick out details, and he
snarled. Damn it, where the hell had they hidden—?
"There, Sean!"
Sandy pointed, and Sean swallowed a curse as he saw the console. The bastards
hadn't just switched the neural interfacing off; they'd physically disconnected
it from the computer core.
"Tam, you're our
best techie. Go! Get that thing back on-line!"
"Gotcha!"
Tamman dashed across the command center, and Sean turned back to the men
crowding through the hatch behind him. "In the meantime, let's get some
security set up here. We need to—"
"Sean!"
Sandy screamed, and he whirled just as a tapestry on the opposite wall was
ripped aside and a musket flashed fire through the sudden opening. The ball
whizzed past his head by no more than a centimeter, and he saw more men filling
a five-meter-wide arch.
A tunnel! A goddamned
tunnel into the command center!
Even as the thought
flashed through his mind, he had time to wonder whether the original architect
had installed it, or if it had been added by the Church's founders . . . and to
realize it didn't really matter.
"Take 'em!" he
bellowed. "Keep them off Tamman's back!"
His men answered with a
snarl, and rifles barked like the hammer of God. Choking smoke filled the
command center's vaulted chamber as muskets blazed back, yet for the first few
seconds it all went the Malagorans' way, despite the surprise of their enemies'
sudden arrival. They were spread out, able to pour more rounds into the arch
than the Guardsmen could fire back, but three hundred men crowded the tunnel,
pressing forward with fanatic devotion, and there was no time to reload.
"Hit 'em! Bottle
'em up!" Sean roared, and charged as the first Guardsmen broke out into
the open.
His Malagorans charged
at his heels, but the Guardsmen were charging, too. They'd left their pikes
behind, unable to get through the tunnel with them, but their pikemen carried
swords, maces, and battle-axes, and their musketeers hurled themselves forward
with clubbed weapons.
"Malagor and Lord
Sean!" someone howled.
"Holy God and no
quarter!" the Guard bellowed back, and the two forces slammed together in
a smoke-choked nightmare of hand-to-hand combat.
Sean rampaged at the
head of his men, and his slender sword carved an arc of death before him. No
unenhanced human could enter its reach and live, and he hacked his way towards
the arch. If he could reach it, bottle them up inside it . . . But his men
weren't enhanced. They couldn't match his strength and speed, and too many
Guardsmen had gotten into the control center. They swirled about him, and he
grunted in anguish as something slammed into his thigh from behind. His enhanced
muscle and bone held, but blood oozed down his leg, and unenhanced or not, if
they swarmed him under—
He fell back, cursing,
strangling an enemy with his left hand even as he cut down two more with his
sword, and someone swung a mace two-handed. It clanged into his breastplate and
rebounded, staggering him despite his enhancement, but once more the Imperial
composite held. Steel clashed and grated all about him, men screamed and died,
and a Guardsman loomed suddenly before him, sword thrusting for his throat, and
there was no time to dodge.
He saw the point coming,
and then a battle-ax split his killer from crown to navel. Blood fountained
over him, and he gasped in surprise as Sandy bounded past him. The ax she'd
snatched from the trophies on the wall was as tall as she was, and she shrieked
like a Valkyrie as she swung. She'd lost her helmet, and her brown eyes flashed
fire as she cut a second man cleanly in half, and another voice screamed in
horror.
"Demon! Demon!"
it wailed as they realized she was a woman.
Guardsmen who'd been
howling, fanatical warriors the instant before shrank from her in terror, and
she snarled.
"Come on, then,
you bastards!" she yelled in Imperial Universal, and a fresh wail of
terror went up as the Guardsmen recognized the Holy Tongue in the mouth of a
demon. She cut down another man, and for just a moment, Sean thought she was
going to pull it off. But the men still in the tunnel couldn't see her.
Ignorance immunized them against the terror of her presence, and the weight of their
bodies drove the others forward.
Fresh pressure pushed
the Malagorans back, and Sean and Sandy with them. Their infantry formed a
wedge behind them, fighting to cover Lord Sean's and the Angel Sandy's backs,
and they lunged forward once more while bodies flew away from them. Under any
other circumstances, the Guardsmen probably would have fled from their
"superhuman" foes, but the tunnel behind them was packed solid. They
had to fight or die, and so they fought, and the howling bedlam of combat
filled the command center.
Behind his friends,
Tamman worked frantically, hands flying as he fought to reconnect the neural
interface. He'd never seen one quite like this, and he was working as much by
guess as by knowledge. Despite his total concentration on his task, he knew the
Guardsmen were grinding forward. Sean and Sandy were worth fifty unenhanced men
when it came to offense, but there were only two of them. Some of the Guardsmen
were slipping past them, circling around to get at the merely mortal Malagorans
behind them, and despite the reach advantage of the Malagorans' bayoneted
rifles, they were going down. So far none of the attackers seemed to have
noticed Tamman, but it was only a matter of time before one of them—
There! He made the last
connection, flipped his neural feed into the console, and demanded access.
There was a moment of utter silence, and then an utterly emotionless contralto
spoke.
"ID code required
for implant access. Please enter code," it said, and he stared at the
console in horror.
* * *
Sean gasped as another
mace crunched into his left arm. The mail sleeve held and his implants overrode
the pain and shock, but the blow had hurt him badly and he knew it. He
staggered back, and Sandy whirled around him, graceful as a dancer as she swung
her huge ax with dreadful precision. Sean's attacker went down without a
scream, and he lashed out with his sword and killed another man before he could
hit Sandy from behind.
"Sean! Sean, it's
ID-coded!" He heard the voice, but it made no sense, and he hacked down
another enemy. "Goddamn it, Sean, it's ID-coded!" Tamman
bellowed, and this time he understood.
He turned his head just
as Tamman hurtled past him. His friend's sword went before him, and Sean and
Sandy followed. They forged forward, killing as they went, and this time there
were three of them. Tamman took point, with Sean and Sandy covering his flanks,
leaving a carpet of bodies in their wake, and at last, the Guardsmen began to
yield. The sight of three demons—and they must be demons to wreak such
carnage—coming straight for them was too much. They scattered out of their way,
and Tamman reached the archway. His sword wove a deadly pattern before him,
building a barricade of bodies to block the arch with the dead, and even with
the weight of numbers pressing them forward, no man could break past him.
"Watch his back,
Sandy!" Sean gasped, and turned back to the combat still raging in the
command center. Only ten of his men still stood, but they'd formed a tight,
desperate defensive knot in the center of the huge chamber, and he flung
himself into the rear of their attackers.
The Guardsmen saw him
coming and screamed in fear. They backed away, unwilling to face the demon, and
their eyes darted to the arch by which they'd entered. Two more demons blocked
it, cutting them off from their companions, but the main hatch was open, and
they took to their heels, trampling one another in their desperate haste to
escape with their souls.
The sounds of combat
died. The tunnel was so choked with bodies no one could get to Tamman to engage
him, even assuming they'd had the courage to try, and Sean leaned on his sword
gasping for breath while the cold, hideous knowledge of failure filled him.
They'd come so close!
Fought so hard, paid such a horrible price. Why hadn't it even occurred to him
that the interface would be ID-coded?!
"Tam!" he
croaked. "If the interface's coded, what about voice access?"
"Tried it,"
Tamman said grimly, never looking away from the tunnel while the surviving
Malagoran infantry hastily reloaded and turned to cover the main hatch.
"No good. They took out the regular verbal access and set up a series of
stored commands when they cut out the interface. We could spend weeks trying to
guess what to tell it to control the inner defenses!"
"Oh, God,"
Sean whispered, his face ashen. "God, what have we done? All those
people—did we kill them for nothing?"
"Stop it,
Sean!" Sandy was splashed from head to toe in blood, and her eyes still
smoked as she rounded on him. "We don't have time for that! Think! There has
to be a way in!"
"Why?" Sean
demanded bitterly. "Because we want there to be one? We fucked up,
Sandy. I fucked up!"
"No! There has to
be—"
She froze, mouth
half-open, and her eyes went huge.
"That's it,"
she whispered. "By all that's holy, that's it!"
"What's
'it'?" Sean demanded, and she gripped his good arm in fingers of steel.
"We can't
access without the ID-code, but you can—maybe!"
"What are you talking
about?"
"Sean, it's an Imperial
computer. A Fourth Empire computer."
"So?" He stared
at her, trying to comprehend, and she shook him violently.
"Don't you
understand? It was set up by an Imperial governor. A direct
representative of the Emperor!"
Comprehension wavered
just beyond his grasp, and his eyes bored into hers, begging her to explain.
"You're the heir to
the throne, second only to the Emperor himself in civil matters, and you've
been confirmed by Mother! That means she buried the ID codes to identify
you to any Imperial computer in your implants!"
"But—" Sean
stared at her, and his brain lurched back into motion. "We can't be sure
they were ever loaded," he argued, already turning to run towards the
console. "Even if they were, it's going to take me time to work through
them. Ten, fifteen minutes, minimum."
"So? You got anything
else to do right now?" she demanded with graveyard humor, and he managed
to smile.
"Guess not, at
that," he admitted, and stopped beside the console.
"They're reforming
on the stairs, Lord Sean!" one of the Malagorans called, and he turned,
but Sandy shoved him back towards the console.
"You take care of
the computer," she told him grimly. "We'll take care of the
Guard."
"Sandy, I—" he
began helplessly, and she squeezed his arm.
"I know," she
said softly, then turned and ran for the hatch. "You, you, and you,"
she told three of the Malagorans. "Go watch the arch. Tam, over here!
We've got company!"
"Here they come!"
someone shouted, and Crown Prince Sean Horus MacIntyre closed his eyes and
inserted his neural feed into the console.
Ninhursag MacMahan
rubbed weary eyes and tried to feel triumphant. A planet was an enormous place
to hide something as small as Tsien's super bomb, but there was little traffic
to Narhan, and most of it was simple personnel movement, virtually all of which
went by mat-trans. Her people had started out by checking the logs for every
mat-trans transit, incoming or outgoing, with a microscope and found nothing;
now a detailed search from orbit had found the same. She couldn't be absolutely
positive, but it certainly appeared the bomb had never been sent to the planet.
Which, unfortunately,
made Birhat the most likely target, and Birhat would be far harder to search.
There were more people and vastly more traffic, and swarms of botanists,
biologists, zoologists, entomologists, and tourists had fanned out across its
rejuvenated surface in the last twenty years. Anyone could have smuggled
the damned thing in, and Maker alone knew where they might have stashed it if
they had.
Of course, if it was in
one of the wilderness areas, it shouldn't be too hard to spot. Even if
it was covered by a stealth field, Imperial sensors should pick it up if they
looked hard enough. But if Mister X had gotten it into Phoenix, it was a whole
different ball game. The capital city's mass of power sources was guaranteed to
confuse her sensors. Even a block-by-block or tower-by-tower scan wouldn't find
it; her people would have to cover the city literally room by room, and that
was going to take weeks or even months.
But at least they'd made
progress. Assuming whoever had the thing didn't intend to blow up Earth
herself, they'd reduced the possible targets to one planet. And, she thought
with a frown, it was time to point that out.
* * *
"No."
"But, Colin—"
"I said no,
'Hursag, and I meant it."
Ninhursag sat back and
puffed her lips in frustration. She and Hector sat in the imperial family's
personal quarters facing Colin and a Jiltanith whose figure had changed
radically over the past few months. Tsien Tao-ling, Amanda, Adrienne Robbins,
and Gerald Hatcher attended by hologram, and their expressions mirrored
Ninhursag's.
" 'Hursag's right,
Colin," Hatcher said. "If the bomb's not on Narhan, it's almost
certainly here. It's the only thing that makes sense, given our estimate of
Mister X's past actions."
"I agree."
Colin nodded, yet his tone didn't yield a centimeter. "But I'm not going
to have myself evacuated when millions of other people can't do the same
thing."
"I'm only asking
you to make a state visit to Earth!" Ninhursag snapped. "For Maker's
sake, Colin, what are you trying to prove? Go to Earth and stay there till we
find the damned thing!"
"If you find
it," Colin shot back. "And I'm not going to do it."
"The people would
understand, Colin," Tsien said quietly.
"I'm not thinking
about public relations here!" Colin's voice was harsh. "I'm talking
about abandoning millions of civilians to save my own skin, and I won't do
it."
"Colin, you are
being foolish," Dahak put in.
"So sue me!"
"If I believed it
would change your mind, I would do just that," the computer replied.
"As it will not, I can only appeal to the good sense which, upon rare
occasion, you have exhibited in the past."
"Not this
time," Colin said flatly, and Jiltanith squeezed his hand.
"Colin, there's
something neither 'Hursag nor Dahak have pointed out," Amanda said.
"If, in fact, Mister X killed the kids, and if he's the one who has the
bomb, and if he's put it on Birhat, then you and 'Tanni are the reason.
If you're not here, there's no point in his setting the thing off. By that
standard, your moving to Earth might be the one thing that would keep him from
detonating it before we find it."
"Amanda raises a
most cogent point," Dahak agreed, and Colin frowned.
"Both Dahak and
Amanda are correct," Tsien pressed as he sensed Colin weakening. "You
are the Imperium's head of state, responsible for protecting the continuity of
government and the succession, and if you and Jiltanith are 'Mister X's'
targets, you may provoke him into action by remaining on Birhat."
"First," Colin
said, "you're assuming he has some means of setting this thing off at
will. To do that, he'd have to have someone here to transmit a firing order,
which would just happen to kill whoever transmitted it. I'm willing to concede
that he might have set up a patsy without telling the sucker what would happen,
but Mister X himself certainly won't sit around on ground zero. That means he'd
have to get the firing order to his patsy by hypercom, and 'Hursag and Dahak
are monitoring all hypercom traffic. It's still possible he could sneak
something past us, but, frankly, I doubt he'd risk it. I think the means of
detonation are already in place with a specific timetable."
"I could take half
of Battle Fleet through the holes in that logic," Adrienne said grimly.
"Maybe. I think
it's valid, but you may have a point—which brings me to my second point.
You're right about protecting the succession and the continuity of government,
Tao-ling, but I don't have to go to Earth for that."
"Nay, my
love!" Jiltanith's voice was sharp. "I like not thy words—nay, nor
thy thought, either!"
"Maybe not, but
Tao-ling's right, and so am I. One of us has to stay, 'Tanni. We can't just run
out on our people. But if we send you to Earth, we protect both the government
and the succession."
Jiltanith looked into
his face for a moment, pressing a hand against her swollen abdomen, and her
eyes were dark.
"Colin," she
said very quietly, "already have I lost two babes. Wouldst make these yet
unborn the pretext for my loss of thee, as well?"
"No," he said
softly. His left hand captured hers, and he cupped her face in his right.
"I don't intend to die, 'Tanni. But if there's any chance Mister X will
hold his detonation schedule unless he can get both of us, then one of us has
got to go. All right, I'm selfish enough to be glad of an excuse to get you out
of the danger zone and protect you. I admit that. But you're pregnant, 'Tanni.
Even if I do die, the succession is safe as long as you're alive. I'm
sorry, babe, but it's your duty to go."
" 'Duty.'
'Protect.' " The words were a harsh, ugly curse in her lovely mouth.
"Oh, how dearly have those words cost me o'er the centuries!"
"I know." He
closed his eyes and drew her close, hugging her fiercely while their friends
watched, and one hand stroked her raven's-wing hair. "I know," he
whispered. "Neither of us asked for the job, but we've got it, love. Now
we've got to do it. Please, 'Tanni. Don't fight me on this."
"Did it offer
chance o' victory, then would I fight thee to the end," she said into his
shoulder, and her voice was bleak. "Yet thou'rt what thou art, and I—I am duty's
slave, and for duty's sake and the lives I bear within I will not fight thee.
But know this, Colin MacIntyre. The day these babes draw breath do I leave them
in Father's care and return hither, and not thou nor all the power of thy crown
will stop me then."
* * *
"Jiltanith's coming
early?" Lawrence Jefferson said. Horus nodded, and the Lieutenant Governor
frowned. "Is something going on I should know about?"
"Going on?"
Horus raised his eyebrows.
"Look, Horus, I
know Jiltanith's planned all along for these children to be born on Earth, but
she's not due for another month. Where she goes and what she does is her
business, not mine, but I am Security Minister as well as Lieutenant
Governor, and the Sword of God's still mighty active. Don't forget that bomb
they planted right here in our own mat-trans facility! I wish she'd stay on
Birhat where it's safe, but if she won't, I'm responsible for backing up her
Marine security while she's here. So if there's any reason I should be thinking
in terms of additional precautions, I'd like to know it."
"I think her
security's more than adequate, Lawrence," Horus said after a moment.
"I appreciate your concern, but this is just a daughter visiting her
father. She'll be safe enough here inside White Tower."
"If you say
so." Jefferson sighed. "Well, in that case, I should get busy. When,
exactly, is she arriving?"
"Next Wednesday.
You'll have almost a week to make any arrangements you think are
necessary."
"That's good,
anyway," Jefferson said dryly.
He left, and Horus sat
gazing down at his blotter. Damn it, Lawrence was right. He was Security
Minister, and he should be warned, but Ninhursag was adamant on
maintaining strict need-to-know security on Mister X, and Colin backed her
totally. Horus pursed his lips, then shook his head and made a mental note to
buttonhole Colin for one more try to get Lawrence onto the cleared list when
the Assembly of Nobles met week after next on Birhat.
* * *
Jefferson settled into
his old-fashioned swivel chair and clenched his jaw. Damn the bitch!
He'd gone to all this trouble to get her, Colin, Horus, Hatcher, and Tsien onto
the same bull's-eye, and she had to decide to visit Daddy! Why couldn't
she stay home on Birhat where she was safe from terrorists?
He swore again, then
inhaled deeply and made himself relax. All right, it wasn't the end of the
world. He couldn't change the timing on the detonation, but as he'd just told
Horus, he was responsible for backing up her security detachment
whenever she visited Earth. It shouldn't be too hard to arrange the right sort
of backup. Sloppy, yes, and with the potential risk of pointing a finger at him
after she was dead, but the operative point was that she—and the rest of
them—would be dead by the time anyone started asking questions. He'd
already set up an in-depth defense against such questions, and with Ninhursag
killed along with the others, Security Minister Lawrence Jefferson would be the
one responsible for answering them. Better still, he could probably make it
look like a Sword of God operation, and with the Narhani branded with
responsibility for the bomb and the Sword with responsibility for Jiltanith's
assassination, he'd have all sorts of threats to justify whatever
"temporary" special powers he chose to assume, now wouldn't he?
He smiled thinly and
nodded. All right, Your Majesty. You just come on home to Earth. I'll arrange a
special homecoming for you.
* * *
"Got those
mat-trans logs you wanted, Ma'am."
Ninhursag looked up as
Fleet Commander Steinberg entered her office. The newly promoted commander
handed over the massive folio of datachips, but her face wore a thoughtful
frown, and Ninhursag cocked an eyebrow at her.
"Something on your
mind, Commander?"
"Well. . . ."
Steinberg shrugged. "I'm sorry, Ma'am. I know I'm not cleared for
everything, but this—" she gestured to the folio "—seems like a
pretty peculiar, ah, line of inquiry for the head of ONI to handle personally.
I know I'm not supposed to ask questions, but I'm afraid I haven't quite
figured out how to turn my curiosity off on cue."
"A serious flaw in
an intelligence officer." Ninhursag's voice was severe, but her eyes
smiled, and she waved at a chair. "Sit, Commander."
Steinberg sank into the
indicated chair and folded her hands in her lap. She looked like a uniformed
high school student waiting for a pop quiz, but Ninhursag reminded herself this
was the ice-cold interrogator who'd gotten them the break that proved the
bomb's existence. Commander Steinberg had been a major asset ever since her
transfer to Birhat, and Ninhursag had already added her to her mental list of
possible successors to take over at ONI when she stepped down in another
century or two. She had no intention of telling Steinberg that, but perhaps
it was time to bring her up to speed on Mister X and see what her talents could
do to push the bomb search here on Birhat.
"You're right,
Esther," she said after a moment. "It is a peculiar thing to
ask for, but I've got a rather peculiar reason for wanting it. And since you
can't turn your curiosity off, I think you've just talked yourself into a new
job." She flipped the folio back to Steinberg, and smiled at the
commander's look of surprise. "You're now in charge of analyzing these for
me, Commander, but before you start, let me tell you a little story. You've
already played a not so minor part in it yourself, even if you didn't know
it."
She tipped her chair
back, and though her voice remained whimsical, her expression was anything but.
"Once upon a
time," she began, "there was a person named Mister X. He wasn't a
very nice person, and . . ."
* * *
"Good to see you,
'Tanni. Maker, you look wonderful!"
"Art a poor liar,
Father." Jiltanith smiled and returned Horus' hug while Tinker Bell's pups
lolled on the rug at their feet. "Say rather that I do most resemble a
blimp, and thou wouldst speak but truth!"
"But I always liked
blimps," her father said with a grin. "Zeppelins were nicer, though.
Did I ever tell you I was aboard the Hindenburg for her first
transatlantic crossing in 1936? Didn't appear on the manifest, because I was
hiding from Anu at the time, but I was there. Won eight hundred dollars at poker
during the crossing." He shook his head. "Now there was a
civilized way to travel! I was always glad I wasn't at Lakehurst in '37."
"Nay, Father, thou
didst not tell me, yet now I think upon it, 'twould be the sort of thing thou
wouldst like."
"Yes." He
sighed and his smile faded. "You know, despite all the terrible things
I've seen in my life, I'll always be glad I've seen so much. Not many of
us get the chance to watch an entire planet discover the universe."
"No," she
said, and his eyes darkened and fell at the involuntary bitterness that cored
the single, soft word.
" 'Tanni," he
said quietly, "I'm sorry. I know—"
"Hush,
Father." She pressed her fingers to his mouth. "Forgive me. 'Tis only
being sent to 'safety' once more maketh my tongue so bitter." She smiled
sadly. "Well do I know thou didst the best thou couldst. 'Twas not our
fate to live the lives we longed to live."
"But—"
"Nay, Father. Say
it not. Words change naught after so many years." She smiled again, and
shook her head. "Now am I weary, and by thy mercy will I seek my
bed."
"Of course,
'Tanni." He hugged her again and watched her leave the room, then walked
to the window and stared sightlessly out over Shepard Center. She would never
truly forgive him, he thought. She couldn't, any more than he could blame her
for it, but she was right. He'd done the best he could.
Tears burned, and he
wiped them angrily. All those years. Those millennia while she'd slept in
stasis. He and the rest of Nergal's crew had rotated themselves in and
out of stasis, using it to spin their own lives out beyond mortal imagination
in their war against Anu, yet he hadn't been able to let her do the same. He'd kept
her in stasis, for he'd been unable not to, and his weakness was his deepest
shame. Yet he'd lost too much, given too much, to change it. Her mother had
never escaped from the original mutiny aboard Dahak, and he'd almost
lost 'Tanni, as well, when her child's mind broke under the horrors of that
blood-soaked day.
No, he told himself
bitterly, he had lost that child that day. When one of his own
Terra-born granddaughters managed to heal her, somehow, she'd been someone
else, someone who'd survived only by walling herself off utterly from the
broken person she once had been. A person who never again spoke Universal, but
only the fifteenth-century English she'd learned. One who never, ever again
called him "Poppa," but only "Father."
He'd been unable to risk
that person again, unable to bring himself to lose her twice, and so, against
her will, he'd sent her back into stasis and kept her there another five
hundred years, until Nergal's dwindling manpower forced him to release
her from it. He'd turned her into a symbol, his defiant challenge to the
universe which had taken all he loved. He . . . would . . . not . . . lose . . . her . . . again!
And so he hadn't. He'd
kept her safe, and in doing so, he'd robbed her of so much. Of the foster
mother who'd saved her mind, of her chance to fight by his side for all those
centuries—of her right to live her own life on her own terms. He knew, knew to
the depths of his soul, how unspeakably lucky he was that, somehow, she'd
learned to love him once more when he finally did release her. It was a reward
his selfish cowardice could never deserve, and, oh Maker of Grace and Mercy, he
was so proud of her. Yet he could never undo what he'd done, and of all
the bitter regrets of his endless life, that knowledge was the bitterest of
all.
Planetary Duke Horus
closed his eyes and inhaled sharply, then shook himself and walked slowly from
his daughter's apartment in silence.
"Got a second,
Ma'am?"
Esther Steinberg stood
in the door of Ninhursag's office once more, and Ninhursag's eyebrows rose in
surprise. It was the middle of the night, and Steinberg had been off duty for
hours. But then she frowned. The commander was in civvies, and from the looks
of things she'd dressed in a hurry.
"Of course I do.
What's on your mind?"
Steinberg stepped inside
the door and waited for it to close behind her before she spoke.
"It's those
mat-trans records, Ma'am."
"What about them? I
thought you and Dahak cleared all of them."
"We did, Ma'am. We
found a couple of small anomalies, but we tracked those down, and aside from
that, everything was right on the money."
"So?"
"I guess it's just
that curiosity bump again, Ma'am, but I haven't been able to get them out of my
mind." Steinberg smiled crookedly. "I've been going back over them on
my own time, and, well, I've found a new discrepancy."
"One Dahak
missed?" Ninhursag couldn't keep from sounding skeptical.
"No, Ma'am. A new
discrepancy."
"New?"
Ninhursag jerked upright in her chair. "What d'you mean, 'new,'
Esther?"
"You know we've
been pulling regular updates on the mat-trans logs ever since you put me on the
project?" Ninhursag nodded impatiently, and Steinberg shrugged.
"Well, I started playing with the data—more out of frustration at not
finding any answers than anything else—and I had my personal computer run a
check for anomalies within the database. Any sort of conflict between
downloads from the mat-trans computers on a generational basis, as well as a
pure content one."
"And?"
"I just finished
the last one, Ma'am, and one of the log entries in my original download doesn't
match the version in the most recent one."
"What?"
Ninhursag frowned again. "What do you mean, 'doesn't match'?"
"I mean, Ma'am,
that according to the mat-trans facility records, I have two different logs
with precisely the same time and date stamp, both completely official by every
test I can run, that say two different things. It's only a small variation, but
it shouldn't be there."
"Corrupted
data?" Ninhursag murmured, and Steinberg shook her head.
"No, Ma'am. Different
data. That's why I came straight over." Her mouth tightened in a firm
line. "I may be paranoid, Admiral, but the only reason I can think of for
the difference is that between the time we pulled the first log and the time we
got the latest update, someone changed the entry. And under the circumstances,
I thought I should tell you. Fast."
* * *
"Esther's
right," Ninhursag said grimly. She and the commander sat in Colin's Palace
office. Steinberg looked acutely uncomfortable at being in such close proximity
to her Emperor, but she met Colin's searching look squarely as he rubbed his bristly
chin. "I double-checked her work, and so did Dahak. Someone definitely
changed the entry, and that, Colin, took someone with a hell of a lot of
juice."
"Are you telling
me," Colin said very carefully, "that the goddamned bomb is sitting
directly under the Palace right this instant?"
"I'm telling you something
is sitting under the Palace." Ninhursag's voice was flat. "And
whatever it is, it isn't the statue that left Narhan. The mass readings matched
perfectly in the first log entry, but they're off by over twenty percent in the
second one. You have any idea why else that might be?"
"But, good God,
'Hursag, how could anyone make a switch? And if they pulled it off in the first
place without our catching it, why change the logs so anyone who checked would know
they had?"
"I don't know that
yet, but I think we're going to have to reconsider our theory that Mister X and
the Sword of God are two totally separate threats. I find it extremely hard to
believe the Sword just coincidentally blew up the officer who oversaw
the statue's transit here the very night he did it. If Esther hadn't caught the
discrepancy in masses, we never would have connected the two events; now it
hits me right in the eye."
"Agreed.
Agreed." Colin leaned back with a worried frown. "Dahak?"
"My remotes are
only now getting into position, Colin," Dahak's mellow voice replied from
thin air. "It is most fortunate Commander Steinberg pursued this line of
inquiry. It would never have occurred to me—I have what I believe humans call a
blind spot in that I assume that data, once entered, will not subsequently
metamorphose—and the Palace's security systems would almost certainly have
prevented our orbital scans from detecting anything. Even now—"
He broke off so suddenly
Colin blinked.
"Dahak?" There
was no response, and his voice sharpened. "Dahak?"
"Colin, I have made
a grave error," the computer said abruptly.
"An error?"
"I should not have
inserted my remotes so promptly. I fear my scan systems have just activated the
bomb."
"The bomb?"
Even now Colin hadn't truly believed, not with his emotions, and his face went
pale.
"Indeed." The
computer's voice seldom showed emotion, but it was bitter now. "I cannot
be certain it is the bomb, for I had insufficient time for detailed
scans before I was forced to shut down. But there is a device of some sort
within the statue—one protected by a Fleet antitampering system."
The humans looked at one
another in stunned silence, and then Ninhursag cleared her throat.
"What . . . what
sort of system, Dahak?"
"A Mark Ninety,
multi-threat remote weapon system sensor," the computer said flatly.
"My scan activated it, but it would appear I was able to shut down before
it reached second-stage initiation. It is now armed, however. Any attempt to
approach with additional scan systems or with anything which its systems might
construe as a threat, will, in all probability, result in the device's
immediate detonation."
* * *
" 'Tanni! 'Tanni,
wake up!"
Jiltanith sat up as
quickly as her pregnant condition allowed, and the shaking hand released her.
She rubbed her eyes and stared at her father, and the ghosts of sleep fled as
his expression registered.
"Father? What
passeth?"
"They think they've
found the bomb," he said grimly. Her eyes flew wide, and his mouth
twisted. "It's under the Palace, 'Tanni—hidden inside the Narhani's
statue."
"Jesu!" Her
eyes narrowed. There'd been a time when she'd personally managed Nergal's
Terra-born intelligence net against Anu, and she hadn't lost the habits of
thought that had engendered. " 'Tis a ploy most shrewd," she murmured
now. "Should it be discovered, as, indeed, 'twould seem it hath, then
would all assume 'twas the Narhani concealed it there."
"That's what we
think," Horus agreed, but his voice's harshness warned her he hadn't yet told
her everything, and her eyes demanded the rest. "It's armed and
active," he said sighing, "and it's covered by an antitampering
system. We can't get to it to disarm it, or even to destroy it."
"Colin!"
Jiltanith whispered, and clutched her father's arm.
"He's all right,
'Tanni!" Horus said quickly, covering her hand with his own. "He and
Gerald and Adrienne are activating the evacuation plan now. He's fine."
"Nay!" Her
fingers tightened like talons. "Father, thou knowest him too well for
that, as I! He will not flee so long as any of his folk do stand exposed to
such danger!"
"I'm sure—"
Horus began, but she shook her head spastically and threw off the covers. She
swung her feet to the floor and stood, already reaching for her clothing.
"I must go to him!
Mayhap, were I there, I—"
"No, 'Tanni."
Her head snapped around, and he shook his head.
"I tell thee I am
going." Her voice was chipped ice, but he shook his head, and her tone
turned colder still. "Gainsay me in this at thy peril, Father!"
"Not me, 'Tanni,"
he said softly. "Colin. He's ordered me to keep you here and keep you
safe."
Her eyes locked with
his, and her fear for her husband struck him like a lash. But he refused to
look away, and a dark, terrible sorrow, like a premonition of yet more loss,
twisted her face.
"Father, please,"
she whispered, and he closed his eyes, unable to face her pain, and shook his
head once more.
"I'm sorry, 'Tanni.
It was Colin's decision, and he's right."
* * *
"Dahak is
correct," Vlad Chernikov said. "We dare not send any additional
scanners into the gallery, but I have deployed passive systems from beyond a
Mark Ninety's activation threshold and carried out a purely optical scan using
the Palace security systems. While I can find no outward visual evidence, our
passive systems have detected active emissions from a broad-spectrum sensor
array which are entirely consistent with a Mark Ninety's. I fear that any
remote—or, for that matter, any human with Imperial equipment—entering the
gallery will cause it to detonate."
"God." Colin
closed his eyes, propped his elbows on the conference table, and leaned his
face into his palms.
"The evacuation
will begin in twenty-five minutes," Adrienne Robbins' holo image said.
"I'll coordinate embarkation from the Academy; Gerald will handle
ship-to-ship movement from Mother, but we don't have enough ships in-system to
handle the entire population."
"Some additional
transport'll begin arriving in about ninety-three hours," Hatcher's image
said. "Mother sent out an all-ships signal as soon as I got the word.
We'll have another six planetoids within a hundred and fifty hours; anything
after that'll take at least ten days to get here."
"How many can we
get aboard the available ships?" Colin asked tautly.
"Not enough,"
Hatcher said grimly. "Dahak?"
"Assuming Dahak
is used as well, and that we move as many as possible to existing deep-space
life support in-system but beyond lethal radius of the weapon, we will be able
to lift approximately eighty-nine percent of the Birhat population from the
planet," the computer responded. "More than that will be beyond our
resources."
"Mat-trans?"
Colin said.
"On our list,"
Adrienne replied, "but the system's too big an energy hog to move people
quickly, Colin. It's going to take at least three weeks to move eleven percent
of Birhat's population through the facility."
"We don't have
three weeks!"
"Colin, all we can
do is all we can do." Gerald Hatcher didn't look any happier than Colin,
but his voice was crisp.
"We've got to take
that bomb out," Colin muttered. "Damn it, there has to be a
way!"
"Unfortunately,"
Dahak said, "we cannot disarm it. That means we can only attempt to
destroy it, which will require a weapon sufficient to guarantee its instant and
complete disablement from outside the Mark Ninety's perimeter, and the device
is located in the most heavily protected structure on Birhat. While we possess
many weapons which could assure its destruction, the Palace's structural
strength is such that any weapon of sufficient power would effectively destroy
Phoenix, as well. In short, we cannot ourselves 'take out' the device without
obliterating the Imperium's capital, and all in it."
* * *
"Horus! What the
hell is going on?" Lawrence Jefferson had commed from Van Gelder Center,
Planetary Security's central facility, not his White Tower office, and like
many of the people swarming about behind him, he looked as if he'd dressed in the
dark in a hurry. Horus wondered how he'd gotten to Van Gelder so quickly, but
he wasn't about to look a gift horse in the mouth.
"Big trouble,
Lawrence," he replied. "Get as many of your people as you can to the
mat-trans facility. We're going to have thousands of people coming through from
Birhat, starting in about—" he checked his chrono "—twelve
minutes."
"Thousands of
people?" Jefferson shook his head like a punch-drunk fighter, and
Horus bared his teeth.
"Some lunatic's put
a bomb under the Palace, and the damned thing's got an active antitampering
system," he said, and watched Lawrence Jefferson go bone-white. The
Lieutenant Governor said absolutely nothing for a moment, then shook himself.
"A bomb? What sort
of bomb? It sounds like you're evacuating the entire planet!"
"We are,"
Horus said grimly. "This thing's probably powerful enough to take out all
of Birhat—and Mother."
"With a single bomb?
You're joking!"
"I wish I were.
We've been looking for the damned thing for months. Well, now we've found
it."
"What about the
Emperor?" Jefferson demanded.
"He's hanging in
until the last minute, the damned young fool! Says he won't leave until he can
get everyone else out."
"And
Jiltanith?" Jefferson asked quickly, and Horus smiled more naturally.
"Thanks for asking,
but she's safe. She's still in White Tower, and she's staying here, by the
Maker, if I have to chain her to the wall!"
Jefferson closed his
eyes for a moment, mind racing, then nodded sharply.
"All right, Horus,
I'm on it."
"Good man! I'll be
down to give you a hand as quick as I can."
"Don't!" Horus
raised an eyebrow at the Lieutenant Governor's quick, sharp reply, and
Jefferson shook his head angrily. "Sorry. Didn't mean to bark at you. It's
just that you can't do anything down here that I can't do just as well,
and from your tone of voice, Her Majesty isn't too happy at staying here on
Earth."
"That," Horus
agreed, "is putting it mildly."
"Well, in that case
you'd better stay there and keep an eye on her. God knows no one else on
this planet has the seniority—or the balls!—to tell her no if she orders them
out of her way. Besides, it's going to be a madhouse down here when refugees
start coming through. I'll feel better with both of you tucked away someplace
nice and safe, where whoever's behind this can't get at you in the
confusion."
"I—" Horus
started to reply, then stopped himself and nodded unwillingly. "You may be
being paranoid, but you may also be right. I can't see why anyone would want me
dead if they can't get 'Tanni and—please the Maker—Colin, but whoever's behind
this has to be a lunatic."
"Exactly."
Jefferson gave him a grim smile. "And if he's a lunatic, who knows what he
may do if he thinks the wheels are coming off?"
Lawrence Jefferson
stared at the blank com screen. How? How had they found it? Had he come
this far, worked this hard, to fail at the last minute?!
A fisted hand pounded
his knee under cover of his borrowed desk, and a chill stabbed him as something
else Horus had said struck home. If they'd been hunting the bomb "for
months," they knew far more than he'd imagined. Ninhursag! It had to be
Ninhursag, and that gave ONI's increased activities on Earth a suddenly
sinister cast. Obviously they hadn't ID'ed him, but if they'd deduced the
bomb's existence, what else had they picked up along the way?
He drew a deep breath
and closed his eyes. All right. They knew the bomb was there and active, but if
they'd known more, Horus would have said so. Which meant they didn't
know it would detonate twelve hours after the Mark Ninety activated. Would they
assume the fact that it hadn't instantly detonated meant it wouldn't
unless they triggered it somehow?
He bit his lip. The bomb
had originally been timed to detonate during the next meeting of the Assembly
of Nobles, when Horus would be on Birhat with Colin, Jiltanith, and both the
Imperium's senior military commanders. That would have gotten all five of them
at once, but now they were spread out in two different star systems and they
knew someone was after them, which meant the chance of recreating that
opportunity was unlikely ever to come again. Yet Horus said Colin was going to
"hang in" to the last possible minute, and Hatcher and Tsien must be
up to their necks in the evacuation operation. Even if they guessed time was
short, their efforts to save Birhat's population were almost certain to keep
the two officers within the danger zone until too late. But by the same token,
both of them would be doing everything they could to convince Colin to leave,
and if he gave in, he'd evacuate to Dahak. Any other ship would be
unthinkable, and if Colin MacIntyre got away from Birhat aboard Dahak,
very few things in the universe—and certainly nothing Lawrence Jefferson
had—could get to him.
The Lieutenant Governor
hesitated in an atypical agony of indecision. There was still a chance Colin
would die with his senior military commanders. If that happened, and if
Jefferson could insure Horus and Jiltanith died as well, his original plan would
still work. But if Horus and Jiltanith died and Colin didn't, he'd move
in with Battle Fleet and the Imperial Marines. He'd take Earth apart stone by
stone, and the hell with due process, to find the man who'd destroyed Birhat
and murdered his wife, unborn children, and father-in-law, and when he did—
Jefferson shuddered, and
the panicked part of his brain gibbered to give it up. They didn't know who he
was yet. If he folded his hand and faded away, they might never know. In
time, if they continued to trust him, he might actually have the chance to try
again. But he couldn't count on eluding their net, not when he didn't know how
much they'd already learned, and the gambler in his soul shouted to go banco.
It was all on the table, everything he had, all he'd hoped and dreamed and
worked for. Success or failure, absolute power or death: all of it hinged on
whether or not Colin MacIntyre agreed to leave Birhat within the next twelve
hours, and Jefferson wanted to scream. He was a chess master who calculated
with painstaking precision. How was he supposed to calculate this? All
he could do was guess, and if he guessed wrong, he died.
He pounded his knee one
more time, and then his shoulders relaxed. If he stopped now and they found him
out, the crimes he'd already committed would demand his execution, and that
meant it was really no choice at all, didn't it?
* * *
"—so Adrienne's
parasites are embarking their first loads now, and my Marines have taken over
at the mat-trans," Hector MacMahan reported. "So far, there seems to
be more shock than panic, but I don't expect that to last."
"Do you have enough
men to control a panic if it starts?" Hatcher asked. "I can reinforce
with Fleet personnel if you need them."
"I'll take you up
on that," MacMahan said gratefully.
"Done. And
now," Hatcher's holo-image turned to Colin, "will you please
get aboard a ship and move out beyond the threat zone?"
"No."
"For Maker's sake,
Colin!" Ninhursag exploded. "Do you want this thing to kill you?"
"No, but if it
hasn't gone off yet, maybe it won't unless we set it off."
"And maybe the
goddamned thing is ticking down right now!" MacMahan snapped. "Colin,
if you don't get out of here willingly, then I'll have a battalion of Marines drag
your ass off this planet!"
"No, you
won't!"
"I'm responsible
for your safety, and—"
"And I am your
goddamned Emperor! I never wanted the fucking job, but I've got it, and I will
by God do it!"
"Good. Fine! Shoot
me at dawn—if we're both still alive!" MacMahan snarled. "Now get
your butt in gear, Sir, because I'm sending in the troops!"
"Call him off,
Gerald," Colin said in a quiet, deadly voice, but Hatcher's holo-image
shook its head.
"I can't do that.
He's right."
"Call him off, or
I'll have Mother do it for you!"
"You can try,"
Hatcher said grimly, "but only the hardware listens to her. Or are you
saying that if Hector drags you aboard a ship with a million civilian evacuees
you'll have Mother order its comp cent not to leave orbit?"
Colin's furious eyes
locked with those of Hatcher's image, but the admiral refused to look away. A
moment of terrible tension hovered in the conference room, and then Colin's
shoulders slumped.
"All right,"
he grated, and his voice was thick with hatred. Hatred that was all the worse
because he knew his friends were right. "All right, goddamn it! But I'll
go aboard Dahak, not another ship."
"Good!"
MacMahan snapped, then sighed and looked away. "Colin, I'm sorry. God,
I'm sorry. But I can't let you stay. I just can't."
"I know,
Hector." It was Colin's turn to turn away, and his voice was heavy and
old, no longer hot. "I know," he repeated quietly.
* * *
Brigadier Alex Jourdain
sealed his Security tunic and looked around his comfortable apartment. He'd
lived well for the last ten years; now the orders he'd just received were
likely to take it all away, and more, yet he was in far too deep to back out,
and if they pulled it off after all—
He drew a deep breath,
checked his grav gun, and headed for the transit shaft.
* * *
" 'Tanni, I—"
Horus cut himself off as Jiltanith, still in her nightgown, turned from the
window and he saw her tears. His face twisted, and he closed his mouth and
started to leave, but she held out a hand.
"Nay, Father,"
she said softly. He turned back to her, then reached out to take her hand, and
she smiled and pulled him closer. "Poor Father," she whispered.
"How many ways the world hath wounded thee. Forgive my anger."
"There's nothing to
forgive," he whispered back, and pressed his cheek to her shining hair.
"Oh, 'Tanni! If I could undo my life, make it all different—"
"Then would we be
gods, Father, and none of us the people life hath made us. In all I have ever
known of thee, thou hast done the best that man might do. 'Twas ever thy fate
to fight upon thy knees, yet never didst thou yield. Not to Anu, nor to the
Achuultani, nor to Hell itself. How many, thinkest thou, might say as
much?"
"But I built my
Hell myself," he said quietly. "Brick by brick, and I dragged you
into it with me." He closed his eyes and held her tight. "Do . . . do
you remember the last thing you ever said to me in Universal, 'Tanni?"
She stiffened in his
arms, but she didn't pull away, and after a moment, she shook her head.
"Father, I recall
so little of those days." She pressed her face harder into his shoulder.
" 'Tis like some dark, horrible dream, one that e'en now haunteth my sleep
on unquiet nights, yet when waking—"
"Hush. Hush,"
he whispered, and pressed his lips into her hair. "I don't want to hurt
you. Maker knows I've done too much of that. But I want you to understand,
'Tanni." He drew a deep breath. "The last thing you ever said was
'Why didn't you come, Poppa? Why didn't you love us?' " Her
shoulders shook under his hands, and his own voice was unsteady. " 'Tanni,
I always loved you, and your mother, but you were right to hate
me." She tried to protest, but he shook his head. "No, listen to me,
please. Let me say it." She drew a deep, shuddering breath and nodded, and
he closed his eyes.
" 'Tanni, I
talked your mother into supporting Anu. I didn't realize what a monster he
was—then—but I was the one who convinced her. Everything that happened to
you—to her—was my fault. It was, and I know it, and I've always known it, and,
O Maker, I would sell my very soul never to have done it. But I could never
undo it, never find the magic to make it as if it had never happened. A father
is supposed to protect his children, to keep them safe, and that—" his
voice broke, but he made himself go on "—that was why I put you back into
stasis. Because I knew I'd failed. Because I'd proven I couldn't keep you safe
any other way. Because . . . I was afraid."
"Father, Father!
Dost'a think I knew that not?" She shook her head.
"But I never told
you," he said softly. "I cost us both so much, and I never had the
courage to tell you I knew what I'd done and ask you to forgive
me."
* * *
Colin paced the
conference room like a caged animal, fists pounding together before him while
he awaited his own cutter, and his brain raced. The evacuation Adrienne and
Hatcher had planned but never been able to rehearse was going more smoothly
than he would have believed possible, but all of them knew they weren't going
to get everyone out. Unless they could deactivate the bomb, millions of people
would die, yet how in God's name did you deactivate something you couldn't
approach with as much as a scanpack, much less the weapons to—
He stopped suddenly,
then slammed himself down in his chair and opened his neural feed to Dahak
wide.
"Give me everything
on the Mark Ninety," he said sharply.
* * *
The door chime sounded,
and Horus turned from Jiltanith to answer it.
"Yes?"
"Your Grace, it's
Captain Chin," an urgent voice said. "Sir, I think you'd better come
out here. I just tried to com the mat-trans center, and the links are all
down."
"That's
impossible," Horus said reasonably. "Did you call Maintenance?"
"I tried to, Your
Grace. No luck. And then I tried my fold-com." The captain drew a deep
breath. "Your Grace, it didn't work either."
"What?"
Horus opened the door and stared at the Marine.
"It didn't work,
Sir, and I've never seen anything like it. There's no obvious jamming, the coms
just don't work, and it'd take a full-scale warp suppressor within four or five
hundred meters to lock a Fleet com out of hyper-space." The captain faced
Horus squarely. "Your Grace, with all due respect, we'd better get Her Majesty
the hell out of here. Right now."
"You know, it might
just work," Vlad Chernikov murmured.
"Or set the thing
the hell off!" Hector MacMahan objected.
"A
possibility," Dahak agreed, "yet the likelihood is small, assuming
the force of the explosion were sufficient. What Colin suggests is, admittedly,
a brute force solution, yet it has a certain conceptual elegance."
"Let me get this
straight," MacMahan said. "We can't get near the thing, but you
people want to pile explosives on top of it and set them off? Are you out of
your frigging minds?"
"The operative
point, General," Dahak said, "is that a Mark Ninety is programmed to
recognize Imperial threats."
"So?"
"So we don't use
Imperial technology," Colin said. "We use old-fashioned,
pre-Imperial, Terran-made HE. A Mark Ninety would no more recognize those as a
threat than it would a flint hand-ax."
"HE from
where?" MacMahan demanded. "There isn't any on Birhat. For that
matter, I doubt there's any on Terra after this long!"
"You are incorrect,
General," Dahak said calmly. "Marshal Tsien has the materials we
require."
"I do?" Tsien
sounded surprised.
"You do, Sir. If
you will check your records, you will discover that your ordnance disposal
section has seventy-one pre-Siege, megaton-range nuclear warheads confiscated by
Imperial authorities in Syria four years ago."
"I—" Tsien
paused, and then his holo-image nodded. "As usual, you are correct, Dahak.
I had forgotten." He looked at MacMahan. "Lawrence's Security
personnel stumbled across them, Hector. We believe they were cached by the
previous regime before you disarmed it on Colin's orders before the Siege.
Apparently, even the individuals who hid them away had forgotten about them,
and they were badly decayed—they used a tritium booster, and it had broken
down. They were sent here for disposal, but we never got around to it."
"You want to use nukes?"
MacMahan yelped.
"No," Dahak
said calmly, "but these are Terran warheads, which rely on shaped
chemical charges to initiate criticality, and each of them contains several kilograms
of the compound Octol."
"And how do you get
the explosives into position?" MacMahan asked more normally.
"Somebody walks in,
sets them, fuses them, and walks back out again," Colin said. MacMahan
raised an eyebrow, and Colin shrugged. "It should work, as long as he
doesn't have any active Imperial hardware on him."
"Background
radioactivity?" Hatcher asked. "If this stuff's been squirreled away
inside a nuclear warhead for twenty-odd years, it's bound to have picked up
some contamination."
"Not sufficient to
cross a Mark Ninety's threshold," Dahak replied.
"You're
certain?" Hatcher pressed, then waved a hand. "Forget that. You never
make unqualified statements if you aren't certain, do you?"
"Such habits imply
a certain imprecision of thought," Dahak observed, and despite the
tension, Colin smiled, then sobered.
"I think we have to
try it. It's a risk, but it's the smallest one I can come up with, and you may
be right about a timer, Hector. We don't have time to come up with an ideal,
no-risk solution."
"Agreed. How long
to strip out the explosives and get them down here, Dahak?"
"I have already
initiated the process, General. I estimate that they could be delivered to the
Palace within twenty minutes in their present state, but I would prefer to
reshape them into a proper configuration for maximum destructive effect, which will
require an additional hour."
"Eighty
minutes?" MacMahan rubbed his chin, then nodded. "All right, Colin,
I'll vote for it."
"Gerald?
Tao-ling?" Both officers nodded, and Colin glanced at Chernikov.
"I, too," the
Russian said. "In fact, I would prefer to place the charge myself."
"I don't know,
Vlad—" Colin began, but MacMahan interrupted crisply.
"If you were
thinking about doing it yourself, you can just rethink. Whatever happens down
here, you, personally, are going to be aboard Dahak and outside the
lethal zone when we set it off. And if you know anybody better equipped
for the job than Vlad, I don't." Colin opened his mouth, but
MacMahan fixed him with a challenging eye and he closed it again.
"Good,"
MacMahan said.
* * *
"Suppressor's
active, Brigadier," the Security tech said, never looking up from his
remote panel. "Their coms are blocked."
"Elevators and
switchboard?" Brigadier Jourdain asked, and another man looked up.
"Shut down. They've
pulled almost all the regular Security people for crowd control, and I've cut
the links to the lobby station. We're placing the charges to blow the
switchboard when we leave now; it'll look just like a Sword of God hit,
Sir."
"All right."
Jourdain faced his handpicked traitors. "Remember, these are Imperial
Marines. There's only twelve of them, but they're tough, well trained, and if
they've tried their coms since the suppressor went on-line, they're going to be
ready. Our coms are out, too, so stick to the plan. Don't improvise unless you
have to."
His men nodded grimly.
"All right. Let's
do it."
* * *
Horus stood outside
Jiltanith's bedroom while she jerked on clothes, and his mind raced. It was
preposterous. He was in his own HQ building in the middle of Earth's capital
city, and he couldn't even place a com call! There could be only one reason for
that, but how had "Mister X" pulled it off? Captain Chin was right.
The only thing that could shut down fold coms without active jamming was close
proximity to a warp suppressor, but a suppressor powerful enough to do the job
was far too large to have been smuggled through White Tower's security . . .
which meant someone on his own security staff must have brought it in, and if
he'd been penetrated that completely—
He crossed to his desk
and touched a button, and the desktop swung smoothly up. The habits of
millennia of warfare die hard, and despite his fear, he smiled wolfishly as he
lifted the energy gun from its nest. He punched the self-test button, and the
ready light glowed just as the bedroom door opened . . . and Captain Chin
half-ran into his office.
"Your Grace,"
the Chinese officer said flatly, "the elevators are out, too."
"Shit!" Horus
closed his eyes, then shook himself. "Stairs?"
"We can try them,
Sir, but if they've cut the coms and elevators, they're already on their way.
And without the elevators—"
"Without the
elevators, they're coming up the stairs," Horus grunted. Wonderful. Just
fucking wonderful! Head down the stairs and they risked running into the
bastards head-on. For a moment, he was tempted anyway, but Imperial weapons
were too destructive. If they got caught in a stairwell, a single shot might
take out all their men—and 'Tanni. But if they didn't try to break out, they
left the initiative to the other side. On the other hand—
Jiltanith stepped out of
the bedroom, convoyed by four stocky, black-and-tan rottweilers. Her dagger
glittered on her belt, and Horus' mouth tightened as she reached out and took
Captain Chin's grav gun from its holster. The Marine didn't protest; he simply
shifted his energy gun to his left hand and passed over his ammunition belt
with his right, and she gave him a strained smile. The belt wouldn't fit around
her pregnancy-swollen waist, so she hung it over her shoulder like a bandolier.
"All right,
Captain," Horus said. "We have to let them come to us. The stairs
merge into the central core one floor down; have ten of your people set up to
cover the landings. Leave the other two here to cover the access to my office.
'Tanni, lock your bedroom door, then go to my room and lock yourself in.
Hopefully, if anyone gets this far, they'll head for your room first."
"Father, I—"
she began, and he shook his head savagely.
"I know, 'Tanni,
but you're going to have to leave this to us. We can't risk you, and even if we
could—" He waved at her swollen belly, the gesture both tender and oddly
apologetic, and she nodded unhappily.
"Art right,"
she sighed, and looked down at the bio-enhanced dogs.
"Go thou wi'
Captain Chin," she told them, "and watch thyselves."
"We go, pack
lady," Galahad's vocoder said, "but keep Gwynevere with you."
She nodded, and Horus looked at Chin as the other three dogs leapt away.
"We're out of
communication, and we're going to be spread out. Watch your rears as well as
your fronts."
"Yes, Your
Grace!" Chin saluted and vanished after the dogs, and Horus turned to the
two Marines who'd been left behind.
"Anyone who gets
this far will have to come up the last stair. After that, they'll go for
'Tanni's bedroom first. Pick yourselves positions to cover the stairs. If you
have to fall back, head this way; don't head for my room. We want
them to keep on thinking she's in her room as long as we can."
"Yes, Sir."
The senior Marine jerked his head at his companion, and they ran towards the
tower's central access core.
"Go, 'Tanni!"
Horus said urgently.
"I go,
Father," she said softly, yet she paused just long enough to throw one arm
about him and kiss him before she wheeled away. He watched her go, Gwynevere
trotting ahead of her like a scout, and turned to survey his office one more
time. He'd accomplished a lot from this place. Commanded the Siege of Earth,
directed the reconstruction in its wake, coordinated the introduction of an
entire planet to Imperial technology. . . . He'd never expected to fight for
his daughter's life from it, but if he had to do that too, then, by the Maker,
he would.
He walked slowly to the
office foyer. It was the only way into his personal quarters, and he upended
his receptionist's desk and piled furniture about it. He built a sturdy
barricade facing the entry, then stepped away from it to the wall beside the
entry and settled his back into a corner.
* * *
"The explosives
have arrived at the Palace, Colin," Dahak said as Colin entered the
command deck of the computer's starship body.
"Good."
Officers popped to their feet as their Emperor and Warlord strode across to the
captain's couch, but he waved them back to their duties. Dahak had moved
beyond the weapon's threat radius, and Colin felt a sick surge of guilt as he realized
that, whatever happened, he personally was safe. It seemed a betrayal of all
his subjects, and knowing Hector and Gerald were right to insist upon it only
made his guilt worse.
He settled into the
command couch. The display was centered on Birhat, not Dahak, and he
watched sublight craft streaming from the planetary surface to the waiting
planetoids. Like Dahak, all those starships were beyond threat range,
and thousands more of his subjects were embarking aboard them as he watched,
but it was taking time. Too much time they might not have. He drew a deep, deep
breath and pressed himself back in his couch.
"Tell them to
proceed, Dahak."
* * *
Brigadier Jourdain
followed his men up the stairs. There were only twelve Marines, one tired old
man, and a pregnant woman to stop them, while he had over a hundred men, all
fully enhanced courtesy of Earth Security. It would be more than enough, he
told himself yet again. Some were going to get killed, but not enough to stop
them, and dead Security men would be convincing proof of how hard Brigadier
Jourdain and his men had fought to protect their Empress.
He bared mirthless teeth
at the thought as his point man approached the landing. They were one floor
below Duke Horus's office and living quarters, and they hadn't seen a soul.
Perhaps he'd worried too much. Surely if the Marines had figured
anything out—
Something rattled. The
lead Security man saw the small object skitter past his feet, and his eyes
flared. No! His implant scanners hadn't picked up a thing, so how—
Eleven men died in a
blast of fury, and the Marine who'd thrown the grenade grinned savagely as he
and his partner reactivated their own implants and brought their energy guns to
bear on the smoke-streaming door.
* * *
Captain Chin's head
jerked up as the explosion rattled. Please, God, let someone else
have heard it! he prayed, then settled back down in firing position.
* * *
Brigadier Jourdain's
ears cringed as thunder filled the stairwell. The screams of the merely wounded
were faint and tiny in the explosion's wake, and he swore viciously. So much
for surprise!
"Clancey! Get up
there!" he barked, and Corporal Clancey settled his automatic grenade
launcher into firing position. He jerked his head at the other three members of
his section, and the four of them pushed forward through the men above them on
the stair.
The waiting Marines had
their own implant sensors on-line now, but there was a limit to what the
devices could tell them. They knew the stairs were full of men, but they
couldn't tell what weapons they carried or precisely what they were doing. The
second Marine held a grenade, ready to throw it, but the same suppressor that
blocked their coms from hyper-space would smother any hyper grenade's small
field, and they'd had only one HE grenade each. He couldn't afford to waste it,
and so he gritted his teeth and waited.
Clancey and his team
reached the landing and eased forward, boots skidding in what had once been
their point men, backs pressed to the walls. They, too, had their sensors
on-line, and they didn't like what they were telling them. There were two
Marines up there, and only one of them was where their grenades could get at
him; the other was further back, sheltering in a cross-connecting corridor to
cover his companion, and Clancey swore. God, what he wouldn't give for hyper
grenades! But at least the bastards didn't seem to have any more grenades of
their own.
He nodded to the two men
against the opposite wall.
"Go!"
They spun into the
doorway, launchers coughing on full auto. The closer Marine's fire ripped both
of them apart, but their grenades were already on the way, and a staccato blast
rattled teeth as they detonated in sequence, killing him instantly.
Clancey cursed as an
energy gun splattered his companions over him, but his implants told him the
Marine who'd fired was dead. He went down in a crouch, hosing more grenades to
keep the surviving Marine's head down while more Security men charged the door.
Explosions shattered walls and furnishings, and the building's fire suppression
systems howled to life as flames glared. More men charged up the stairs, white
faces locked in death's-head grins, and then Corporal Clancey discovered he'd
been wrong about what the Marines had.
The grenade landed 1.3
meters behind him, and he had one instant to feel the terror before it exploded
and killed six more men . . . including Corporal William Clancey, Earth
Security.
* * *
Vlad Chernikov felt
blind and maimed. For the first time in twenty-five years, every implant in his
body had been shut down lest the Mark Ninety decide they were weapons, and the
sudden reversion to the senses Nature had provided was a greater psychic shock
than he'd anticipated.
He grimaced the thought
aside and hoisted the charge Dahak had designed. The initiator charges of the
obsolete warheads had been formed in hundreds of precisely shaped blocks, and
Dahak had reassembled a hundred and fifty kilos of them into a single massive
shaped-charge. That might be more than they needed, but Dahak believed in
redundancy.
He slung the charge on
his back—at least his muscular enhancement still worked, since it used no power
and hence offered no emissions signature to offend the Mark Ninety's
sensibilities—and started down the hall to the gallery on the longest
sixty-meter hike of his life.
* * *
The scream of alarms
filled the stairwell as thermal sensors responded to the fires the explosions
had set. Their shrill, atonal wail set Jourdain's teeth on edge, but White Tower's
soundproofing was excellent, and his men at the switchboard had cut all lines
to its top fifteen floors. None of which meant people wouldn't notice if
grenades started blowing out windows.
"Push 'em
back!" he shouted, and started up the stairs. His point had stalled amid
the carnage of shattered bodies, and he snarled at them. "Come on, you
bastards! There's only twelve of them!"
He flung himself through
the doorway, landing flat on his belly in Clancey's blood. More of his men
crouched behind him or threw themselves prone, and at least a dozen energy guns
snarled. Walls already torn and pocked by grenade fragments ripped apart under
focused beams of gravitic disruption, and the Marine fired back desperately.
Another of his men went down, then two more, a fourth, but there was only one
Marine left. It was only a matter of time—and not much of it—until one of those
energy guns found him.
* * *
There were five separate
stairs. Captain Chin had placed two Marines to cover each, but Jourdain had
elected to assault only three, and combat roared as his other assault teams ran
into their own defenders. The Marines had the advantage of position; their
attackers had both numbers and heavier weapons. It was an unequal equation, and
it could have only one solution.
Jourdain's number three
assault team lost ten men in the first exchange, but its commander was a
hard-bitten man, an ex-Marine himself, who knew what he was about. Once he'd
pinpointed the defenders, he sent six men down one floor. They positioned themselves
directly beneath the Marines, switched their energy guns to maximum power,
aimed at the ceiling, and simply held the triggers back. The Marines never had
time to realize what was happening, and assault team three charged forward over
their mutilated bodies.
* * *
Captain Chin heard feet
behind him and rolled up on one knee just as the leading "Security
men" appeared in the hall. His energy gun howled, and three of them
vanished in a gory spray. He flung himself back down, flat on his belly against
the wall, and his single grenade killed three more attackers.
"Wire the doors and
get your ass up here, Matthews!" he shouted to his teammate. Private
Matthews didn't waste time answering. She yanked the pin from her own grenade
and wedged it against the stairwell door so that any effort to open it would
release the safety handle. Then she grabbed her energy gun and headed for the
captain's position.
She arrived just in time
to help beat off the next assault, and then Chin swore as the attackers fell
back.
"They're not coming
up our stair at all," he spat. "They're going to leave someone to pin
us down and get on with it."
"Only if we let
'em, Cap," Matthews grunted, and before Chin could stop her, the private
lunged to her feet. She charged down the hall, energy gun on continuous fire,
and Chin leapt to his feet and followed. Matthews killed six more men before
answering fire blew her apart, and Chin vaulted her body. The captain landed
less than a meter from the remaining three men holding the blocking position,
and four energy guns snarled as one.
There were no survivors
on either side.
* * *
Staff Sergeant Duncan
Sellers, Earth Security, swore monotonously as he ran down the hall. He'd
gotten separated from the rest of his team, and the entire floor had filled
with smoke despite the fire suppression systems. His enhanced lungs handled the
smoke easily, but he dreaded what could happen if he blundered into his friends
and they mistook him for a Marine.
He turned a corner and
gasped in relief as he picked up the implants of his fellows ahead. He opened
his mouth to shout his own name, then whirled as some sixth sense warned him. A
shape bounded towards him, but his instant spurt of panic eased as he realized
it was only one of the Empress's dogs. Big as it was, no dog was a threat to an
enhanced human, and he raised his energy gun almost negligently.
Gaheris was four meters
away when he left the floor in a prodigious spring. Sergeant Sellers got off
one shot—then screamed in terror as bio-enhanced jaws ripped his throat out
like tissue.
* * *
Alex Jourdain advanced
in a crouch, weapon ready, and disbelief filled him. There were only twelve
of them, damn it!
Perhaps so, but by the
time his three assault teams merged at the foot of the single stair leading to
the next floor, he'd lost over seventy men. Over seventy! Worse, he'd
added up the Marine body count from all three teams and come up with only
eight. Two more were pinned down at the west stairwell, but the last pair of
Marines was still unaccounted for—and ten of his own men were equally pinned
down in the stairwell firefight. That left him with only nineteen under his own
command, and he didn't like the math. Eight Marines had killed seventy-six of
their attackers. That worked out to almost ten each, and if Horus and the two
remaining Marines did as well . . .
He shook his head. It
was the stupid and incautious who died first, he told himself. The men he had
left were survivors, or they wouldn't have gotten this far. They could still do
it—and they'd damned well better, because none of them could go home and
pretend this hadn't happened!
"Hose it!" he
barked to his remaining grenadiers, and a hurricane of grenades lashed up the
stairs and blew the doors at their head to bits.
"Go!" Jourdain
shouted, and his men went forward in a rush.
* * *
Corporal Anna Zhirnovski
cringed as another grenade exploded. The bastards had gotten Steve O'Hennesy
with the last salvo, but Zhirnovski was bellied down behind a right-angled bend
in the corridor. They couldn't get a direct shot at her, but they were trying
to bounce the damned things around the corner, and they were getting closer. It
was only a matter of time, and she rechecked her sensors. At least seven of
them left, she thought, and despair stabbed through her. They wouldn't waste
this much time—or this many men—on killing one Marine unless they had enough
other firepower to kill the Empress without their input, but there wasn't a
damned thing she could do about it. She and Steve had been cut off from the central
core, and even launching a kamikaze attack into them would achieve nothing but
her own death.
Her muscles quivered
with the need to do just that, for she was a Marine, handpicked to protect her
Empress' life, but she fought the urge down once more. She was going to die.
She'd accepted that. And if she couldn't kill the men attacking her (and she
couldn't), she could at least keep them occupied. And, she told herself grimly,
she could make them pay cash when they came after her to finish off the witnesses.
Another string of
grenades exploded, and she detected movement behind them. They were trying a
rush under cover of the explosions, and she waited tensely. Now!
The grenadiers stopped
firing to let their flankers go in, and Anna Zhirnovski rolled out into the
corridor, under the smoke. Men shrieked as her snarling energy gun ripped their
feet and legs apart, and Zhirnovski snap-rolled back into her protected
position.
Two more, she thought,
and then the grenades began to explode once more.
* * *
Oscar Sanders unwrapped
another stick of gum, shoved it into his mouth, and chewed rhythmically without
ever taking his eyes from the HD. Every news service was covering the chaos at
the mat-trans facility across the Concourse from Sanders' position in the White
Tower lobby, and he shook his head. Virtually every member of White Tower's
usual security force was over there trying to sort out the confusion, and they
were fighting a losing battle. Sanders had never seen so many people in one
place in his life, and the threat that could produce it was enough to make
anyone nervous. Evacuating an entire planet because of one bomb? What
the hell sort of bomb could—
He looked up at a sudden
slamming sound. It came again, then again, and he frowned and glanced at his
console. Every light glowed a steady green, but the slamming sound echoed yet
again, and he stood.
He walked around the end
of the counter and followed the sound up the corridor. It was coming from the
stairwell door, and he drew his grav gun and reached for the latch. He gripped
it firmly and yanked the door open, then relaxed. It was only a dog, one of
Empress Jiltanith's.
But Oscar Sanders's
relief vanished suddenly, and his gun snapped back up as he realized the dog
was covered with blood. He almost squeezed the trigger, but his brain caught up
with his instincts first. The dog was not only covered with blood; one of its
forelegs was a mangled stub, and the door was slick with blood where the
injured animal had tried repeatedly to spring the crash bar latch with its
remaining leg.
It took only a fraction
of a second for Sanders' stunned brain to put all that together—and then, with
a sudden burst of horror, to remember whose dog this was. He jerked
back, a thousand questions flaring through his mind, and that was when the
strangest thing of all happened.
"Help!"
Gaheris's vocoder said just before he collapsed. "Men come to kill
Jiltanith! Help her!"
* * *
Vlad Chernikov turned
the last corner, and the magnificent statue stood before him. Even now he felt
a stir of awe for its beauty, but he hadn't come to admire it, and he advanced
cautiously.
The shaped charge on his
back seemed to take on weight with every stride. It was silly, of course. He
was already well inside a Mark Ninety's interdiction perimeter; if the thing
was going to decide the charge was a weapon, it would already have blown up the
planet.
That, unfortunately,
made him feel no less naked and vulnerable, and he missed his implants' ability
to manipulate his adrenaline level as he stepped around the inert scanner
remote still lying where it had fallen when Dahak hastily deactivated it.
He moved to within two
meters of the sculpture and studied it carefully. The problem was that his
weapon was insufficient to reduce the entire statue to gravel, so he had to be
certain that whatever bit he chose to blow up contained the bomb. And since
neither he nor Dahak could scan the thing, he could only try to estimate where
the bomb was.
It would help, he
thought irritably, if they knew its dimensions. It was tempting to assume
they'd used Tsien's blueprints without alteration, but if that assumption
proved inaccurate, the consequences would be extreme.
Well, there were certain
constraints Mister X's bomb-makers couldn't avoid. The primary emitter, for
example, had to be at least two meters long and twenty centimeters in
diameter, and the focusing coils would each add another thirty centimeters to
the emitter's length. That gave him a minimum length of two hundred sixty
centimeters, which meant the bomb couldn't be inside the human half of the
statue. It would have had to be in his torso, and while the Marine was more
than life-sized, he wasn't that much larger, so the bomb itself had to
be inside the Narhani. Unfortunately, the Narhani was big enough that the thing
could be oriented at any of several angles, and he couldn't afford to miss. Of
course, the power source for the bomb was a fair-sized target all on its own,
and the designers had had to squeeze in the Mark 90, too. They'd undoubtedly
put at least part of the hardware inside the Marine, but which part?
They'd counted on the
bomb's never being detected, Vlad thought, so they probably hadn't
considered the need to design it to sustain damage and still function, which
might mean the power source was inside the Marine and the rest of the hardware
was inside the Narhani. That was a seductively attractive supposition, but
again, he couldn't afford to guess wrong.
He stepped even closer
to the statue, considering the angle of the Narhani's body as it reared against
its chains. All right, the bomb wasn't inside the human and it was
the next best thing to three meters long. It couldn't be placed vertically in
the Narhani's torso, either, because there wasn't enough length. It could be
partly inside the torso and angled down into the body's barrel, though. The
arch of the Narhani's spine would make that placement tricky, but it was
feasible.
He rocked back on his
heels and wiped sweat from his forehead as the unhappy conclusion forced itself
upon him. The possible bomb dimensions simply left too many possibilities. To
be certain, he had to split the statue cleanly in two, and to be sure the break
came within the critical length, he'd have to come up from below.
He sighed, wishing he
dared activate his com implant to consult with Dahak, then shrugged. He
couldn't, and even if he could have, he already knew what Dahak would say.
He wiped his forehead
one more time, took the bomb from his back, and bent cautiously to edge it
under the marble Narhani's belly.
* * *
The last exchange of
fire faded into silence, and Brigadier Jourdain's mouth was a bitter, angry
line. Ten more of his men lay dead around the head of the ruined stairs. Two
more were down, one so badly mangled only his implants kept him alive, and they
wouldn't do that much longer, but at least they'd accounted for the last two
Marines.
He glared at the closed
door to the foyer of Horus's office and cranked his implant sensors to maximum
power. Damn it, he knew the Governor was in there somewhere, but the
cunning old bastard must have shut his implants down, like the Marines covering
that first stairwell. As long as he stayed put without moving, Jourdain
couldn't pick him up without implant emissions.
Well, there were
drawbacks to that sort of game, the brigadier told himself grimly. If Horus had
his implants down, he couldn't see Jourdain or his men, either. He was
limited to his natural senses. That ought to make him a bit slower off the mark
when he opened fire, and even if he'd found an ambush position to let him get
the first few men through the door, he'd reveal his position to the others the
instant he fired.
"All right,"
the brigadier said to his seven remaining men. "Here's how we're going to
do this."
* * *
Franklin Detmore ripped
off another burst of grenades and grimaced. Whoever that Marine up there was,
he was too damned good for Detmore's taste. The ten men assigned to mop him up
had been reduced to five, and Detmore was delighted to be the only remaining
grenadier. He vastly preferred laying down covering fire to being the next poor
son-of-a-bitch to rush the bastard.
He fed a fresh belt into
his launcher and looked up. Luis Esteben was the senior man, and he looked
profoundly unhappy. Their orders were to leave no witnesses; sooner or later,
someone was going to have to go in after the last survivor, and Esteben had a
sinking suspicion who Brigadier Jourdain was going to pick for the job if he
hadn't gotten it done by the time the Brigadier got here.
"All right,"
he said finally. "We're not going to take this bastard out with a frontal
assault." His fellows nodded, and he bared his teeth at their relieved
expressions. "What we need to do is get in behind him."
"We can't. That's a
blind corridor," someone pointed out.
"Yeah, but it's got
walls, and we've got energy guns," Esteben pointed out. "Frank, you
keep him busy, and the rest of us'll go back and circle around to get into the
conference room next door. We can blow through the wall from there and flank
him out."
"Suits me,"
Detmore agreed, "but—" He broke off and his eyes widened. "What
the hell is that?" he demanded, staring back up the corridor.
Esteben was still
turning when Galahad and Gawain exploded into the Security men's rear.
* * *
Vlad settled the charge
delicately and sighed in relief. He was still alive; that was the good news.
The bad news was that he couldn't be certain this was going to work . . . and
there was only one way to find out.
He set the timer,
turned, and ran like hell.
* * *
Alarms screamed as Oscar
Sanders hit every button on his panel. Security personnel and Imperial Marines
fighting to control traffic in the mat-trans facility looked up in shock, then
turned as one to run for White Tower as Sanders came up on their coms.
* * *
The foyer door vanished
in a hurricane of fire, and two men slammed through the opening. They saw the
piled fortress of furniture facing the door and charged it frantically, firing
on the run, desperate to reach it before Horus could pop up and return fire.
He let them get half way
to it, and then, without moving from his position in the corner, cut both of
them in half.
Jourdain cursed in
mingled rage and triumph as his men went down. Damn that sneaky old
bastard! But his fire had given away his position, and the brigadier and his
five remaining Security men knew exactly where to look when they came
through the door.
Energy guns snarled in a
frenzy of destruction at a range of less than five meters. Men went
down—screaming or dead—and then it was over. Two more attackers were down, one
dead and one dying . . . and the Governor of Earth was down as well. Someone's
fire had smashed his energy gun, but it didn't really matter, Jourdain thought
as he glared down at him, for Horus was mangled and torn. Only his implants
were keeping him alive, and they were failing fast.
Jourdain raised his
weapon, only to lower it once more as the old man snarled at him. Horus
couldn't last ten more minutes, the brigadier thought coldly, but he could last
long enough to know Jourdain had killed his daughter.
"Find the
bitch," he said coldly, turning away from the dying Governor. "Kill
her."
* * *
Vlad rounded the last
corner, skidded to a halt, and flung himself flat.
The charge went off just
before he landed, and the floor seemed to leap up and hit him in the face. His
mouth filled with blood as he bit his tongue, and he yelped in pain.
It was only then that he
realized he was still alive . . . which meant it must have worked.
* * *
Agony drowned Horus in
red, screaming waves—the physical agony his implants couldn't suppress, and the
more terrible one of knowing men were hunting his daughter to kill her. He bit
back a scream and made his broken body obey his will one last time. Both his
legs were gone, and most of his left arm, but he dragged himself—slowly,
painfully, centimeter by centimeter—across the carpet in a ribbon of blood. His
entire, fading world was focused on the closest corpse's holstered grav gun. He
inched towards it, gasping with effort, and his fingers fumbled with the
holster. His hand was slow and clumsy, shaking with pain, but the holster came
open and he gripped the weapon.
A boot slammed down on
his wrist, and he jerked in fresh agony, then rolled his head slowly and stared
into the muzzle of an energy gun.
"You just can't
wait to die, can you, you old bastard?" Alex Jourdain hissed. "All
right—have it your way!"
His finger tightened on
the firing stud . . . and then his head blew apart and Horus' eyes flared in
astonishment as two bloodsoaked rottweilers and a Marine corporal charged
across his body.
* * *
"Your Majesty! Your
Majesty!"
Jiltanith stiffened,
then shuddered in relief as she recognized the voice. It was Anna, and if
Corporal Zhirnovski was calling her name and there were no more screams and
firing—
She jerked the door
open, and Gwynevere shot out it, hackles raised, ready to attack any threat.
But there was no threat. Only a smoke-stained, bloodied Marine corporal, one
arm hanging useless at her side . . . the sole survivor of Jiltanith's security
team.
"Anna!" she
cried, reaching out to the wounded woman, but Zhirnovski shook her head.
"Your father!"
she gasped. "In the foyer!"
Jiltanith hesitated, and
the corporal shook her head again.
"My implants'll
hold it, Your Majesty! Go!"
* * *
Horus drifted deeper
into a well of darkness. The world was fading away, dim and insubstantial as
the hovering smoke, and he felt Death whispering to him at last. He'd cheated
the old thief so long, he thought hazily. So long. But no one cheated him
forever, did they? And Death wasn't that bad a fellow, not really. His whisper
promised an end to agony, and perhaps, just perhaps, somewhere on the other
side of the pain he would find Tanisis, as well. He hoped so. He longed to
apologize to her as he had to 'Tanni, and—
His eyes fluttered open
as someone touched him. He stared up from the bottom of his well, and his
fading eyes brightened. His head was in her lap, and tears soaked her face, but
she was alive. Alive, and so beautiful. His beautiful, strong daughter.
" 'Tanni." His
remaining arm weighed tons, but he forced it up, touched her cheek, her hair.
" 'Tanni . . ."
It came out in a thread,
and she caught his hand, pressing it to her breast, and bent over him. Her lips
brushed his forehead, and she stroked his hair.
"I love you,
Poppa," she whispered to him in perfect Universal, and then the darkness
came down forever.
Lawrence Jefferson gazed
into the mirror and adjusted his appearance with meticulous care, then checked
the clock. Ten more minutes, he thought, and turned back to the mirror to smile
at himself.
For someone who'd seen
almost thirty years of planning collapse with spectacular totality less than two
months before, he felt remarkably cheerful. His coup attempt had failed, but
the governorship of Earth was a fair consolation prize—and, he reflected, an
even better platform from which to plan anew after a few years.
He'd gone to
considerable lengths to set Brigadier Jourdain up as the fall guy if his plans
miscarried, and the brigadier had helped by getting himself killed, which
neatly precluded the possibility of his defending himself against the charges.
Lieutenant Governor Jefferson had, of course, been shocked to learn that one of
his most senior Security men had formed links to the Sword of God and had, in
fact, used Security's own bio-enhancement facilities to enhance his own select
band of traitors! The stunning discovery of Jourdain's treason had led to a
massive shakeup at Security, in the course of which an Internal Affairs
inspector had "stumbled across" the secret journal which chronicled
the brigadier's secretly growing disaffection. A disaffection which had
blossomed to full life when he was named to head the special team created by
newly appointed Security Minister Jefferson to combat the Sword's terrorism
following the Van Gelder assassination. Instead of hunting the Sword down to
destroy it, he'd used the investigation to make contact with a Sword cell
leader and found his true spiritual home.
It was a black mark
against Jefferson that he'd failed to spot Jourdain's treason, but the man had
been recruited away from the Imperial Marines by Gustav van Gelder (no one—now
living, that was—knew it was Jefferson who'd recommended him to Gus), not
Jefferson, and he'd passed every security screening. And if his journal rambled
here and there, that was only to be expected in the personal maunderings of a
megalomaniac who believed God had chosen him to destroy all who trafficked with
the Anti-Christ. It detailed his meticulous plan to assassinate Colin,
Jiltanith, Horus, their senior military officers, and Lawrence Jefferson, and
if it was a bit vague about precisely what was supposed to happen when they
were dead, the fact that he'd hidden his bomb inside the Narhani statue
suggested his probable intent. By branding the Narhani with responsibility for
the destruction of Birhat, he'd undoubtedly hoped to lead humanity into turning
on them as arch-traitors and dealing with them precisely as the Sword of God said
they should be dealt with.
Jefferson was proud of
that journal. He'd spent over two years preparing it, just in case, and if
there were a few points on which it failed to shed any light, that was actually
a point in its favor. By leaving some mysteries, it avoided the classic failing
of coverups: an attempt to answer every question. Had it tried to do so,
someone—like Ninhursag MacMahan—undoubtedly would have found it just a bit too
neat. As it was, and coupled with the fact that the dozens of still-living
people named in it had, in fact, all been recruited by Jourdain (on Jefferson's
orders, perhaps, but none of them knew that), it had worked to
perfection. The most important members of Jefferson's conspiracy weren't listed
in it, and several of his more valuable moles had actually been promoted for
their sterling work in helping ONI run down the villains the journal's
discovery had unmasked. Best of all, every one of those villains, questioned under
Imperial lie detectors, only confirmed that Jourdain had recruited them and
that all of their instructions had come from him.
The clock chimed softly,
and Jefferson settled his face into properly grave lines before he walked to
the door. He opened it and stepped out into the corridor to the Terran Chamber
of Delegates with a slow, somber pace that befitted the occasion while his
brain rehearsed the oath of office he was about to recite.
He was half way to the
Chamber when a voice spoke behind him.
"Lawrence
McClintock Jefferson," it said with icy precision, "I arrest you for
conspiracy, espionage, murder, and the crime of high treason."
He froze, and his heart
seemed to stop, for the voice was that of Colin I, Emperor of Humanity. He
stood absolutely motionless for one agonizing moment, then turned slowly, and
swallowed as he found himself facing the Emperor, and Hector and Ninhursag
MacMahan. The general held a grav gun in one hand, its rock-steady muzzle
trained on Jefferson's belly, and his hard, hating eyes begged the Lieutenant
Governor to resist arrest.
"What . . . what
did you say?" Jefferson whispered.
"You made one
mistake," Ninhursag replied coldly. "Only one. When you set up
Jourdain's journal, you fingered him for everything except the one crime that
actually started us looking for you, 'Mister X.' There wasn't a word in it
about Sean's and Harriet's assassination—and the murder of my daughter."
"Assassination?"
Jefferson repeated in a numb voice.
"Without that, I
might actually have bought it," she went on in a voice like liquid
nitrogen, "but the megalomaniac you created in that journal would never
have failed to record his greatest triumph. Which, of course, suggested it was
a fake, so I started looking for who else might have had the combination
of clearances necessary to steal the bomb's blueprints, have it built, smuggle
it through the mat-trans, alter the mat-trans log so subsequent investigators
would know he had, and get a batch of assassins into White Tower. And
guess who all that pointed to?"
"But I—" He
cleared his throat noisily. "But if you suspect me of such horrible
crimes, why wait until now to arrest me?" he demanded harshly.
"We waited because
'Hursag wanted to see who distinguished themselves in your 'investigation' of
Jourdain." Colin's voice was as icy as Ninhursag's. "It was one way
to figure out who else was working for you. But the timing for your
arrest?" He smiled viciously. "That was my idea, Jefferson. I
wanted you to be able to taste the governorship—and I want you to go
right on remembering what it tasted like up to the moment the firing squad
pulls the trigger."
He stepped aside, and
Jefferson saw the grim-faced Marines who'd stood behind the Emperor. Marines
who advanced upon him with expressions whose plea to resist mirrored that of
their commandant.
"You'll have a fair
trial," Colin told him flatly as the Marines took him into custody,
"but with any luck at all—" he smiled again, with a cold, cruel
pleasure Jefferson had never imagined his homely face could wear "—every
member of the firing squad will hit you in the belly. Think about that, Mister
Jefferson. Look forward to it."
* * *
Colin and Jiltanith sat
on their favorite Palace balcony, gazing out over the city of Phoenix. Colin
held their infant daughter, Anna Zhirnovski MacIntyre, in his lap while her
godmother stood guard at the balcony entrance and her younger brother Horus
Gaheris MacIntyre nursed at his mother's breast. Amanda and Tsien Tao-ling
stood side by side, leaning on the balcony rail, while Hector and Ninhursag sat
beside Colin. Tinker Bell's pups—including Gaheris and his regenerated
leg—drowsed on the sun-warmed flagstones, and Gerald and Sharon Hatcher,
Brashieel, and Eve completed the gathering.
"I do not fully
understand humans even now, Nest Lord." The Narhani leader sighed.
"You can be a most complex and confusing species."
"Perhaps, my
love," Eve said gently, "yet they are also a stubborn and generous
one."
"Truly,"
Brashieel conceded, "but the thought that Jefferson planned to implicate us
in our Nest Lord's murder—" He bent his head in the Narhani gesture of
perplexity, and his double eyelids flickered with dismay.
"You were just
there, Brashieel," Colin said wearily. "Just as the Achuultani
computer needed a threat to keep your people enslaved, Jefferson needed a
threat to justify the power he intended to seize."
"And the Achuultani
history of genocide made us an excellent threat," Eve observed.
"Indeed,"
Dahak's voice replied. "It was a most complex plot, and Jefferson's
association with Francine Hilgemann was a masterful alliance. It not only
permitted him to further inflame and sustain the anti-Narhani prejudices the
Church of the Armageddon enshrined but gave him direct access to the Sword of
God. A classic continuation of Anu's practice of employing terrorist
proxies."
"Um." Colin
grunted agreement and gazed down into his daughter's small, thoughtful face.
She looked perplexed as she tried to focus on the tip of her own nose, and at
this moment, that was infinitely more important to him than Lawrence Jefferson
or Francine Hilgemann.
Jefferson's
interrogation under an Imperial lie detector had led to the arrest of his
entire surviving command structure. The last of them had been shot a week
before, and it was even possible some good would come of it. The Church of the
Armageddon, for example, was in wild disarray. Not only had their spiritual
leader been unmasked as a cold, cynical manipulator, but the fact that she and
Jefferson had intended to use their anti-Narhani prejudice to whip up a genocidal
frenzy to support their coup had shocked the church to its foundation. Colin
suspected the hardcore true believers would find some way to blame the Narhani
for their own victimization, but those whose brains hadn't entirely ossified
might just take a good, hard look at themselves.
Yet none of it seemed
very important somehow. No doubt that would change, but for now his wounds, and
those of his friends, were too raw and bleeding. Jefferson's execution couldn't
bring back their children any more than it could restore Horus or the Marines
who'd died defending Jiltanith to life. There was such a thing as vengeance,
and Colin was honest enough to admit he'd felt just that as Jefferson died, but
it was a cold, iron-tasting thing, and too much of it was a poison more deadly
than arsenic.
Anna blew a bubble of
drool at him, and he smiled. He looked up at Jiltanith, feeling his bitter
melancholy ease, and she smiled back. Darkness and grief still edged that
smile, but so did tenderness, and her fingers stroked her son's head as he
sucked on her nipple. Colin turned his head and saw the others watching, saw
them smiling at his wife and his son, and a deep, gentle wave of warmth eased
his heart as he felt their shared happiness for him and 'Tanni. Their love.
Perhaps that, he
thought, was the real lesson. The knowledge that life meant growth and change
and challenge, and that those were painful things, but that only those who
dared to love despite the pain were the true inheritors of humanity's dreams of
greatness.
He closed his eyes and
pressed his nose into his daughter's fine, downy hair, inhaling the clean skin
and baby powder and stale milk sweetness of her, and the peaceful content of
this small, quiet moment suffused him.
And then Dahak made the
quiet electronic sound he used when a human would have cleared his throat.
"Excuse me, Colin,
but I have just received a priority hypercom transmission of which I feel you
should be apprised."
"A hypercom
message?" Colin raised his head with an expression of mild curiosity.
"What sort of message?"
"The
transmission," Dahak said, "is from the planet Pardal."
" 'Pardal'?"
Colin looked at Hatcher. "Gerald? You have a survey mission to someplace
called 'Pardal'?"
"Pardal?"
Hatcher shook his head. "Never heard of it."
"You sure you got
that name right, Dahak?" Colin asked.
"I am."
"Well where in the
blazes is it and how come I never heard of it?"
"I am not yet
certain of the answer to either of those questions, Colin. The message,
however, is signed 'Acting Governor Midshipman His Imperial Highness Sean Horus
MacIntyre,' " Dahak replied calmly, and Jiltanith gasped as Colin jerked
upright in his lounger. "It reports the successful reclamation of the populated
planet Pardal for the Imperium by the crew of the sublight battleship Israel:
Midshipwoman Princess Isis Harriet MacIntyre, Midshipman Count Tamman,
Midshipwoman Crown Princess Consort Sandra MacMahan MacIntyre, and Mishipman
Nest Heir Brashan."
Colin's head snapped
around. His incredulous gaze met Jiltanith's equally incredulous—and
joyous—eyes, then swept to his friends, the friends who were coming to their
feet in joy that matched his own, as Dahak paused for just a moment. Then the
computer spoke again, and even Dahak's mellow voice could not hide its vast
elation.
"Will there be a
reply?"