Reality Dysfunction: Expansion
Chapter 01
Graeme Nicholson sat
on his customary stool beside the bar in the Crashed Dumper, the one furthest
away from the blaring audio block, and listened to Diego Sanigra, a crewman
from the Bryant, complain about the way the ship had been treated by
Colin Rexrew. The Bryant was a colonist-carrier starship that had
arrived at Lalonde two days ago, and so far not one of its five and a half
thousand colonists had been taken out of zero-tau. It was a ruinous state of
affairs, Diego Sanigra claimed, the governor had no right to refuse the
colonists disembarkation. And the energy expenditure for every extra hour they
spent in orbit was costing a fortune. The line company would blame the crew, as
they always did. His salary would suffer, his bonus would be non-existent, his
promotion prospects would be reduced if not ruined.
Graeme Nicholson
nodded sympathetically as his neural nanonics carefully stored the aggrieved
ramblings in a memory cell. There wasn’t much which could be used, but it was
good background material. How the big conflict reached down into individual
lives. The kind of thing he covered so well.
Graeme had been a
reporter for fifty-two of his seventy-eight years. He reckoned no journalist
didactic course could teach him anything new, not now. With his experience he
should have been formatting didactic courses, except there wasn’t a news
company editor in existence who would want junior reporters corrupted to such
an extent. In every sense he was a hack reporter, with an unerring knack of
turning daily misfortune into spicy epic tragedy. He went for the human
underbelly every time, highlighting the suffering and misery of little people
who were trampled on, the ones who couldn’t fight back against the massive
uncaring forces of governments, bureaucracies, and companies. It was not from
any particular moral indignation, he certainly didn’t see himself as
championing the underdog. He simply felt emotions laid raw made for a better
story, with higher audience ratings. To some degree he had even begun to look
like the victims he empathized with so well; it was partly reflexive, they were
less suspicious of someone whose clothes never quite fitted, who had thick
ruddy skin and watery eyes.
His brand of
sensationalism went down well with the tabloid broadcasts, but by concentrating
on the seedy aspects he knew best, building a reputation as a specialist of
dross, he found himself being squeezed out of the more prestigious assignments;
he hadn’t covered a half-decent story for a decade. Over the last few years his
neural nanonics had been used less for sensevise recording and more for running
stimulant programs. Time Universe had given him a roving assignment eight years
ago, pushing him off onto all the shabby little fringe jobs that no one else
with a gram of seniority would cover. Anything to keep him out of a studio, or
an editorial office where his contemporaries had graduated to.
Well, no more. The
joke was on the office has-beens now. Graeme Nicholson was the only man on the
ground, the one with the clout, the one with the kudos. Lalonde was going to
earn him the awards he’d been denied all these years; then maybe after that one
of those nice cosy office seats back home on Decatur.
He had been on Lalonde
for three months to do a documentary-style report on the new world frontier,
and gather general sensevise impressions and locations for the company
library’s memory cores. Then this wonderful calamity had fallen on Lalonde.
Calamitous for the planet and its people, for Rexrew and the LDC career
administration staff; but for Graeme Nicholson it was manna from heaven. It being
war, or an Ivet rebellion, or a xenoc invasion, depending on who you were
talking to. He had included accounts of all three theories on the fleks Eurydice
had taken to Avon last week. But it was strange that after two and a half
weeks the Governor had still made no official announcement as to exactly what
was happening up in the Quallheim and Zamjan Counties.
“That executive
assistant of Rexrew’s, Terrance Smith, he’s talking about sending us to another
phase one colony world,” Diego Sanigra grumbled. He took another gulp of bitter
from his tankard. “As if that’s going to be any help. What would you say if you
were a colonist who paid passage for Lalonde and came out of zero-tau to find
yourself on Liao-tung Wan? That’s Chinese-ethnic, you know, they wouldn’t like
the EuroChristian-types we’ve got stored on board.”
“Is that where
Terrance Smith suggested you take them?” Graeme Nicholson asked.
He gave a noncommittal
grunt. “Just giving you an example.”
“What about fuel
reserves? Have you got enough He3 and deuterium to get to another
colony world and then return to Earth?”
Diego Sanigra started
to answer. Graeme Nicholson wasn’t listening too hard, he let his eyes wander
round the hot crowded room. One of the spaceport shifts had just come off duty.
At the moment there were few McBoeing flights. Only the three cargo ships
orbiting Lalonde were being unloaded; the six colonist-carriers were waiting
for Rexrew to decide what to do with their passenger complements. Most of the
spaceport crews simply turned up at the start of each shift so they could keep
claiming their pay.
I wonder what they
feel about the end of overtime, Graeme asked himself. Might be another story
there.
The Crashed Dumper
certainly wasn’t suffering from the troubles afflicting the rest of the city;
this outlying district didn’t protest or riot over Rexrew and the Ivets, it
housed too many LDC worker families. There were a lot of people in tonight,
drowning their sorrows. The waitresses were harried from one end of the long
room to the other. The overhead fans were spinning fast, but made little
impression on the heat.
Graeme heard the audio
block falter, the singer’s voice slowing, deepening to a weird bass rumble. It
picked up again, turning the voice to a girlish soprano. The crowd clustered
round started laughing, and one of them brought his fist down on it. After a
moment the loud output returned to normal.
Graeme saw a tall man
and a beautiful teenage girl walk past. Something about the man’s face was
familiar. The girl he recognized as one of the Crashed Dumper’s waitresses,
although tonight she was dressed in jeans and a plain cotton blouse. But the
man—he was middle-aged with a neat beard and small pony-tail, wearing a smart
leather jacket and ash-grey shorts, and he was very tall, almost like an
Edenist.
The glass of lager
dropped from Graeme’s numb fingers. It hit the mayope planks and smashed,
soaking his shoes and socks. “Holy shit,” he croaked. The fright constricting
his throat prevented the exclamation being more than a whisper.
“You all right?” Diego
Sanigra asked, annoyed at being interrupted in mid-complaint.
He forced himself to
look away from the couple. “Yes,” he stammered. “Yes, I’m fine.” Thank Christ
nobody was paying any attention, if he had looked round . . . He
reddened and bent down to pick up the shards of glass. When he straightened up
the couple were already at the bar. Somehow they had cut straight through the
crush.
Graeme ran a priority
search program through his neural nanonics. Not that he could possibly be
mistaken. The public figures file produced a visual image from a memory cell,
recorded forty years ago. It matched perfectly.
Laton!
Lieutenant Jenny
Harris twitched the reins, and the dun-coloured horse gave the big qualtook
tree a wide berth. Her only previous experience with the animals was her
didactic course and a week in the saddle five years ago during an ESA
transportation training exercise back on Kulu. Now here she was, leading an
expedition through one of the toughest stretches of jungle in the Juliffe
tributary network and trying to avoid the attention of a possible military
invasion force at the same time. It wasn’t the best reintroduction to the
equestrian art. She thought the horse could sense her discomfort, he was
proving awkward. A mere three hours’ riding and every muscle in her lower torso
was crying for relief; her arms and shoulders were stiff; her backside had gone
from soreness to numbness and finally settled for a progressive hot ache.
I wonder what all this
bodily offensive is doing to my implants?
Her neural nanonics
were running an extended sensory analysis program, enhancing peripheral vision
and threshold audio inputs, and scrutinizing them for any signs of hidden
hostiles. Electronic paranoia, basically.
There had been nothing
remotely threatening, except for one sayce, since they left the Isakore,
and the sayce hadn’t fancied its chances against three horses.
She could hear Dean
Folan and Will Danza plodding along behind her, and wondered how they were
getting on with their horses. Having the two ESA G66 Division (Tactical Combat)
troops backing her up was a dose of comfort stronger than any stimulant program
could provide. She had been trained in general covert fieldwork, but they had
virtually been bred for it, geneering and nanonic supplements combining to make
them formidable fighting machines.
Dean Folan was in his
mid-thirties, a quiet ebony-skinned man with the kind of subtle good looks most
of the geneered enjoyed. He was only medium height, but his limbs were long and
powerful, making his torso look almost stunted by comparison. It was the
boosted muscles which did that, Jenny knew; his silicon-fibre-reinforced bones
had been lengthened to give him more leverage, and more room for implants.
Will Danza fitted
people’s conception of a modern-day soldier; twenty-five, tall, broad, with
long, sleek muscles. He was an old Prussian warrior genotype, blond, courteous,
and unsmiling. There was an almost psychic essence of danger emanating from
him; you didn’t tangle with him in any tavern brawl no matter how drunk you
were. Jenny suspected he didn’t have a sense of humour; but then he’d seen
action in covert missions three times in the last three years. She’d accessed
his file when the jungle mission was being assembled; they had been tough
assignments, one had earned him eight months in hospital being rebuilt from
cloned organs, and an Emerald Star presented by the Duke of Salion, Alastair
II’s first cousin, and chairman of the Kulu Privy Council’s security
commission. He had never talked about it on the journey upriver.
The nature of the
jungle started to change around them. Tightly packed bushy trees gave way to
tall, slender trunks with a plume of feather-fronds thirty metres overhead. A
solid blanket of creepers tangled the ground, rising up to hug the lower third
of the tree trunks like solid conical encrustations. It increased their
visibility dramatically, but the horses had to pick their hoofs up sharply.
High above their heads vennals leapt between the trees in incredible bounds,
streaking up the slim trunks to hide in the foliage at the top. Jenny couldn’t
see how they clung to the smooth bark.
After another forty
minutes they came to a small stream. She dismounted in slow tender stages, and
let her horse drink. Away in the distance she could see a herd of danderil
bounding away from the trickle of softly steaming water. White clouds were
rolling in from the east. It would rain in an hour, she knew.
Dean Folan dismounted
behind her, leaving Will Danza sitting on his horse, keeping watch from his
elevated vantage point. All three of them were dressed identically, wearing a
superstrength olive-green one-piece anti-projectile suit, covered with an outer
insulation layer to diffuse beam weapons. The lightweight armour fitted perfectly,
with an inner sponge layer to protect the skin. Thermal-shunt fibres woven into
the fabric kept body temperature to a pre-set norm, which was a real blessing
on Lalonde. If they were struck by a projectile slug the micro-valency
generators around her waist would activate, solidifying the fabric instantly,
distributing the impact, preventing the wearer’s body from being pulped by
automatic fire. (Jenny’s only regret was that it didn’t protect her from saddle
sores.) The body armour was complemented by a shell-helmet which fitted with
the same tight precision as the suit. It gave them all an insect appearance,
with its wide goggle lenses and a small central V-shaped air-filter vent. The
collar had a ring of optical sensors which could be accessed through neural
nanonics, giving them a rear-view capability. They could even survive
underwater for half an hour with its oxygen-recycling capacity.
The stream was muddy,
its stones slimed with algae, none of which seemed to bother the horses. Jenny
watched them lapping it up, and requested a drink from her shell-helmet. She
sucked ice-cold orange juice from the nipple as she reviewed their location
with help from the inertial guidance block.
When Dean and Will
swapped position she datavised the armour suit’s communications block to open a
scrambled channel to Murphy Hewlett. The ESA team had split up from the
Confederation Navy Marines after leaving the Isakore. Acting separately
they thought they stood a better chance of intercepting one of the sequestrated
colonists.
“We’re eight
kilometres from Oconto,” she said. “No hostiles or locals encountered so far.”
“Same with us,” the
marine lieutenant answered. “We’re six kilometres south of you, and there’s
nobody in this jungle but us chickens. If Oconto’s supervisor did lead fifty
people in pursuit of the Ivets, he didn’t come this way. There’s a small
savannah which starts about fifteen kilometres away, there are about a hundred
homesteads out there. We’ll try them.”
Static warbled down
the channel. Jenny automatically checked her electronic warfare suite, which
reported zero activity. Must be atmospherics.
“OK. We’re going to
keep closing on the village and hope we find someone before we reach it,” she
datavised.
“Roger. I suggest we
make half-hourly check-ins from now on. There isn’t . . .” His signal
dissolved into rowdy static.
“Hell! Dean, Will,
we’re being jammed.”
Dean consulted his own
electronic warfare block. “No activity detected,” he said.
Jenny steadied her
horse and put her foot in the stirrup, swinging a leg over the saddle. Will was
mounting hastily beside her. All three of them scanned the surrounding jungle.
Dean’s horse snickered nervously. Jenny tugged at the reins to keep hers from twisting
about.
“They’re out there,”
Will said in a level tone.
“Where?” Jenny asked.
“I don’t know, but
they’re watching us. I can feel it. They don’t like us.”
Jenny bit down on the
obvious retort. Soldier superstitions were hardly appropriate right now, yet
Will had more direct combat experience than her. A quick hardware status check
showed that only the communications block was affected so far. Her electronic
warfare block remained stubbornly silent.
“All right,” she said.
“The one thing we don’t want to do is run into a whole bunch of them. The
Edenists said they were most powerful in groups. Let’s move out, and see if we
can get outside this jamming zone. We ought to be able to move faster than
them.”
“Which way?” Dean
asked.
“I still want to try
and reach the village. But I don’t think a direct route is advisable now. We’ll
head south-west, and curve back towards Oconto. Any questions? No. Lead off
then, Dean.”
They splashed over the
stream, the horses seemingly eager to be on the move again. Will Danza had
pulled his thermal induction pulse carbine from its saddle holster; now it was
cradled in the crook of his right arm, pointing upwards. The datavised
information from its targeting processor formed a quiet buzz at the back of his
mind. He didn’t even notice it at a conscious level, it was as much a part of
the moment as the easy rhythm of the horse or the bright sunlight, making him
whole.
He made up the rear of
the little procession, constantly reviewing the sensors on the back of his
shell-helmet. If anyone had asked him how he knew hostiles were nearby he would
just have to shrug and say he couldn’t explain. But instinct was pulling at him
with the same irresistible impulse that pollen exerted on bees. They were here,
and they were close. Whoever, or whatever, they were.
He strained round in
the saddle, upping his retinal implants’ resolution to their extreme. All he
could see was the long thin black trunks and their verdant cone island bases,
outlines wavering in the heat and unstable magnification factor.
A movement.
The TIP carbine was
discharging before he even thought about it, blue target graphics sliding
across his vision field like neon cell doors as he dropped the barrel in a
single smooth arc. A red circle intersected the central grid square and his
neural nanonics triggered a five-hundred-shot fan pattern.
The section of jungle
in the central blue square sparkled with orange motes as the induction pulses
stabbed against the wood and foliage. It lasted for two seconds.
“Down!” Will datavised.
“Hostiles four o’clock.”
He was already
slithering off the horse, feet landing solidly on the broad triangular creeper
leaves. Dean and Jenny obeyed automatically, rolling from their saddles to land
crouched, thermal induction pulse carbines held ready. The three of them turned
smoothly, each covering a different section of jungle.
“What was it?” Jenny
asked.
“Two of them, I
think.” Will quickly replayed the memory. It was like a dense black shadow
dashing out from behind one of the trees, then it split into two. That was when
he fired, and the image jolted. But the black shapes refused to clarify, no
matter how many discrimination programs he ran. Definitely too big for sayce,
though. And they were moving towards him, using the shaggy treebases for cover.
He felt a glow of
admiration, they were good.
“What now?” he
datavised. Nobody responded. “What now?” he asked loudly.
“Reconnaissance and
evaluation,” said Jenny, who had just realized even short-range datavises were
being disrupted. “We’re still not out of that jamming effect.”
There was a silent
orange flash above her. The top third of the tree ten metres to her left began
to topple over, hinging on a section of trunk that was mostly charred
splinters. Just as it reached the horizontal, the rich green plumes at the top
caught on fire. They spluttered briefly, belching out a ring of blue-grey
smoke, then the fire really caught. Two vennals leapt out, squeaking in pain,
their hides badly scorched. Before the whole length of wood crashed down, the
plumes were burning with a ferocity which matched the sun.
The horses reared up,
whinnying alarm. They were pulled down by boosted muscles.
Jenny realized the
animals were rapidly becoming a liability as she clung on to hers. Her neural
nanonics reported the suit sensors had detected a maser beam striking the tree,
which was what snapped it. But there was no detectable follow-up energy strike
to account for the ignition.
Dean’s sensors had
also detected the maser beam. He fired a fifty-shot barrage back along the line.
The fallen tree’s tip
fizzled out. All that was left was a tapering core of wood and a heap of ash.
Blackened ground creepers smouldered in a wide circle around it.
“What the hell did
that?” Dean asked.
“No data,” Jenny
answered. “But it isn’t going to be healthy.”
Globules of vivid
white fire raced up the trunks of several nearby trees like some bizarre astral
liquid. Bark shrivelled and peeled off in long strips behind them, the naked
wood below roaring like a blast furnace as it caught alight. The flames
redoubled in vehemence. Jenny, Will, and Dean were surrounded by twelve huge
torches of brilliant fire.
Jenny’s retinal
implants struggled to cope with the vast photon flood. Her horse reared up
again, fighting her, neck sweeping from side to side in an effort to make her
let go, forelegs cycling dangerously close to her head. She could see the
terror in its eyes. Foam sprayed out of its mouth to splatter her suit.
“Save the equipment,”
she shouted. “We can’t hang on to the horses in this.”
Will heard the order
as his horse began bucking, its hind legs kicking imaginary foes. He drove his
fist into its head, catching it between the eyes, and it froze for a second in
stunned surprise, then slowly buckled, collapsing onto the ground. One of the blazing
trees gave a single creak of warning and keeled over. It slammed down on the
horse’s back, breaking ribs and legs, searing its way into the flesh. Oily
smoke billowed up. Will darted forward, and tugged at the saddle straps. His
suit datavised an amber alert to his neural nanonics as the heat impact of the
flames gusted against the outer layer.
Balls of orange flame
were hurtling through the air above him, spitting greasy black liquids:
vennals, fleeing and dying as their roosts were incinerated. Small withered
bodies hit the ground all around, some of them moving feebly.
Dean and Jenny were
still struggling with their horses, filling the air with confused curses.
Will’s suit sounded a preliminary caution that thermal input was reaching the
limit of the handling capacity. He felt the saddle strap give, and jumped
backwards, hugging the equipment packs. The suit’s outer dissipator layer
glowed cherry red as it radiated away the excess heat, and wisps of smoke rose
from around his feet.
More trees were falling
as the flame consumed the wood at a fantastic rate. For one nasty moment they
were completely penned in by a rippling fence made up from solid sheets of that
strange lethal white flame.
Jenny salvaged her
equipment packs from her horse and let go of the bridle. It raced away blindly,
only to veer to one side as another burning tree fell in its path. One of the
fiery vennals landed on its back, and it charged straight into the flames,
screaming piteously. She watched it tumble over. It twitched a couple of times,
trying to regain its feet, then flopped down limply.
By now a ring of
ground a hundred metres in diameter was burning, leaving just a small patch at
the centre untouched. The three of them grouped together at the middle as the
last two trees went down. Now there was only the ground creepers burning,
sending up forked yellow flames and heavy blue smoke.
Jenny pulled her packs
towards her and ran a systems status check. Not good. The guidance block was
putting out erratic data, and the suit’s laser rangefinder return was dubious.
The hostiles’ electronic warfare field was growing stronger. And according to
her external temperature sensors, if they hadn’t been wearing suits with a
thermal-dispersal layer they would have been roasted alive by now.
She gripped the TIP
carbine tighter. “As soon as the flames die down I want a sweep-scorch pattern
laid down out to four hundred metres. Fight fire with fire. They’ve shown us
what they can do, now it’s our turn.”
“All right,” Will
muttered happily.
Rummaging round in her
packs for one of the spherical heavy duty power cells she was carrying, she
plugged its coiled cable into the butt of her carbine. The other two were doing
the same thing.
“Ready?” she asked.
The flames were only a couple of metres high now, the air above them swarmed
with ash flakes, blotting out the sun. “Go.”
They stood, shoulders
together, forming a triangle. The TIP carbines blazed, sending out two hundred
and fifty invisible deadly shots every second. Targeting processors coordinated
the sweep parameters, overlapping their fields of fire. Neural nanonics ordered
their muscles to move in precise increments, controlling the direction of the
energy blitz.
A ripple of
destruction roared out across the already cremated land, then started to chew
its way into the vegetation beyond. Dazzling orange stars scintillated on tree
trunks and creepers, desiccating then igniting the wood and tangled cords of
vine. The initial ripple became a fully-fledged hurricane firestorm,
exacerbated by the relentless push of the carbines.
“Burn, you mothers,”
Will yelled jubilantly. “Burn!” The entire jungle was on fire around them, an
avalanche of flames racing outward. One again the vennals were dying in their
hundreds, plunging out of their igneous trees right into the conflagration.
Dean’s neural nanonics
reported that his carbine was stuttering whenever he wiped the barrel across a
certain coordinate. He brought it back and held it. The shot rate declined to
five a second.
“Shit. Jenny, they’re
locking their electronic warfare into my carbine targeting processor.”
“Let me have the
section,” she said.
He datavised the
coordinates over—no problem with communication any more. When she aimed her own
TIP carbine along the line its output dropped off almost immediately, but her
suit blocks were coming back on-line. “Jeeze, that electronic warfare of theirs
is the weirdest.”
“Want me to try?” Will
asked.
“No. Finish the
sweep-scorch first, we’ll deal with them in a minute.” She turned back to her
section. Watching the invincible rampart of flame cascade over the jungle had
sent her heart racing wildly. The awe that she could command such fearsome
power was soaring through her veins, taking her to a dangerous high. She had to
load a suppression order into her neural nanonics, which restricted the release
of natural adrenalin sharply. The sweep pattern was completed, and her flesh
cooled. But she still felt supreme.
A holocaust of flame
raged a hundred and twenty metres away.
“OK, they’ve given
their position away,” she said. “Dean, Will: gaussguns, please. Fragmentation
and electron-explosive rounds, forty–sixty ratio.”
Will grinned inside
his shell-helmet as he bent down to retrieve the heavy-duty weapon. The
gaussgun barrel was dark grey in colour, a metre and a half long. It weighed
thirty kilograms. He picked it up as if it was made from polystyrene, checked
the feed tube was connected to the bulky magazine box at his feet, datavised in
the ratio, and aimed it out through the shimmering flames. Dean deployed its
twin beside him.
Jenny had been probing
through the flames, using her TIP carbine to determine the extent and location
of the dead zone simply by recording where it cut out. She datavised the
coordinates over to Dean and Will: an oval area fifty metres long, roughly
three hundred metres away.
“One hundred and fifty
per cent coverage,” she said. “Fire.” Even she had to marvel at how the two men
handled the weapons. The gaussguns hurled ten rounds a second, leaving the
muzzle at five times the speed of sound. Yet they hardly moved as the recoil
hammered at them, swaying gently from side to side. She doubted her boosted
muscles could cope.
Away beyond the first
rank of flames, a wide island of intact jungle erupted in violent pyrotechnics.
Explosions five metres above the ground slammed out hundreds of thousands of
slender crystallized carbon shrapnel blades. They scythed through the air at
supersonic velocity, sharp as scalpels, stronger than diamond. Those trees
which had survived the firestorm disintegrated, shredded instantly by the rabid
aerial swarm. Confetti fragments blew apart like a dandelion cloud in a
tornado.
The rest of the
shrapnel impacted on the ground, slicing through the tangled mat of creepers,
blades stabbing themselves thirty to forty centimetres down into the loose
moist loam. They never had a chance to settle. EE projectiles rained down,
detonating in hard vicious gouts of ionic flame. Plumes of black loam jetted up
high into the ash-dimmed sky. The whole area was ruptured by steep-walled
two-metre craters, undulating like a sea swell.
Looking down on the
desolation, it was hard to believe even an insect could have survived, let
alone any large animal.
The three ESA agents
stared through the ebbing flames at the dark cyclone of loam particles and wood
splinters obscuring the sun.
Jenny’s neural
nanonics ran a series of diagnostic programs through her suit equipment blocks.
“That electronic warfare field has shut down,” she said. There was a faint
quaver to her voice as she contemplated the destructive forces she had
unleashed. “Looks like we got them.”
“And everybody knows
it,” Dean said flatly. “They must be able to see this fire halfway back to
Durringham. The hostiles are going to come swarming to investigate.”
“You’re right,” she
said.
“They’re still there,”
Will pronounced.
“What?!” Dean said.
“You’ve cracked. Nothing could survive that kind of barrage, not even an army
assault mechanoid. We blasted those bastards to hell.”
“I’m telling you;
they’re still out there,” Will insisted. He sounded nervous. Not like him at
all.
His edginess crept in
through the comfortable insulation of Jenny’s suit. Listening to him she was
half convinced herself. “If someone survived, that’s good,” she said. “I still
want that captive for Hiltch. Let’s move out. We’d have to investigate anyway.
And we can’t stay here waiting for them to regroup.”
They quickly
distributed the remaining ammunition and power cells from their packs, along
with basic survival gear. Each of them kept their TIP carbine; Will and Dean
shouldered the gaussguns without a word of protest.
Jenny led off at a
fast trot across the smouldering remnants of jungle, towards the area they had
bombarded with the gaussguns. She felt terribly exposed. The fire had died
down, it had nothing left to burn. Away in the distance they could see a few
sporadic flames licking at bushes and knots of creeper. They were in the middle
of a clearing nearly a kilometre across, the only segment of colour. Everything
was black, the remnants of creepers underfoot, tapering ten-metre spikes of
trees devoured by natural flames (as opposed to the white stuff the hostiles
threw at them), cooked vennals that lay scattered everywhere, other smaller
animals, a savagely contorted corpse of one of the horses, even the air was
leaden with a seam of fine dusky motes.
She datavised her
communication block to open a scrambled channel to Murphy Hewlett. To her
surprise, he responded straight away.
“God, Jenny, what’s
happened? We couldn’t raise you, then we saw that bloody great fire-fight. Are
you all OK?”
“We’re in one piece,
but we lost the horses. I think we did some damage to the hostiles.”
“Some damage?”
“Yeah. Murphy, watch out
for a kind of white fire. So far they’ve only used it to set the vegetation
alight, but our sensors can’t pick up how they direct the bloody stuff. It just
comes at you out of nowhere. But they hit you with an electronic warfare field
first. My advice is that if your electronics start to go, then lay down a
scorch pattern immediately. Flush them away.”
“Christ. What the hell
are we up against? First that paddle-boat illusion, now undetectable weapons.”
“I don’t know. Not
yet, but I’m going to find out.” She was surprised at her own determination.
“Do you need
assistance? It’s a long walk back to the boat.”
“Negative. I don’t
think we should join up. Two groups still have a better chance to achieve our
objective than one, nothing has changed that.”
“OK, but we’re here if
it gets too tough.”
“Thanks. Listen,
Murphy, I’m not aiming to stay in this jungle after dark. Hell, we can’t even
see them coming at us in the daytime.”
“Now that sounds like
the first piece of sensible advice you’ve given today.”
She referred to her
neural nanonics. “There are another seven hours of daylight left. I suggest we
try and rendezvous back at the Isakore in six hours from now. If we
haven’t captured a hostile, or found out what the hell is going down around
here, we can review the situation then.”
“I concur.”
“Jenny,” Dean called
with soft urgency.
“Call you back,” she
told Murphy.
They had reached the
edge of the barrage zone. Not even the tree stumps had survived here. Craters
overlapped, producing a crumpled landscape of unstable cones and holes; crooked
brown roots poked up into the sky from most of the denuded soil slopes. Long
strands of steam, like airborne worms, wound slowly around the crumbling
protrusions, sliding into the holes to pool at the bottom.
Over on the far side
she watched three men emerging from the craters, scrambling sluggishly for
solid ground. They helped each other along, wriggling on their bellies when the
slippery loam proved impossible to stand on.
Jenny watched their
progress in the same kind of bewildered daze which had engulfed her as the
fantastical paddle-steamer sailed down the river.
The men reached level
ground sixty metres away from the ESA team, and stood up. Two were recognizable
colonist types: dungarees, thick cotton work shirts, and woolly beards. The
third was dressed in some kind of antique khaki uniform: baggy trousers, calves
bound up by strips of yellowish cloth; a brown leather belt round his waist
sporting a polished pistol holster; a hemispherical metal hat with a
five-centimetre rim.
They couldn’t possibly
have survived, Jenny found herself thinking, yet here they were. For one wild
second she wondered if the electronic warfare field had won, and was feeding
the hallucination directly into her neural nanonics.
The two groups stared
at each other for over half a minute.
Jenny’s electronic
warfare block reported a build-up of static in the short-range datavise band.
It broke the spell. “OK, let’s go get them,” she said.
They started to circle
round the edge of the barrage zone. The three men watched them silently.
“Do you want all
three?” Will asked.
“No, just one. The
soldier must be equipped with the most powerful systems if he can create that
kind of chameleon effect. I’d like him if we can manage it.”
“I thought chameleon
suits were supposed to blend in,” Dean muttered.
“I’m not even sure
we’re seeing men,” Will added. “Maybe the xenocs are disguising themselves.
Remember the paddle-steamer.”
Jenny ordered her
suit’s laser rangefinder to scan the soldier; its return should reveal the true
outline to an accuracy of less than half a millimetre. The blue beam stabbed
out from the side of her shell-helmet. But instead of sweeping the soldier, it
broke apart a couple of metres in front of him, forming a turquoise haze. After
a second the rangefinder module shut down. Her neural nanonics reported the
whole unit was inoperative.
“Did you see that?”
she asked. They had covered about a third of the distance round the barrage
zone.
“I saw it,” Will said
brusquely. “It’s a xenoc. Why else would it want to hide its shape?”
The distortion in the
datavise band began to increase. Jenny saw the soldier start to unbuckle his
holster.
“Stop!” she commanded,
her voice booming out of the communication block’s external speaker. “The three
of you are under arrest. Put your hands on your head, and don’t move.”
All three men turned
fractionally, focusing on her. Her neural nanonics began to report malfunctions
in half of her suit’s electronics.
“Screw it! We must
break them up, even three of them are too powerful. Will, one round EE, five
metres in front of them.”
“That’s too close,”
Dean said tensely as Will brought the gaussgun to bear. “You’ll kill them.”
“They survived the
first barrage,” Jenny said tonelessly. Will fired. A fountain of loam spurted
up into the air, accompanied by a bright blue-white sphere of flame. The
blast-wave flattened some of the nearby piles of soil.
Jenny’s neural
nanonics reported the electronics coming back on-line. The loam subsided,
revealing the three men standing firm. A faint whistle was insinuating itself
into the datavise band; her neural nanonics couldn’t filter it out.
“One metre,” she
snapped. “Fire.”
The explosion sent
them spinning, tottering about for balance. One fell to his knees. For the
first time there was a reaction; one of the two farmer-types started snarling
and shouting. His face above the beard was black, whether from loam or a
flashburn she couldn’t tell.
“Keep firing, keep
them apart,” Jenny called to Will. “Come on, run.”
Explosions bloomed
around the three men. Will was using the gaussgun the way riot police employed
a water cannon, harrying the men as they tried to come together. Blasts that
would rip a human to pieces barely affected them, at the most they tumbled backwards
to sprawl on the ground. He was tempted to land a round straight on one, just
to see what it would do. They scared him.
Jenny’s feet pounded
over the scorched creepers. The packs and the TIP carbine weighed nothing as
her boosted muscles powered up and took the full load. Will was doing a good
job, one of the men had been separated from the other two. He was the
farmer-type who had shouted earlier. She brought her TIP carbine round and
aimed it at his left ankle, neural nanonics allowing her to compensate for the
vigorous motion of her body. If they could disable him, they could chase off or
kill the other two. A severed cauterized foot wasn’t lethal.
Her neural nanonics
triggered a single shot. She actually saw the induction pulse. A complete impossibility,
her mind insisted. But a slender violet line materialized in the air ahead of
her. It struck the farmer’s ankle and splashed apart, sending luminous tendrils
clawing up his leg. He yelled wildly, and tumbled headlong.
“Dean, subdue him,”
she ordered. “I want him in one piece. Will and I will fend off the other two.”
Her carbine’s targeting circle slithered round on the soldier as she stopped
running. He was taking aim with his revolver. They both fired.
Jenny saw luminous
purple tapeworms writhing across the neatly pressed khaki uniform. The soldier
began to jerk about as if he was being electrocuted. Then the bullet struck her
with the force of a gaussgun’s kinetic round. Her suit hardened instantly, and
she found herself somersaulting chaotically, grey sky and black land streaking
past in a confused blur. There was an instant’s silence. She landed hard, and
her suit unfroze. She was rolling, arms and legs jolting the ground sharply.
The gaussgun was
roaring three metres away. Will was standing his ground, feet apart to brace
himself, swivelling from the hip to send EE rounds chasing after each of the
men.
Jenny scrambled to her
feet. The soldier and one of the farmers were fifty metres away. They were
facing Will, but retreating in juddering steps from the onslaught of
projectiles. Somehow she had hung on to the TIP carbine, and now she lined it
up. Radiant purple lines shivered across the soldier once more. He threw up his
hands, as if he was physically warding off the intense energy pulses. Then both
he and the farmer looked at each other. Something must have been said, because
they both turned and ran towards the rim of the jungle eighty metres behind
them.
Dean Folan dropped his
gaussgun and backpack, which allowed him to cover the last thirty metres in two
and a half seconds. In that time he fired his TIP carbine twice. The beams tore
into glaring purple streamers which knocked the farmer down into the soft loam.
With his opponent out for the count, Dean took the last five metres in a flying
tackle, landing straight on top of him. The weight of his own body and the suit
and his equipment should have been enough to finish it. But the man started to
rise straight away. Dean gave a surprised yelp as he was lifted right off the
ground, and went for a stranglehold, only to find a hand clamping round each
wrist pulling his arms apart. He fell onto his back as the farmer regained his
feet. A booted foot kicked him in the side of his ribs. His suit hardened, and
he was thrown onto his belly by the force of the blow. The farmer must be a
construct made entirely out of boosted muscle! His neural nanonics combat
routine programs went into primary mode. He swung the TIP carbine round, and
another vicious kick actually cracked the casing. But he lashed out with his
free arm, knocking the farmer’s other leg out from under him. The farmer went
down heavily on his backside.
Somewhere in the
distance the gaussgun was thumping out a stream of EE projectiles.
Both of them struggled
into a semi-crouch, then launched themselves. Once again, Dean found himself
losing. The farmer’s impact sent him reeling backwards, fighting to keep his
feet. Arms with the strength of a hydraulic ram grappled at him. His neural
nanonics reviewed tactical options, and decided his physical strength was
dangerously inferior. He let himself sway backwards, taking the farmer with
him. Then his leg came straight up, slamming into the man’s stomach. A classic
judo throw. The farmer arched through the air, snarling in rage. Dean drew his
twenty-centimetre fission blade and twisted round just in time to meet the man
as he charged. The blade sliced down, aiming for the meat of the right forearm.
It struck, cutting through the cloth sleeve. But the yellow glow faded, and it
skated across the skin, scoring a shallow gash.
Dean stared at the
narrow wound, partly numbed, partly shocked. Will was right, it must be a
xenoc. As he watched, the skin on the forearm rippled, closing the gash. The
farmer laughed evilly, teeth showing white in his grubby face. He started to
walk towards Dean, arms coming up menacingly. Dean stepped inside the embrace,
and ordered his suit to solidify below his shoulders. The farmer’s arms closed
round him in a bear hug. Composite fibres, stiffened by the suit’s integral
valency generators, creaked ominously as the farmer’s arms squeezed. A couple
of equipment blocks snapped. Instinct made Dean switch off the fission blade’s
power, leaving a dull black blade with wickedly sharp edges. The hostiles
seemed capable of controlling and subverting any kind of electrical
circuit—maybe if the knife wasn’t powered up . . . He pressed the tip
up into the base of the farmer’s jaw.
“You can heal wounds
on your arm. But can you heal your brain as it’s sliced in half?” The blade was
shoved up a fraction until a bead of blood welled out around the tip. “Wanna
try?”
The farmer hissed in
animosity. He eased off his grip around Dean’s chest.
“Now keep very still,”
Dean said as he unlocked his suit. “Because I’m very nervous, and an accident
can happen easily and quickly.”
“You’ll suffer,” the
farmer said malevolently. “You’ll suffer longer than you have to. I promise.”
Dean took a pace to
one side, the blade remaining poised on the man’s neck. “You speak English, do
you? Where do you come from?”
“Here, I come from
here, warrior man. Just like you.”
“I don’t come from
here.”
“We all do. And you’re
going to stay here. For ever, warrior man. You’re never going to die, not now.
Eternity in purgatory is that which awaits you. Do you like the sound of that?
That’s what’s going to happen to you.”
Dean saw Will walk
behind the farmer, and touch the muzzle of the gaussgun to the back of his
skull.
“I’ve got him,” said
Will. “Hey, xenoc man, one bad move, one bad word, and you are countryside.” He
laughed. “You got that?”
The farmer’s dirty
lips curled up in a sneer.
“He’s got it,” Dean
said.
Jenny came over and
studied the strange tableau. The farmer looked perfectly ordinary apart from
his arrogance. She thought of his two comrades that had run into the jungle,
the hundreds—thousands—more just like him out there. Maybe he had a right to be
arrogant.
“What’s your name?”
she asked.
The farmer’s eyes
darted towards her. “Kingsford Garrigan. What’s yours?”
“Cuff him,” Jenny told
Dean. “We’ll take him back to the Isakore. You’re going for a long trip,
Kingsford Garrigan. All the way to Kulu.” She thought she saw a flash of
surprise in his eyes. “And you’d better hope your friends don’t try and
interfere with us. I don’t know what you are, but if you attempt to screw up our
electronics again, or if we have to cut and run, the first thing we drop is
you. And drop you we will, from a very great height.”
The farmer spat
casually on her foot. Will jabbed him with the gaussgun.
Jenny opened a
communication channel to the geosynchronous platform, and connected into the
Kulu Embassy dumper.
“We’ve got you one of
the hostiles,” she datavised to Ralph Hiltch. “And when I say hostile, I’m not
kidding.”
“Fantastic. Well done,
Jenny. Now get back here soonest. I’ve got our transport to Ombey arranged. The
ESA office there has the facilities for a total personality debrief.”
“I wouldn’t bank on it
working,” she said. “He’s immune to a TIP shot.”
“Repeat, please.”
“I said the TIP
carbine doesn’t hurt him, the energy pulse just breaks apart. Only physical
weapons seem to have any effect. At the moment we’ve got him subdued with a
gaussgun. He’s also stronger than the G66 boys, a lot stronger.”
There was a long
silence. “Is he human?” Ralph Hiltch asked.
“He looks human. But I
don’t see how he can be. If you want my opinion, I’d guess at some kind of
super bitek android. It’s got to be a xenoc bitek, and a pretty advanced bitek
at that.”
“Christ Almighty.
Datavise a full-spectrum image over, please. I’ll run it through some analysis
programs.”
“Sure thing.”
Dean had the man’s
hands behind his back to slide a zipcuff over his wrists. It was a
figure-of-eight band of polyminium with a latch buckle at the centre. Jenny
watched Dean tighten the pewter-coloured loops; no electronic lock, thank heavens,
just simple mechanics.
She ordered her neural
nanonics to encode the retinal pixels, and datavised the complete image over to
the embassy. Infrared followed, then a spectrographic print.
Dean ejected the power
magazine from his broken TIP carbine and handed it to Jenny along with the
spares, then recovered his gaussgun. With Will covering their prisoner, they
started walking back towards the Isakore at a brisk pace. Jenny aimed
them off at a slight tangent, taking them quickly back into the jungle. She still
felt too exposed in the firestorm clearing.
“Jenny,” Ralph called
after a minute. “What did the hostile say his name was?”
“Kingsford Garrigan,”
she replied.
“He’s lying. And
you’re wrong about him being a xenoc android, too. I’ve run a search program
through our records. He’s a colonist from Aberdale called Gerald Skibbow.”
“It is a wet, humid
night here in Durringham, as they always are on this poor benighted planet. The
heat clogs my throat and my skin sweats as though I have caught a fever. But
still I feel cold inside, a coldness that grips the very cells of my heart.”
Was that a bit too purple? Oh well, the studio can always edit it out.
Graeme Nicholson was
squatting on aching ankles in the deepest shadows cast by one of the
spaceport’s big hangars. It was drizzling hard, and his cheap synthetic suit
was clinging to his flabby body. Despite the warmth of the water he really was
shivering, the fat rolls of his beer belly were shaking the same way they did
when he laughed.
Fifty metres away a
defeated yellow light shone from an office in the spaceport’s single-storey
administration block. It was the only occupied office, the rest had shut long
ago. With his retinal implants straining, Graeme could just make out Laton,
Marie Skibbow, and two other men through the grimed glass. One of them was
Emlyn Hermon, the Yaku’s second-in-command, who had met Marie and Laton
in the Crashed Dumper. He didn’t know the fourth, but he must work for the
spaceport administration in some capacity.
He just wished he
could listen to whatever deal they were making. But his boosted hearing was
only effective inside a fifteen-metre radius. And no prize in the universe
would make him creep any closer to Laton. Fifty metres was quite close enough,
thank you.
“I have followed the
arch-diabolist here from the city. And nothing I have seen has given me the
slightest hope for the future. His interest in the spaceport can only indicate
he is ready to move on. His work on Lalonde is complete. Violence and anarchy
reign beyond the city. What monstrous curse he has let loose is beyond my
imagination; but each new day brings darker stories down the river, sucking
away the citizens’ hope. Fear is his real weapon, and he possesses it in
abundance.”
Marie held out a small
object Graeme took to be a Jovian Bank credit disk. The spaceport
administration official proffered its counterpart.
“The alliance has been
formed. His plan advances another notch. And I cannot believe it will bring
anything other than disaster upon us. Four decades has not reduced the fear.
What has he achieved in those four decades? I ask myself this question time and
again. The only answer must be: evil. He has perfected evil.”
The office light went
out. Graeme emerged from his sheltered recess, and walked along the side of the
hangar until he could see the administration block’s main entrance. The drizzle
was worsening, becoming rain. His suit felt cool, and unbearably clammy,
restricting his movements. A prodigious amount of water was running off the
ezystak-panel roof overhead, splattering onto the chippings round his soaking
feet. Despite the physical discomfort and nagging consternation at Laton’s
presence, he felt an excitement that had been absent for years. This was real
journalism: the million to one break, the hazardous follow-up, getting the
story at any cost. Those shits back in the editing offices could never handle
this, safe paunchy career creatures; and they would know it too. His real
victory.
Laton and his cohorts
had all emerged into the bleak night wearing cagoules against the weather. They
had their backs to him, heading for the flight line where the indistinct
outlines of the parked McBoeings formed windows into an even graver darkness.
Laton (betrayed by his height) had his arm around Marie.
“The beauty and the
beast, look. What can she see in him? For Marie is just a simple colony girl,
proud and decent, loving her new planet, working long hours like all of this
city’s residents. She shares the planetary ethic of her neighbours, striving
hard to achieve a better world for her children. Yet somehow she has stumbled.
A warning that none of us is immune to the attraction of the dark side of human
nature. I look at her, and I think: there but for the grace of God go I.”
Halfway along the
McBoeings was a smaller spaceplane. It was obviously Laton’s goal. Bright light
shone out of its open airlock, casting a grey smear across the ground. A couple
of maintenance crew personnel were tending the mobile support units under its
nose.
Graeme sneaked up to
the big undercarriage bogies of a McBoeing forty metres away, and crouched down
below the broad tyres. The spaceplane was one of the small swing-wing VTOL
marques starships carried in their hangars. He switched his retinal implants to
full magnification and scanned the fuselage. Sure enough, the name Yaku was
printed on the low angular tail.
Some kind of argument
was going on at the foot of the steps leading up to the airlock. The
administration official was talking heatedly to another man wearing a cagoule
with the LDC emblem on the arm. Both of them were waving their arms around.
Laton, Marie, and Emlyn Hermon stood to one side, watching patiently.
“The last obstacle has
been reached. It is ironic to consider that all that stands between Laton and
the Confederation is one immigration official. One man between us and the
prospect of galactic tragedy.”
The argument ended. A
Jovian Bank disk was offered.
“Can we blame him?
Should we blame him? It is a foul night. He has a family which looks to him for
support. And how harmless it is, a few hundred fuseodollars to avert his eyes
for one swift minute. Money which can buy food for his children in these
troubled times. Money which can make life that fraction easier. How many of us
would do the same? How many? Would you?” Nice touch that, involve people.
Laton and Marie went
up the battered aluminium stairs, followed by a furtive Emlyn Hermon. The
administration official was talking to the two ground crew.
Just as he reached the
airlock hatch, Laton turned, the hood of his cagoule falling back to reveal his
face in full. Handsome, well proportioned, a hint of aristocracy: Edenist
sophistication, but without the cultural heritage, that essential counterbalance
which made the affinity gene carriers human. It looked as though he was staring
straight at Graeme Nicholson. He laughed with a debonair raffishness. Mocking.
Everyone in the
Confederation who accessed the sensevise in the weeks which followed experienced
the old journalist’s heart thud inside his ribs. All of a sudden breath was
very hard to come by, stalling in his throat.
That pause, the
derision. It wasn’t an accident, chance. Laton knew he was there, and didn’t
care. Graeme was too far beneath him to care.
“He is going now. Free
to roam the stars. Should I have tried to stop him? Put myself up against a man
who can make entire worlds tremble at the mention of his name? If you think I
should, then I am sorry. For I am so frightened of him. And I do not believe I
would have made any difference, not against his strength. He would still be on
his way.”
The airlock hatch
shut. The two ground crew scuttled about, hunched against the rain, unplugging
the thick dark-yellow ribbed hoses from their underbelly hatches. Compressors
wound up, kicking out micro-squalls of the heavy rain. Their reedy sibilance
built steadily until the spaceplane rocked on its undercarriage. It lifted into
the murky sky.
“My duty now is to
warn you all. I will do what I can, what I must, to ensure this sensevise
reaches you. So that you know. He is coming. It is you who must fight him. I
wish you luck. Those of us left here have our own battle against the calamity
he has unleashed out in the hinterlands. It is not one for which we are well
prepared, this is not a planet of epic heroes, just ordinary people like
yourselves. As always, the burden falls upon those least able to shoulder it;
for a terrible night has fallen on Lalonde, and I do not think we will see the
dawn again.”
The spaceplane swooped
up in a sharp climb, its wings beginning to fold back. It arrowed into the low,
bulging cloud base, and disappeared from view.
A dozen paltry fires
spluttered and hissed on the broad road outside the Governor’s dumper, the
flames devouring fence posts and broken carts that had been snatched for fuel.
Little knots of protesters clustered round them under the watchful eyes of the
sheriffs and deputies circling the carbotanium cone. An uneasy truce had broken
out after the anger and violence of the day. The earlier barrages of stones and
bottles had been answered each time by cortical-jamming impulses from the
sheriffs. Thankfully the protesters had refrained from using any real weapons
today. Now the chanting had stopped. The naked menace in a thousand throats
screaming in unison wasn’t something Colin Rexrew was accustomed to dealing
with. He could never make out what they had been chanting for these last few
days; he thought they weren’t entirely sure themselves apart from wanting the
turmoil to end. Well, so did he. Very badly.
Each time Colin Rexrew
looked out of his window he could see some new plume of smoke rising from the
vista of dark rooftops. Tonight the horizon was dotted with three or four
fierce orange flares as buildings burned. If it wasn’t for the rain and
humidity Durringham would have been reduced to a single giant firestorm days
ago.
And the deteriorating
civic situation in the city wasn’t even his real problem.
When Candace Elford
came into the office Colin Rexrew was behind his desk as always, gazing
vacantly at the window strip and the luckless city outside. Terrance Smith gave
her a fast, expressive grimace, and they both sat down.
“I’m afraid I have now
effectively lost control over a third of the city,” she started.
It was the nightly
situation briefing. Or the nightly crisis meeting, depending on how cynical
Colin felt. The intensifying pressures seemed to make it hard to concentrate at
the very times he needed his full mental resources. He would have given a lot
to be able to run a stimulant program through his neural nanonics, or even
escape into a MF album for a few hours like he used to in his adolescence. It
would have made the strain a little easier to bear.
Not even his neural
nanonics with their top of the range managerial programs were much help. There
were too many unaccountable—downright weird—factors cropping up to apply
standard responses. Had there ever been a stage one colony governor who had
lost all control of his planet? The memory cells held no record of any.
What a way to get into
the history books.
“Is it the invaders?”
he asked.
“No, as far as we can
make out they are still some distance away. What we’re dealing with here is
mainly opportunist looting, and some organized grabs for power. Nothing
political, but there are some strong criminal gangs who have been quick to take
advantage of the unrest. I’d point out that most of the districts my sheriffs
have been excluded from are on the south-eastern side of town. Those are the
newest and poorest; in other words the most disaffected to begin with. The
heart of the city, and more importantly the merchant and industrial sectors,
remain stable. If anything, the older residents resent the lawlessness. I’m
looking to recruit more deputies from them.”
“How long before you
can start to regain control of the south-east districts?” Terrance Smith asked.
“At the moment I’m
just looking to contain the trouble,” Candace Elford said.
“You mean you can’t?”
“I didn’t say that,
but it isn’t going to be easy. The gangs have captured two dumpers, and their
fusion generators. We can’t afford to damage them, and they know that. I lost a
lot of good people in Ozark and on the Swithland fiasco. Plus we have to
deal with the transient colonists. They seem to be the biggest problem right
now; they’re holed up in the docks and I can’t shift them. There are barricades
across every access route and there’s a lot of wanton destruction and looting
going on. So half the port is currently unusable, which has antagonized the
boat captains; and I have to deploy a lot of people to keep an eye on them.”
“Starve them out,”
Colin said.
She nodded
reluctantly. “That’s one option. About the least expensive at the moment. But
it will take time, there was a lot of food stored in those warehouses.”
“The merchants won’t
like that,” Terrance Smith said.
“Screw the merchants,”
Colin said. “I’m sorry about the transients’ gear being looted, but that
doesn’t excuse this kind of behaviour. We can help them eventually, but not if they’re
going to hamper every effort with petty-minded belligerence.”
“Some families lost
everything—”
“Tough shit! We are
in danger of losing an entire planet of twenty million people. My priority is
to the majority.”
“Yes, sir.”
There were times when
Colin just felt like telling his aide: here’s my seat, you take over, you with
your situation summaries and cautiously formulated response suggestions.
Instead, the Governor walked over to the drinks cabinet and searched through
the bottles for a decent chilled white wine, and to hell with the chief
sheriff’s disapproval.
“Can we defend
Durringham from the invaders?” he asked quietly as he flipped the neck seal and
poured out a glass.
“If we had enough time
to prepare, and you declared martial law, and if we had enough weapons.”
“Yes or no?”
Candace Elford watched
the glass in the Governor’s hand. It was shaking quite badly, the wine nearly
spilling. “I don’t think so,” she said. “Whatever it is that’s out there, it’s
strong, well armed, and well organized. The Confederation Navy office thinks
they are using some kind of sequestration technology to turn colonists into a
slave army. Faced with that, I don’t think we really stand much of a chance.”
“Sequestration
nanonics,” Colin mumbled as he sank back into his chair. “Dear God, who are
these invaders? Xenocs? Some exiled group from another planet?”
“I’m not one hundred
per cent certain,” she said. “But my satellite image analysis people found
these this morning. I think it may throw a little light on the situation.” She
datavised an order into the office’s computer. The wall-screens lit up, showing
a blank section of jungle fifty kilometres west of Ozark.
The satellite had
passed over in the middle of the afternoon, giving a clear bright image. Trees
were compacted so tightly the jungle looked like an unbroken emerald plain.
Five perfectly straight black lines began to probe across the green expanse, as
if the talons of a huge invisible claw were being scored down the screen. The
satellite cameras zoomed in on the head of one line, and Colin Rexrew saw trees
being bulldozed into the ground. A big ten-wheeled vehicle rolled into view,
grey metal glinting dully, a black bubble-cab protruding from a flat upper
surface. It had a blunt wedge-shaped front that smashed through trunks without
the slightest resistance. Viscous sprays of red-brown mud were being flung up
by its rear wheels, caking the metal bodywork. There were another three
identical vehicles following it along the track of shattered vegetation it was
ripping through the jungle.
“We positively
identified them as Dhyaan DLA404 landcruisers; they are made on Varzquez. Or I
should say, were made. The Dhyaan company stopped producing that particular
model over twenty years ago.”
Colin Rexrew datavised
a search order into the office computer. “The LDC never brought any to
Lalonde.”
“That’s right. The
invaders brought them. What you’re seeing is the first definite proof that it
is an external force behind all this. And they’re heading straight towards
Durringham.”
“Dear God.” He put his
empty wineglass down on the desk, and stared at the screens. The enemy had a
physical form. After weeks of helpless wrestling with an elusive, possibly
imaginary, foe, it was finally real; but a reason for the invasion, logical or
otherwise, was impossible to devise.
Colin Rexrew gathered
up what was left of his old determination and resolve. Something tangible gave
his psyche a fragment of very welcome confidence. He accessed the one neural
nanonics program he had thought he would never have to use, strategic military
procedure, and put it into primary mode. “We have to stop deluding ourselves we
can handle this on our own. I need combat troops backed up with real
fire-power. I’m going to blow these invaders right off my planet. We only need
to locate the headquarters. Kill the brain and the body is irrelevant. We can
see about removing the sequestration nanonics from people later.”
“The LDC board will
need convincing,” Terrance Smith said. “It won’t be easy.”
“They will be told
afterwards,” Colin said. “You’ve seen those landcruisers. They’ll be here in a
week. We must move fast. After all, it’s the board’s interest I’m ultimately
protecting; without Lalonde there will be no LDC.”
“Where can you get
troops from without going through the board?” Terrance asked.
“The same place they
would ultimately get them from. We buy them on a short-term contract.”
“Mercenaries?” the
aide asked in surprised alarm.
“Yes. Candace, where’s
the nearest port we can get enough in reasonable numbers? I want armed ships,
too; they can provide the fire-power back-up from low orbit. It’s expensive,
but cheaper than buying in strategic-defence platforms. They can also prevent
any more of the invader’s ships from landing.”
The chief sheriff gave
him a long, testing stare. “Tranquillity,” she said eventually. “It’s a base
for blackhawks and the so-called independent traders. Where you find the ships,
you find the people. Ione Saldana might be young, but she’s not stupid, she
won’t throw out the undesirables. The plutocrats who live in the habitat have
too many uses for them.”
“Good,” Colin said
decisively. “Terrance, cancel all work on Kenyon as of now. We’ll use the money
earmarked for mining its main chamber. It always was bloody premature.”
“Yes, sir.”
“After that, you can
take one of the colonist-carrier ships to Tranquillity and supervise the
recruitment.”
“Me?”
“You.” Colin watched
the protest form and die unvoiced on the younger man’s lips. “I want at least
four thousand general troops to re-establish order in Durringham and the
immediate counties. And I also want teams of combat scouts for the Quallheim
Counties. They are going to have to be the best, because they are going to be
assigned the search and destroy mission in the deep jungle. Once they locate
the invader’s home base they can zero it for the starships’ weapons. We can
pound it from orbit.”
“What sort of
armaments are we looking for on these starships?” Terrance asked guardedly.
“Masers, X-ray lasers,
particle beams, thermal inducers, kinetic harpoons, and atmospheric penetration
nukes—straight fusion, I don’t want any radioactives clogging the environment.”
He caught the aide’s eye. “And no antimatter, not under any circumstances.”
Terrance gave a
cautious grin. “Thank you.”
“What ships have we
got available in orbit right now?”
“That was something I
was going to mention,” Terrance said. “The Yaku left its parking orbit
this evening. It jumped outsystem.”
“So?”
“Firstly, it was a
cargo ship, and only fifty per cent of its cargo had been unloaded. And cargo
is the one thing we are still bringing down to the spaceport. It had no reason
to leave. Secondly, it had no permission to leave. There was no prior contact with
our Civil Flight Control Office. The only reason I found out it had left was
because Kelven Solanki got in touch with me to query it. When I checked with
flight control to ask why they hadn’t informed us about it, they didn’t even
know Yaku had lifted from parking orbit. It turns out someone had erased
the traffic-monitor satellite data from the spaceport computer.”
“Why?” Candace asked.
“It’s not as if we have anything that could prevent them from leaving.”
“No,” Colin said
slowly. “But we could have asked another ship to track it. Without the monitor
satellite data we don’t know its jump coordinate, we don’t know where it went.”
“Solanki will have a
copy,” Terrance said. “Ralph Hiltch too, I suspect. If he was pressed.”
“That’s all we need,
another bloody puzzle,” Colin said. “See what you can find out,” he told
Candace.
“Yes, sir.”
“Back to the original
question. What other ships are available?”
Terrance consulted his
neural nanonics. “There are eight left in orbit; three cargo ships, the rest
colonist-carriers. And we’re due for another two colonist-carriers this week,
as well as a Tyrathca merchant ship sometime before the end of the month to
check on their farmers.”
“Don’t remind me,”
Colin said sorely.
“I think the Gemal would
be the best bet. That only has forty Ivets left in zero-tau. They can be
transferred to the Tachad or the Martijn, both of them have spare
zero-tau pods. It wouldn’t take more than a few hours.”
“Get onto it tonight,”
Colin said. “And, Candace, that means the spaceport has to be defended at all
costs. We have to be able get those troops down in the McBoeings. There’s
nowhere else for them to land. The scouts can use VTOLs to take them direct to
the Quallheim Counties, but the rest will have to use the McBoeings.”
“Yes, sir, I am aware
of that.”
“Good, start
organizing for it, then. Terrance, I want you back here in ten days. Give me
one month, and I’ll have these bastards begging me for surrender terms.”
The gaussgun’s
fragmentation round hit the man full in his chest, and penetrated to a depth of
ten centimetres, already starting to crater the flesh, impact shock pulverizing
the entire mass of organs held within his rib cage to mucilaginous jelly. Then
it exploded, silicone shrapnel reducing the entire body to a spherical cascade
of scarlet cells.
Will Danza grunted in
acute satisfaction. “Try rebuilding yourself out of that, my xenoc friend,” he
told the slippery red leaves.
The hostiles were
impervious to almost any major injury. The little ESA team had found that out
long ago. Gaping lacerations, severed limbs—they barely slowed the hostiles
down as they emerged from the thick bushes to harass the party. Wounds closed
up, bones knitted in seconds. Lieutenant Jenny Harris might insist on calling the
prisoner a sequestrated colonist, but Will knew what it really was. Xenoc
monster. And its friends wanted it back.
Twice in the last
three kilometres Jenny Harris had been forced to order a sweep-scorch pattern.
The things had been throwing that eerie white fire of theirs. Once a ball had
struck Dean Folan’s arm, burning through the suit’s energy diffusion layer as
if it wasn’t there. The medical nanonic package they’d put on his arm looked
like a tube of translucent green exoskeleton.
“Hey!” Dean yelled. “Get
back here!”
Jenny Harris looked
round. Gerald Skibbow was running into the jungle, both arms pumping wildly.
“Shitfire,” she muttered. He had been zipcuffed a moment ago. Dean was lining
up his gaussgun.
“Mine,” she called.
Her blue TIP carbine targeting graphic centred on a tree five metres ahead of
the running man; the shots punched straight through the slim trunk, puffs of
steam and flame squirted out. Gerald Skibbow swerved frantically as the tree
toppled across his path. Another volley of shots and the jungle around him
caught light. One final shot on his knee knocked his legs from under him.
The three of them
trotted over where he lay sprawled in the crushed muddy vines.
“What happened?” Jenny
asked. She had assigned Dean to guard the prisoner. Unless a gaussgun was in
his back the whole time, Gerald Skibbow felt free to cause as much trouble as
possible.
Dean held up the
zipcuff. It was unbroken. “I saw a hostile,” he said. “I only turned away for a
second.”
“OK,” Jenny sighed. “I
wasn’t blaming you.” She bent over Gerald Skibbow, whose grimed face was
grinning up at them, and jerked his right arm up. There was a narrow red line
braceleting the wrist, an old scar. “Very clever,” she told him wearily. “Next
time, I’ll order Dean to slice your legs off below the knee. We’ll see how long
it takes you to grow a new pair.”
Gerald Skibbow
laughed. “You don’t have that much time available, Madame bitch.”
She straightened up.
Her spine creaked and groaned as if she was a hundred and fifty. She felt
older. The fire was crackling loudly in the surrounding bushes, flames
inhibited by the green twigs.
It was another four
kilometres back to the Isakore, and the jungle was becoming
progressively thicker. Vines here wrapped the trees like major arteries,
creating a solid hurdle of verdant mesh between the trunks. Visibility was down
to less than twenty-five metres, and that was with enhanced senses.
We’re not going to
make it, she realized.
They’d been expending
gaussgun ammunition at a heavy rate ever since they set off. They had to,
nothing else worked against the hostiles. Even the two TIP carbines were down
to forty per cent of their power reserve. “Get him up,” she ordered curtly.
Will clamped an arm
round Gerald Skibbow’s shoulder and hauled him to his feet.
White fire burst out
of the ground around Jenny’s feet, damp loam tearing open to spit out dazzling
globules which spiralled up her legs like a liquid repelled by gravity. She
screamed at the pain as her skin blistered and burned inside the
anti-projectile suit. Her neural nanonics isolated the nerve strands,
eliminating the raw impulses with analgesic blocks.
Will and Dean started
firing their gaussguns at random into the blank impassive jungle in the vain
hope of hitting a hostile. EE projectiles mashed the nearby trees. Shreds of
sappy vegetation whirred through the air, forming a loose curtain behind which
vivid explosions boomed.
The viscid beads of
white fire evaporated as they reached Jenny’s hips. She clenched her teeth against
the solid ache from her legs. Frightened by the damage her neural nanonics were
shielding her from. Frightened she couldn’t walk. The medical program was
choking up her mind with red symbols, all of them clustered around schematics
of her legs like bees round honey. She felt faint.
“We can help you,”
silver voices whispered in chorus.
“What?” she asked,
disorientated. She sat on the lumpy ground to take the strain off her legs. Her
trembling muscles had been about to dump her there anyway.
“You all right,
Jenny?” Dean asked. He was standing with the gaussgun pointing threateningly
into the broken trees.
“Did you say
something?”
“Yes, are you OK?”
“I . . .”
I’m hearing things. “We’ve got to get out of here.”
“First thing you have
to do is get a medical nanonic package on those legs. I think there’s enough,”
he said, uncertainty clouding his voice.
Jenny knew there
wasn’t, not to get her patched up for a hike of four kilometres under combat
conditions. The neural nanonics prognosis wasn’t good; the program was
activating her endocrine implant, sending a potent stew of chemicals into her
bloodstream. “No,” she said forcefully. “We’re not going to get back to the
boat like this.”
“We ain’t going to
leave you,” Will said hotly.
She grinned unseen
inside her shell-helmet. “Believe me, I wasn’t going to ask you to. Even if the
medical nanonics can get me walking, we don’t have enough ordnance left to
blast our way back to the Isakore from here.”
“What then?” Will
demanded.
Jenny requested a
channel to Murphy Hewlett. Static crashed into her neural nanonics, that eerie
whistling. “Shitfire. I can’t get the marines.” She hated the idea of
abandoning them.
“I think I can see
why,” Dean said. He pointed at the treetops. “Smoke, and plenty of it. South of
here. Some distance by the look of it. They must have laid down a sweep-scorch
pattern. They got troubles, too.”
Jenny couldn’t see any
smoke. Even the leaves at the top of the trees had turned a barren grey. Her
vision was tunnelling. A physiological-status request showed her endocrines
were barely coping with the flayed legs. “Sling me your medical nanonics,” she
said.
“Right.” Will fired
six EE rounds into the jungle then hurriedly detached his backpack and tossed
it over. He was back watching the abused trees before it reached her.
She ordered her
communications block to open a channel to Ralph Hiltch, then turned the
backpack seal’s catch and fumbled around inside. Instead of the subliminal
digital bleep that signalled the block was interfacing with the geosynchronous
platform, all she heard was a monotonous buzz.
“Will, Dean, open a
channel to the geosync platform, maybe a combined broadcast will get through.”
She picked up her TIP carbine, and pointed it at Gerald Skibbow, who was
squatting sullenly beside a swath of vines four metres away. “And you, if I
think you are part of the jamming effort, I will start a little experiment to
see exactly how much thermal energy you can fight off. You got me, Mr. Skibbow?
Is this message getting through the electronic warfare barrier?”
The communication
block reported the channel to the embassy was open.
“What’s happening?”
Ralph Hiltch asked.
“Trouble—” Jenny broke
off to hiss loudly. The medical nanonic package was contracting round her left
leg, it felt as though a thousand acid-tipped needles were jabbing into the
roasted gouges as the furry inner surface knitted with her flesh. She had to
order the neural nanonics to block all the nerve impulses. Her legs went
completely numb, lacking even the heavy vacuum feeling of chemical
anaesthetics. “Boss, I hope that fall-back scheme of yours works. Because we
need it pretty badly. Now, boss.”
“OK, Jenny. I’m
putting it in motion. ETA fifteen minutes, can you hang on that long?”
“No problem,” Will
said. He sounded indecently cheerful.
“Are you secure where
you are?” Ralph asked.
“Our security
situation wouldn’t change if we moved,” Jenny told him, marvelling at her own
understatement.
“OK, I’ve got your
coordinates. Use your TIP carbines to scorch a clearing at least fifty metres
across. I’ll need it for a landing-zone.”
“Yes, sir.”
“I’m on my way.”
Jenny swapped her TIP
carbine for Dean’s gaussgun. By sitting with her back to a tree she could keep
it pointed at Gerald Skibbow. The two G66 troops began slashing at the jungle
with their TIP carbines.
The captain of the Ekwan
was a middle-aged woman in a blue ship-suit, with the kind of robust, lanky
figure that suggested she was from a space-adapted geneered family. The AV
projector showed her floating ten centimetres above the acceleration couch in
her compact cabin. “How did you know we were leaving orbit?” she asked. Her
voice was slightly distorted by a curious whistle that was coming through the
relay from the LDC’s geosynchronous communication platform.
Graeme Nicholson
smiled thinly at her puzzled tone. He diverted his eyes from the projection for
a second. On the other side of Durringham spaceport’s flight control centre
Langly Bradburn rolled his eyes and turned back to his monitor console.
“I have a contact in
the Kulu Embassy,” Graeme said, returning to the projection.
“This isn’t a
commercial flight,” the captain said, a fair amount of resentment bubbling into
her voice.
“I know.” Graeme had
heard of the Kulu Ambassador throwing his authority around and virtually
commandeering the Kulu-registered colonist-carrier. A situation which became
even more interesting when he discovered from Langly that it was Cathal
Fitzgerald who was in orbit making sure the captain did as she was told. Cathal
Fitzgerald was one of Ralph Hiltch’s people. And now, as Graeme looked through
the flight control centre’s window, he could see a queue of people standing on
the nearby hangar apron, shoulders angled against the rain as they embarked on
a passenger McBoeing BDA-9008. The entire embassy staff and dependants. “But it
is only one memory flek,” he said winningly. “And the Time Universe office will
pay a substantial bonus when you hand it in to them, I can assure you of that.”
“I haven’t been told
where we’re going yet.”
“We have offices in
every Confederation system. And it would be a personal favour,” Graeme
emphasized.
There was a pause as
the captain worked out that she would receive the entire carriage fee herself.
“Very well, Mr. Nicholson. Give it to the McBoeing pilot, I’ll meet him when he
docks.”
“Thank you, Captain,
pleasure doing business with you.”
“I thought you sent a
flek out with the Gemal this morning?” Langly observed as Graeme
switched off the metre-high projection pillar.
“I did, old boy. Just
covering my back.”
“Are people really
going to be interested in a riot on Lalonde? Nobody even knows this planet even
exists.”
“They will. Oh, indeed
they will.”
Rain slammed against
the little spaceplane’s fuselage as it dived out through the bottom of the
clouds. It made a fast rattling sound against the tough silicolithium-composite
skin. Individual drops burst into streaks of steam, vaporized by the friction
heat of the craft’s Mach five velocity.
Looking over the
pilot’s shoulder Ralph Hiltch saw the jungle blurring past below. It was
grey-green, sprinkled by flexuous strands of mist. Up ahead was a broad band of
brighter grey where the clouds ended, and getting broader.
“Ninety seconds,”
Kieron Syson, the pilot, shouted over the noise.
A loud metallic
whirring filled the small cabin as the wings began to swing forward. The
spaceplane pitched up at a sharp angle, and the noise of the rain impacts
increased until talking was impossible. Deceleration hit three gees, forcing
Ralph back into one of the cabin’s six plastic seats.
Sunlight burst into
the cabin with a fast rainbow flash. The sound of the rain vanished. They
levelled out as their speed dropped to subsonic.
“We’ll need a complete
structure fatigue check after this,” Kieron Syson complained. “Nobody flies
supersonic through rain, half the leading edges have abraded down to their
safety margins.”
“Don’t worry about
it,” Ralph told him. “It’ll be paid for.” He turned to check with Cathal
Fitzgerald. Both of them were wearing the same model of olive green one-piece
anti-projectile suits as Jenny and the two G66 troops. It had been a long time
since Ralph had dressed for combat, a cool tension was compressing his body
inside and out.
“Looks like your
people have been having themselves a wild time,” Kieron said.
Away in the southern
distance a vast column of dense soot-laden smoke was rising high into the pale
blue sky, a ring of flames dancing round its base. Ten kilometres to the east a
kilometre-wide ebony crater had been burned out of the trees.
The spaceplane banked
sharply, variable-camber wings twisting elastically to circle it round a third,
smaller, blackened clearing. This one was only a hundred metres across. Small
licks of flame fluttered from the fallen trees around the perimeter, and thin
blue smoke formed a mushroom dome of haze. There was a small green island of
withered vegetation in the exact centre.
“That’s them,” Kieron
said as the spaceplane’s guidance systems locked on to the signal from Jenny
Harris’s communication block.
Four people were
standing on the crush of vine leaves and grass. As Ralph watched, one of them
fired a gaussgun into the jungle.
“Down and grab them,”
he told Kieron. “And make it fast.”
Kieron whistled
through closed teeth. “Why me, Lord?” he muttered stoically.
Ralph heard the fan
nozzles rotate to the vertical, and the undercarriage clunked as it unfolded.
They were swinging round the black scorch zone in decreasing circles. He
ordered his communication block to open a local channel to Jenny Harris.
“We’re coming down in
fifty seconds,” he told her. “Get ready to run.”
The cabin airlock’s
outer hatch hinged open, showing him the fuselage shield sliding back. A blast
of hot, moist air hurtled in, along with the howl of the compressors.
“Faster, boss,” Jenny
shouted, her voice raw. “We’ve only got thirty gaussgun rounds left. Once we
stop this suppression fire they’ll hit the spaceplane with everything they’ve
got.”
A fine black powder
was churning through the cabin like a sable sandstorm.
Environment-contamination warnings sounded above the racket from the
compressors, amber lights winked frantically on the forward bulkhead.
“Land us now,” Ralph
ordered Kieron. “Cathal, give them some covering fire, scorch that jungle.”
The compressor noise
changed, becoming strident. Cathal Fitzgerald moved into the airlock, bracing
himself against the outer hatch rim. He began to swing his TIP carbine in long
arcs. A sheet of flame lashed the darkening sky around the edge of the
clearing.
“Ten seconds,” Kieron
said. “I’ll get as close to them as I can.”
Ash rose up in a
cyclonic blizzard as the compressor nozzle efflux splashed against the ground.
Visibility was reduced drastically. An orange glow from the flames fluoresced
dimly on one side of the spaceplane.
Jenny Harris watched
the craft touch and bounce, then settle. She could just make out the name Ekwan
on the narrow, angled tail. Ralph Hiltch and Cathal Fitzgerald were two
indistinct figures hanging on to the side of the open airlock. One of them was
waving madly; she guessed it was Ralph.
Will Danza fired the
last of his gaussgun rounds, and dropped the big weapon. “Empty,” he muttered
in disgust. His TIP carbine came up, and he started adding to the flames.
“Come on, move!”
Ralph’s datavise was tangled with discordant static.
“Get Skibbow in,”
Jenny ordered Dean and Will. “I’ll cover our backs.” She brought her TIP
carbine to bear on the soot-occluded jungle, putting her back to the
spaceplane.
Will and Dean grabbed
Gerald Skibbow and started to drag him towards the sleek little craft.
Jenny limped after
them, trailing by several metres. The last heavy duty power cell banged against
her side, its energy level down to seven per cent. She reduced the carbine’s
rate of fire, and fired off fifteen shots blindly. Grunting and shuffling
sounds were coming down her headset, relayed by the suit’s audio pick-ups. She
flicked to her rear optical sensors for a moment and saw Gerald Skibbow putting
up a struggle as four people tried to haul him through the spaceplane’s airlock
hatch. Ralph Hiltch slammed his carbine butt into Gerald’s face. Blood poured
out of the colonist’s broken nose, dazing him long enough for Will to shove his
legs through.
Jenny switched her
attention back to her forward view. Five figures were solidifying out of the
swirl of ash. They were stooped humanoids; like big apes, she thought. Blue
targeting graphics closed like a noose around one. She fired, sending it
flailing backwards.
A ball of white fire
raced out of the gloom, too fast to duck. It splashed over her TIP carbine,
intensifying. The weapon casing distorted, buckling as though it was made of
soft wax. She couldn’t free her fingers from the grip; it had melted round
them. Her throat voiced a desolate cry as the terrible fire bit hard into her
knuckles. The flaming remnants of the carbine fell to the ground. She held up
her hand; there were no fingers or thumb, only the smoking stump of her palm.
Her cry turned to a wail, and she tripped over a root protruding from the loam.
The woody strand coiled fluidly round her ankle like a malicious serpent. Four
dark figures loomed closer, a fifth lumbering up behind.
She twisted round on
the ground. The spaceplane was twelve metres away. Gerald Skibbow was lying on
the floor of the airlock with two suited figures on top of him pinning him
down. He looked straight at Jenny, a gleeful sneer on his blooded lips. The
root tightened its vicelike grip, cutting into her ankle. He was doing it, she
knew that then.
“Lift,” she datavised.
“Ralph, for God’s sake lift. Get him to Ombey.”
“Jenny!”
“Make it mean
something.”
One of the dark
figures landed on her. It was a man, strangely corpulent, bulky without being
fat; thick matted hair covered his entire body. Then she couldn’t see anything;
his belly was pressed against her shell-helmet.
That quiet chorus
spoke to her again. “There is no need for fear,” it said. “Let us help you.”
Another of the
man-things gripped her knees, his buttocks squashing her damaged legs into the
ground. The front of her anti-projectile suit was ripped open. It was difficult
to breathe now.
“Jenny! Oh Christ, I
can’t shoot, they’re on top of her.”
“Lift!” she begged.
“Just lift.”
All the neural
nanonics analgesic blocks seemed to have collapsed. The pain from her legs and
hand was debilitating, crushing her thoughts. More ripping sounds penetrated
her dimming universe. She felt hot, damp air gust across her bared crotch.
“We can stop it,” the
chorus told her. “We can save you. Let us in.” There was a pressure against her
thoughts, like a warm dry wind blowing through her skull.
“Go to hell,” she
moaned. She sent one final diamond-hard thought needling into her faltering
neural nanonics, a kamikaze code. The order was transferred into the
high-density power cell, shorting it out. She wondered if there would be enough
energy left for an explosion big enough to engulf all the man-things.
There was.
The Ekwan fell
around Lalonde’s equator, six hundred kilometres above the brown and ochre
streaks of the deserts which littered the continent of Sarell. With its five
windmill-sail thermo-dump panels extended from its central section, the
colonist-carrier was rotating slowly about its drive axis, completing one
revolution every twenty minutes. A passenger McBoeing BDA-9008 was docked to an
airlock tube on its forward hull.
It was a tranquil
scene, starship and spaceplane sliding silently over Sarell’s rocky shores and
out across the deepening blues of the ocean. Thousands of kilometres ahead, the
terminator cast a black veil over half of Amarisk. Every few minutes a puff of
smoky yellow vapour would flash out of a vernier nozzle between the starship’s
thermo-dump panels, gone in an eyeblink.
Such nonchalant
technological prowess created an effect which totally belied the spectacle
inside the airlock tube, where children cried and threw up and red-faced
parents cursed as they fended off the obnoxious sticky globules. Nobody had
been given time to prepare for the departure; all they had brought with them
was clothes and valuable items stuffed hastily into shoulder-bags. Children
hadn’t even been given anti-nausea drugs. The embassy staffers shouted back and
forth in angry tones, disguising both relief at leaving Lalonde and disgust at
the flying vomit. But the Ekwan’s crew were used to the behaviour of
planet dwellers; they floated around with hand-held suction sanitizers, and
cajoled the reluctant children towards one of the five big zero-tau
compartments.
Captain Farrah
Montgomery watched the picture projected from an AV pillar on the bridge
command console, indifferent to the suffering. She’d seen it all before, a
thousand times over. “Are you going to tell me where we are heading?” she asked
the man strapped into her executive officer’s acceleration couch. “I can start
plotting our course vector. Might save some time.”
“Ombey,” said Sir
Asquith Parish, Kulu’s Ambassador to Lalonde.
“You’re the boss,” she
said acidly.
“I don’t like this any
more than you.”
“We’ve got three
thousand colonists left in zero-tau. What are you going to tell them when we
get to the Principality?”
“I’ve no idea. Though
once they hear what’s actually happening down on the surface I doubt they’ll
complain.”
Captain Montgomery
thought about the flek in her breast pocket with a glimmer of guilt. The
reports they’d been receiving from Durringham over the past week were pretty
garbled, too. Maybe they were better off leaving. At least she could transfer
the responsibility to the ambassador when the line company started asking
questions.
“How soon before we
can leave orbit?” Sir Asquith asked.
“As soon as Kieron
gets back. You know, you had no right to send him on a flight like that.”
“We can wait for two
more orbits.”
“I’m not leaving
without my pilot.”
“If they’re not
airborne by then, you don’t have a pilot any more.”
She turned her head to
look at him. “Just what is going on down there?”
“I wish I knew,
Captain. But I can tell you I’m bloody glad we’re leaving.”
The McBoeing undocked
as the Ekwan moved into the penumbra. Its pilot fired the orbital
manoeuvring rockets, and it dropped away into an elliptical orbit which would
intercept Lalonde’s upper atmosphere. Ekwan started her preflight
checks, testing the ion thrusters, priming the fusion tubes. The crew scurried
through the life-support capsules, securing loose fittings and general rubbish.
“Got him,” the
navigation officer called out.
Captain Montgomery
datavised the flight computer, requesting the external sensor images.
A long contrail of
blue-white plasma stretched out across Amarisk’s darkened eastern side, its
star-head racing over the seaboard mountains. Already fifty kilometres high and
rising. Bright enough to send a backwash of lame phosphorescent light skating
over the snow-capped peaks.
Ekwan’s flight computer acknowledged a communication
channel opening.
Ralph Hiltch watched
the hyped-up Kieron Syson start to relax once he could datavise the starship
again. It should have been something for Ralph to be thankful about, too,
communications had been impossible in the aftermath of the landing. Instead he
treated it like a non-event, he expected nothing less than the communications
block to work. They were owed functional circuitry.
Environment-contamination
warning lights were still winking amber, though the pilot had shut off the
cabin’s audio alarm. The air was dry and calciferous, scratching the back of
Ralph’s throat. Gravity was falling off as they soared ever higher above the
ocean, curving up to rendezvous with the big colonist-carrier. The prolonged
bass roar of the reaction rockets was reducing.
The air they breathed
was bad enough, but the human atmosphere in the spaceplane’s confined cabin was
murderous. Gerald Skibbow sat at the rear of the cabin, shrunk down into his
plastic seat, a zipcuff restraining each wrist against the armrests, his hands
white knuckled as he gripped the cushioning. He had been subdued since the
airlock hatch closed. But then Will and Dean were looking hard for an excuse to
rip his head off. Jenny’s death had been fast (thank God) but very, very messy.
Ralph knew he should
be reviewing the memory of the ape-analogue creatures, gaining strategically
critical information on the threat they faced, but he just couldn’t bring
himself to do it. Let the ESA office on Ombey study the memory sequence, they
wouldn’t be so emotionally involved. Jenny had been a damn good officer, and a
friend.
The spaceplane’s
reaction drive cut off. Free fall left Ralph’s stomach rising up through his
chest. He accessed a nausea-suppression program and quickly activated it.
Huddled in his chair,
Gerald Skibbow began to tremble as the forked strands of his filthy,
blood-soaked beard waved about in front of his still-bleeding nose.
Ekwan’s hangar was a cylindrical chamber ribbed by
metal struts; the walls were composed of shadows and crinkled silver blankets.
The spaceplane, wings fully retracted, eased its squashed-bullet nose through the
open doors into the waiting clamp ring. Actuators slid catches into a circle of
load sockets behind the radar dome, and the craft was drawn inside.
Three of Ekwan’s
security personnel, experts at handling troublesome Ivets in free fall, swam
into the cabin, coughing at the ash dust which filled the air.
Will took the zipcuffs
off Gerald Skibbow. “Run, why don’t you,” he said silkily.
Gerald Skibbow gave
him a contemptuous glance, which turned to outright alarm as he rose into the
air. Hands clawed frantically for a grip on the cabin ceiling. He wound up
clutching a grab loop for dear life.
The grinning security
personnel closed in.
“Just tow him the
whole way,” Ralph told them. “And you, Skibbow, don’t cause any trouble. We’ll
be right behind, and we’re armed.”
“You can’t use TIP
carbines in the ship,” one of the security men protested.
“Oh, really? Try me.”
Gerald Skibbow
reluctantly let go of the grab loop, and let the men tug him along by his arms.
The eight-strong group drifted out into the tubular corridor connecting the
hangar to one of the life-support capsules.
Sir Asquith Parish was
waiting outside the zero-tau compartment, a stikpad holding his feet in place.
He gave Gerald Skibbow a distasteful look. “You lost Jenny Harris for him?”
“Yes, sir,” Will said
through clamped teeth.
Sir Asquith recoiled.
“Whatever sequestrated
him has several ancillary energy-manipulation functions,” Ralph explained. “He
is lethal; one on one, he’s better than any of us.”
The ambassador gave
Gerald Skibbow a fast reappraisal. Light strips circling the corridor outside
the zero-tau compartment hatch flickered and dimmed.
“Stop it,” Dean
growled. He jabbed his TIP carbine into the small of Skibbow’s back.
The light strips came
up to full strength again.
Gerald Skibbow laughed
jauntily at the shaken ambassador as the security men shoved him through the
hatch. Ralph Hiltch cocked an ironic eyebrow, then followed them in.
The zero-tau
compartment was a big sphere, sliced into sections by mesh decking that was
only three metres apart. It didn’t look finished; it was poorly lit, with bare
metal girders and kilometres of power cable stuck to every surface. The
sarcophagus pods formed long silent ranks, their upper surface a blank void.
Most of them were activated, holding the colonists who had gambled their future
on conquering Lalonde.
Gerald Skibbow was
manoeuvred to an open pod just inside the hatchway. He glanced around the
compartment, his head turning in fractured movements to take in the
compartment. The security men holding him felt his muscles tensing.
“Don’t even think of
it,” one said.
He was propelled
firmly towards the waiting pod.
“No,” he said.
“Get in,” Ralph told
him impatiently.
“No. Not that. Please.
I’ll be good, I’ll behave.”
“Get in.”
“No.”
One of the security men
anchored himself to the decking grid with a toe clip, and tugged him down.
“No!” He gripped both
sides of the open pod, his features stone-carved with determination. “I won’t!”
he shouted.
“In!”
“No.”
All three security men
were pushing and shoving at him. Gerald Skibbow strove against them. Will
tucked a leg round a nearby girder, and smacked the butt of his TIP carbine
against Gerald Skibbow’s left hand. There was a crunch as the bones broke.
He howled, but managed
to keep hold. His fingers turned purple, the skin undulating. “No!”
The carbine came down
again. Ralph put his hands flat against the decking above, and stood on Gerald
Skibbow’s back, knees straining, trying to thrust him down into the pod.
Gerald Skibbow’s
broken hand slipped a couple of centimetres, leaving a red smear. “Stop this,
stop this.” Rivulets of white light began to shiver across his torso.
Ralph felt as though
his own spine was going to snap, the force his boosted muscles were exerting
against his skeleton was tremendous. The soles of his feet were tingling
sharply, the worms of white light coiling round his ankles. “Dean, switch the
pod on the second he’s in.”
“Sir.”
The hand slipped
again. Gerald Skibbow started a high-pitched animal wailing. Will hammered away
at his left elbow. Firefly sparks streaked back up the carbine every time it
hit, as though he was striking flint.
“Get in, you bastard,”
one of the security men shouted, nearly purple from the effort, face shrivelled
like a rubber mask.
Gerald Skibbow gave
way, the arm Will had hammered on finally losing hold. He crashed down into the
bottom of the pod with an oof of air punched out through his open mouth. Ralph
cried out at the shock of the jolt that was transmitted back up his cramped
legs. The curving lid of the pod began to slide into place, and he bent his
knees frantically, lifting his legs out of the way.
“No!” Gerald Skibbow
shouted. He had begun to glow like a hologram profile, rainbow colours shining
bright in the compartment’s gloom. His voice was cut off by the lid sliding
into place, and it locked with a satisfying mechanical click. There was
a muffled thud of a fist striking the composite.
“Where’s the bloody
zero-tau?” Will said. “Where is it?”
The lid of the pod
hadn’t changed, there was no sign of the slippery black field effect. Gerald
Skibbow was pounding away on the inside with the fervour of a man buried alive.
“It’s on,” Dean
shouted hoarsely from the operator’s control panel. “Christ, it’s on, it’s
drawing power.”
Ralph stared at the
sarcophagus in desperation. Work, he pleaded silently, come on fuck you, work!
Jenny died for this.
“Switch on, you shit!”
Will screamed at it.
Gerald Skibbow stopped
punching the side of the pod. A black emptiness irised over the lid.
Will let out a sob of
exhausted breath.
Ralph realized he was
clinging weakly to one of the girders, the real fear had been that Gerald
Skibbow would break out. “Tell the captain we’re ready,” he said in a drained
voice. “I want to get him to Ombey as quickly as we can.”
Chapter 02
The event horizon around
Villeneuve’s Revenge dissolved the instant the starship expanded out to
its full forty-eight-metre size. Solar wind and emaciated light from New
California’s distant sun fell on the dark silicon hull which its disappearance
exposed. Short-range combat sensors slid out of their jump recesses with smooth
animosity, metallic black tumours inset with circular gold-mirror lenses. They
scoured a volume of space five hundred kilometres across, hungry for a specific
shape.
Data streams from the
sensors sparkled through Erick Thakrar’s mind, a rigid symbolic language
written in monochromic light. Cursors chased through the vast constantly
reconfiguring displays, closing in on an explicit set of values like circling
photonic-sculpture vultures. Radiation, mass, and laser returns slotted neatly
into their parameter definition.
The Krystal Moon materialized
out of the fluttering binary fractals, hanging in space two hundred and sixty
kilometres away. An inter-planetary cargo ship, eighty metres long; a
cylindrical life-support capsule at one end, silver-foil-cloaked tanks and
dull-red fusion-drive tube clustered at the other. Thermo-dump panels formed a
ruff collar on the outside of the environmental-engineering deck just below the
life-support capsule; communication dishes jutted out of a grid tower on the
front of it. The ship’s midsection was a hexagonal gantry supporting five rings
of standard cargo-pods, some of them plugged into the environmental deck via
thick cables and hoses.
A slender
twenty-five-metre flame of hazy blue plasma burnt steadily from the fusion
tube, accelerating the Krystal Moon at an unvarying sixtieth of a gee.
It had departed Tehama asteroid five days ago with its cargo of industrial
machinery and micro-fusion generators, bound for the Ukiah asteroid settlement
in the outer asteroid belt Dana, which orbited beyond the gas giant Sacramento.
Of the star’s three asteroid belts, Dana was the least populated; traffic this
far out was thin. Krystal Moon’s sole link to civilization (and navy
protection) was its microwave communication beam, focused on Ukiah, three
hundred and twenty million kilometres ahead.
Erick’s neural
nanonics reported that pattern lock was complete. He commanded the X-ray lasers
to fire.
Two hundred and fifty
kilometres away, the Krystal Moon’s microwave dishes burst apart into a
swirl of aluminium snowflakes. A long brown scar appeared on the forward hull
of the life-support capsule.
God, I hope no one was
in the cabin below.
Erick tried to push
that thought right back to the bottom of his mind. Straying out of character,
even for a second, could quite easily cost him his life. They’d drilled that
into him enough times back at the academy. There was even a behavioural
consistency program loaded into his neural nanonics to catch any wildly
inaccurate reactions. But flinches and sudden gasps could be equally damning.
The Villeneuve’s
Revenge triggered its fusion drive, and accelerated in towards the stricken
cargo ship at five and a half gees. Erick sent another two shots from the X-ray
cannon squirting into the Krystal Moon’s fusion tube. Its drive flame
died. Coolant fluid vented out of a tear in the casing, hidden somewhere in the
deep shadows on the side away from the sun, the fountain fluorescing grey-blue
as it jetted out from behind the ship.
“Nice going, Erick,”
André Duchamp commented. He had the secondary fire-control program loaded in
his own neural nanonics. If the newest crew-member hadn’t fired he could have
taken over within milliseconds. Despite Erick’s performance in the Catalina
Bar, André had a single nagging doubt. After all, O’Flaherty was one of their
own—after a fashion—and eliminating him didn’t require many qualms no matter
who you were; but firing on an unarmed civil ship . . . You have
earned your place on board, André said silently. He cancelled his fire-control
program.
Villeneuve’s
Revenge was a hundred and
twenty kilometres from the Krystal Moon when André turned the starship
and started decelerating. The hangar doors began to slide open. He started to
whistle against the push of the heavy gee force.
He had a right to be
pleased. Even though it had only been a tiny interplanetary jump, two hundred
and sixty kilometres was an excellent separation distance. Since leaving
Tehama, Villeneuve’s Revenge had been in orbit around Sacramento. They
had extended every sensor, focusing along the trajectory Lance Coulson had sold
them until they had found the faint splash of the Krystal Moon’s
exhaust. With its exact position and acceleration available in real time, it was
just a question of manufacturing themselves a jump co-ordinate.
Two hundred and sixty
kilometres, there were voidhawks that would be pushed to match that kind of
accuracy.
Thermo-dump panels
stayed inside the monobonded silicon hull as the Villeneuve’s Revenge rendezvoused
with Krystal Moon. The jump nodes were fully charged. André was
cautious, they might need to leave in a hurry. It had happened before;
stealthed voidhawks lying in wait, Confederation Navy Marines hiding in the
cargo-pods. Not to him, though.
“Bev, give our target
an active sensor sweep, please,” André ordered.
“Yes, Captain,” Bev
Lennon said. The combat sensors sent out fingers of questing radiation to probe
the Krystal Moon.
The brilliant lance of
fusion fire at the rear of the Villeneuve’s Revenge sank away to a
minute bubble of radiant helium clinging to the tube’s nozzle. Krystal Moon was
six kilometres away, wobbling slightly from the impulse imparted by the venting
coolant fluid. Thrusters flared around the rear bays, trying to compensate and
stabilize.
Ion thrusters on the Villeneuve’s
Revenge fired, nudging the bulky starship in towards its floundering prey.
Brendon piloted the multifunction service vehicle up out of the hangar and set
off towards the Krystal Moon. One of the cargo-bay doors slowly hinged
upwards behind him.
“Come on, Brendon,”
André murmured impatiently as the small auxiliary craft rode its bright yellow
chemical rocket exhaust across the gap. Ukiah traffic control would know the
communication link had been severed in another twelve minutes; it would take
the bureaucrats a few minutes to react, then sensors would review the Krystal
Moon’s track. They’d see the spaceship’s fusion drive was off, coupled with
the lack of an emergency distress beacon. That could only mean one thing. The
navy would be alerted, and if the Villeneuve’s Revenge was really
unlucky a patrolling voidhawk would investigate. André was allowing twenty
minutes maximum for the raid.
“It checks out clean,”
Bev Lennon reported. “But the crew must have survived that first X-ray laser
strike, I’m picking up electronic emissions from inside the life-support
capsule. The flight computers are still active.”
“And they’ve
suppressed the distress beacon,” André said. “That’s smart, they must know we’d
slice that can in half to silence any shout for help. Maybe they’ll be in a
cooperative mood.” He datavised the flight computer to open an inter-ship
channel.
Erick heard the hiss
of static fill the dimly lit bridge as the AV pillar was activated. A series of
musical bleeps came with it, then the distinct sound of a child crying. He saw
Madeleine Collum’s head come up from her acceleration couch, turning in the
direction of the communication console. Blue and red shadows flowed over her
gaunt, shaven skull.
“Krystal Moon,
acknowledge contact,” André said.
“Acknowledge?” a
ragged outraged male voice shouted out of the AV pillar. “You shithead animal,
two of my crew are dead. Fried! Tina was fifteen years old!”
Erick’s neural
nanonics staunched the sudden damp fire in his eyes. A fifteen-year-old girl.
Great God Almighty! These interplanetary ships were often family operated
affairs, cousins and siblings combining into crews.
“Release the latches
on pods DK-30-91 and DL-30-07,” André said as though he hadn’t heard. “That’s
all we’re here for.”
“Screw you.”
“We’ll cut them free
anyway, Anglo, and if we cut then the capsule will be included. I’ll
open your hull up to space like the foil on a freeze-dried food packet.”
A visual check through
the combat sensors showed Erick the MSV was two hundred metres away from the Krystal
Moon. Desmond Lafoe had already fitted laser cutters to the craft’s robot
arms; the spindly white waldos were running through a preprogrammed
articulation test. Villeneuve’s Revenge was lumbering along after the
smaller, more agile, auxiliary craft; three kilometres away now.
“We’ll think about
it,” said the voice.
“Daddy!” the girl in
the background wailed. “Daddy, make them go away.”
A woman shushed her,
sounding fearful.
“Don’t think about
it,” André said. “Just do it.”
The channel went
silent.
“Bastards,” André
muttered. “Erick, put another blast through that capsule.”
“If we kill them, they
can’t release the pods.”
André scowled darkly.
“Scare them, don’t kill them.”
Erick activated one of
the starship’s lasers; it was designed for close-range interception, the last
layer of defence against incoming combat wasps. Powerful and highly accurate.
He reduced the power level to five per cent, and lined it up on the front of
the life-support capsule. The infrared beam sliced a forty-centimetre circle
out of the foam-covered hull. Steamy gas erupted out of the breach.
André grunted at what
he considered to be Erick’s display of timidity, and opened the inter-ship
channel again. “Release the pods.”
There was no answer.
Erick couldn’t hear the girl any more.
Brendon guided the MSV
around the rings of barrel-like cargo-pods circling the Krystal Moon’s
mid-section. He found the first pod containing microfusion generators, and
focused the MSV’s external cameras on it. The latch clamps of the cradle it was
lying in were closed solidly round the load pins. Sighing regretfully at the
time and effort it would cost to cut the pod free, he engaged the MSV’s
attitude lock, keeping station above the pod, then datavised the waldo-control
computer to extend the arm. Droplets of molten metal squirted out where the
cutting laser sliced through the clamps, a micrometeorite swarm glowing as if
they were grazing an atmosphere.
“Something’s
happening,” Bev Lennon reported. The electronic sensors were showing him power
circuits coming alive inside the Krystal Moon’s life-support capsule.
Atmosphere was still spewing out of the lasered hole, unchecked. “Hey—”
A circular section of
the hull blew out. Erick’s mind automatically directed the X-ray lasers towards
the hole revealed by the crumpled sheet of metal as it twirled off towards the
stars. A small craft rose out of the hole, ascending on a pillar of flame.
Recognition was immediate: lifeboat.
It was a cone, four
metres across at the base, five metres high; with a doughnut of equipment and
tanks wrapped round the nose. Tarnished-silver protective foam reflected
distorted star-specks. The lifeboat could sustain six people for a month in
space, or jettison the equipment doughnut and land on a terracompatible planet.
Cheaper than supplying the crew with zero-tau pods, and given that the mother
ship would only be operating in an inhabited star system, just as safe.
“Merde, now
we’ll have to laser every latch clamp,” André complained. He could see that
Brendon had cut loose half of the first pod. By his own timetable, they had
nine minutes left. It was going to be a close-run thing. “Knock that bloody
lifeboat out, Erick.”
“No,” Erick said
calmly. The lifeboat had stopped accelerating. Its spent solid rocket booster
was jettisoned.
“I gave you an order.”
“Piracy is one thing;
I’m not being a party to slaughter. There are children on that lifeboat.”
“He’s right, André,”
Madeleine Collum said.
“Merde! All
right, but once Brendon has those pods cut free I want the Krystal Moon vaporized.
That bloody captain has put our necks on the block by defying us, I want him
ruined.”
“Yes, Captain,” Erick
said. How typical, he thought, we can go in with lasers blazing, but if anyone
fights back, that’s unfair. When we get back to Tranquillity, I’m going
to take a great deal of unprofessional pride in having André Duchamp committed
to a penal planet.
They made it with
forty-five seconds to spare. Brendon cut both cargo-pods free, and manoeuvred
them into the waiting cargo hold in the Villeneuve’s Revenge. X-ray
lasers started to chop at the Krystal Moon as the MSV docked with its
own cradle to be drawn gingerly into the hangar bay. The remaining cargo-pods
were split open, spilling their wrecked contents out into the void. Structural
spars melted, twisting as though they were being chewed. Tanks were punctured,
creating a huge vapour cloud that chased outward, its fringes swirling round
the retreating lifeboat.
The starship’s hangar
door slid shut. Combat sensors retreated back into the funereal hull. An event
horizon sprang up around the Villeneuve’s Revenge. The starship shrank.
Vanished.
Floating alone amid
the fragmented debris and vacuum-chilled nebula, the lifeboat let out a
passionless electromagnetic shriek for help.
The word was out even
before the Lady Macbeth docked at Tranquillity’s spaceport. Joshua’s
landed the big one. On his first Norfolk run, for Heaven’s sake. How does he do
it? Something about that guy is uncanny. Lucky little sod.
Joshua led his crew
into a packed Harkey’s Bar. The band played a martial welcome with plangent
trumpets; four of the waitresses were standing on the beer-slopped bar, short
black skirts letting everyone see their knickers (or not, in one case); crews
and groups of spaceport workers whistled, cheered, and jeered. One long table
was loaded down with bottles of wine and champagne in troughs of ice; Harkey
himself stood at the end, a smile in place. Everyone quietened down.
Joshua looked round
slowly, an immensely smug grin in place. This must be what Alastair II saw from
his state coach every day. It was fabulous. “Do you want a speech?”
“NO!”
His arm swept out
expansively towards Harkey. He bowed low, relishing the theatre. “Then open the
bottles.”
There was a rush for
the table, conversation even loud enough to drown out Warlow erupted as though
someone had switched on a stack of AV pillars, the band struck up, and the
waitresses struggled with the corks. Joshua pushed a bemused and slightly
awestruck Gideon Kavanagh off on Ashly Hanson, and snatched some glasses from
the drinks table. He was kissed a great many times on his way to the corner
booth where Barrington Grier and Roland Frampton were waiting. He loaded visual
images and names of three of the girls into his neural nanonics for future
reference.
Roland Frampton was
rising to his feet, a slightly apprehensive smile flicking on and off,
obviously worried by exactly how big the cargo was—he had contracted to buy all
of it. But he shook Joshua warmly by the hand. “I thought I’d better come
here,” he said in amusement. “It would take you days to reach my office. You’re
the talk of Tranquillity.”
“Really?”
Barrington Grier gave
him a pat on the shoulder and they all sat down.
“That Kelly girl was
asking after you,” Barrington said.
“Ah.” Joshua shifted
round. Kelly Tirrel, his neural nanonics file supplied, Collins news corp
reporter. “Oh, right. How is she?”
“Looked pretty good to
me. She’s on the broadcasts a lot these days. Presents the morning news for
Collins three times a week.”
“Good. Good. Glad to
hear it.” Joshua took a small bottle of Norfolk Tears from the inside pocket of
the gold-yellow jacket he was wearing over his ship-suit.
Roland Frampton stared
at it as he would a cobra.
“This is the Cricklade
bouquet,” Joshua said smoothly. He settled the three glasses on their table,
and twisted the bottle’s cork slowly. “I’ve tasted it. One of the finest on the
planet. They bottle it in Stoke county.” The clear liquid flowed out of the
pear-shaped bottle.
They all lifted a
glass, Roland Frampton studying his against the yellow wall lights.
“Cheers,” Joshua said,
and took a drink. A dragon breathed its diabolical fire into his belly.
Roland Frampton sipped
delicately. “Oh, Christ, it’s perfect.” He glanced at Joshua. “How much did you
bring? There have been rumours . . .”
Joshua made a show of
producing his inventory. It was a piece of neatly printed paper with Grant
Kavanagh’s stylish signature on the bottom in black ink.
“Three thousand
cases!” Roland Frampton squeaked, his eyes protruded.
Barrington Grier gave
Joshua a sharp glance, and plucked the inventory from Roland’s hands. “Bloody
hell,” he murmured.
Roland was dabbing at
his forehead with a silk handkerchief. “This is wonderful. Yes, wonderful. But
I wasn’t expecting quite so much, Joshua. Nothing personal, it’s just that
first-time captains don’t normally bring back so much. There are arrangements I
have to make . . . the bank. It will take time.”
“Of course.”
“You’ll wait?” Roland
Frampton asked eagerly.
“You were very good to
me when I started out. So I think I can wait a couple of days.”
Roland’s hand sliced
through the air, he ended up making a fist just above the table. Determination
visibly returned his old spark. “Right, I’ll have a Jovian Bank draft for you
in thirty hours. I won’t forget this, Joshua. And one day I want to be told how
you did it.”
“Maybe.”
Roland drained his
glass in one gulp and stood up.
“Thirty hours.”
“Fine. If I’m not
about, give it to one of the crew. I expect they’ll still be here.”
Joshua watched the old
man weave a path through the excited crowd.
“That was decent of
you,” Barrington said. “You could have made instant money going to a big
commercial distribution chain.”
Joshua flashed him a
smile, and they touched glasses. “Like I said, he gave me a break when I needed
it.”
“Roland Frampton
doesn’t need a break. He thought he was doing you a favour agreeing to buy your
cargo. First-time captains on the Norfolk run are lucky if they make two
hundred cases.”
“Yeah, so I heard.”
“Now you come back
with a cargo worth five times as much as his business. You going to tell us how
you did it?”
“Nope.”
“Didn’t think so. I
don’t know what you’ve got, young Joshua. But by God, I wish I had shares in
you.”
He finished his glass
and treated Barrington to an iniquitous smile. He handed over the small bottle
of Norfolk Tears. “Here, with compliments.”
“Aren’t you staying?
It’s your party.”
He looked round.
Warlow was at the centre of a cluster of girls, all of them giggling as one sat
on the crook of his outstretched arm, her legs swinging well off the floor.
Ashly was slumped in a booth, also surrounded by girls, one of them feeding him
dainty pieces of white seafood from a plate. He couldn’t even spot the others.
“No,” he said. “I have a date.”
“She must be quite
something.”
“They are.”
The Isakore was
still anchored where they had left it, prow wedged up on the slippery bank,
hull secure against casual observation by a huge cherry oak tree which overhung
the river, lower branches trailing in the water.
Lieutenant Murphy
Hewlett let out what could well have been a whimper of relief when its shape
registered. His retinal implants were switched to infrared now the sun had set.
The fishing boat was a salmon-pink outline distorted by the darker burgundy
flecks of the cherry oak leaves, as if it was hidden behind a solidified
waterfall.
He hadn’t really
expected it to be there. Not a quantifiable end, not to this mission. His mates
treated his name as a joke back in the barracks. Murphy’s law: if anything can
go wrong, it will. And it had, this time as no other.
They had been under
attack for five hours solid now. White fireballs that came stabbing out of the
trees without warning. Figures that lurked half seen in the jungle, keeping
pace, never giving them a moment’s rest. Figures that weren’t always human.
Seven times they’d fallen back to using the TIP carbines for a sweep-scorch
pattern, hacking at the jungle with blades of invisible energy, then tramping
on through the smouldering vine roots and cloying ash.
All four of them were
wounded to some extent. Nothing seemed to extinguish the white fire once it hit
flesh. Murphy was limping badly, his right knee enclosed by a medical nanonic
package, his left hand was completely useless, he wasn’t even sure if the
package could save his fingers. But Murphy was most worried about Niels Regehr;
the lad had taken a fireball straight in the face. He had no eyes nor nose
left, only the armour suit sensors enabled him to see where he was going now,
datavising their images directly into his neural nanonics. But even the neural
nanonics pain blocks and a constant infusion of endocrines couldn’t prevent him
from suffering bouts of hallucination and disorientation. He kept shouting for them
to go away and leave him alone, holding one-sided conversations, even
quoting from prayers.
Murphy had detailed
him to escort their prisoner; he could just about manage that. She said her
name was Jacqueline Couteur, a middle-aged woman, small, overweight, with
greying hair, dressed in jeans and a thick cotton shirt. She could punch harder
than any of the supplement-boosted marines (Louis Beith had a broken arm to
prove it), she had more stamina than them, and she could work that electronic
warfare trick on their suit blocks if she wasn’t being prodded with one of
their heavy-calibre Bradfield chemical-projectile rifles.
They had captured her
ten minutes after their last contact with Jenny Harris. That was when they’d
let the horses go. The animals were panicking as balls of white fire arched
down out of the sky, a deceitfully majestic display of borealis rockets.
Something made a
slithering sound in the red and black jungle off to Murphy’s right. Garrett
Tucci fired his Bradfield, slamming explosive bullets into the vegetation.
Murphy caught the swiftest glimpse of a luminous red figure scurrying away; it
was either a man with a warm cloak spread wide, or else a giant bat standing on
its hind legs.
“Bloody implants are
shot,” he muttered under his breath. He checked his TIP carbine’s power
reserve. He was down to the last heavy-duty power cell: twelve per cent.
“Niels, Garrett, take the prisoner onto the boat and get the motor going.
Louis, you and I are laying down a sweep-scorch. It might give us the time we
need.”
“Yes, sir,” he
answered.
Murphy felt an immense
pride in the tiny squad. Nobody could have done better, they were the best, the
very best. And they were his.
He drew a breath, and
brought the TIP carbine up again. Niels was shoving his Bradfield’s muzzle into
the small of Jacqueline Couteur’s back, urging her towards the boat. Murphy
suddenly realized she could see as well as them in the dark. It didn’t matter
now. One of the day’s smaller mysteries.
His TIP carbine fired,
nozzle aimed by his neural nanonics. Flames rose before him, leaping from tree
to tree, incinerating the twigs, biting deeply into the larger branches. Vines
flared and sparkled like fused electrical cables, swinging in short arcs before
falling to the ground and writhing ferociously as they spat and hissed. A solid
breaker of heat rolled around him, shunted into the ground by his suit’s
dispersal layer. Smoke rose from his feet. The medical nanonic package around
his knee datavised a heat-overload warning into his neural nanonics.
“Come on, Lieutenant!”
Garrett shouted.
Through the heavy
crackling of the flames Murphy could hear the familiar chugging sound of the Isakore’s
motor. The suit’s rear optical sensors showed him the boat backing out from
under the cherry oak, water boiling ferociously around its stern.
“Go,” Murphy told
Louis Beith.
They turned and raced
for the Isakore. Murphy could just targeting graphics circling his back.
We’ll never make it,
not out of this.
Flames were rising
thirty metres into the night behind them. Isakore was completely free of
the cherry oak. Niels was leaning over the gunwale, holding out a hand. The
green-tinted medical nanonic package leaching to his face looked like some
massive and grotesque wart.
Water splashed around
his boots. Once he nearly slipped on the mud and tangled snowlily fronds. But
then he was clinging to the side of the wooden boat, hauling himself up onto
the deck.
“Holy shit, we made
it!” He was laughing uncontrollably, tears streaming out of his eyes. “We
actually bloody made it.” He pulled his shell-helmet off, and lay on his back,
looking at the fire. A stretch of jungle four hundred metres long was in
flames, hurling orange sparks into the black sky far above.
The impenetrable water
of the Zamjan shimmered with long orange reflections. Garrett was turning the
boat, aiming the prow downriver.
“What about the Kulu
team?” Louis asked. He’d taken his shell-helmet off, showing a face glinting
with sweat. His breathing was heavy.
“I think that was a
sonic boom we heard this afternoon,” Murphy said, raising his voice above the
flames. “Those Kulu bastards, always one move ahead of everyone else.”
“They’re soft, that’s
all,” Garrett shouted from the wheel-house. “Can’t take the pressure. We can.
We’re the fucking Confed fucking Navy fucking Marines.” He whooped.
Murphy grinned back at
him; fatigue pulled at every limb. He’d been using his boosted muscles almost
constantly, which meant he’d have to make sure he ate plenty of high-protein
rations to regain his proper blood energy levels. He loaded a memo into his
neural nanonics.
His communication
block let out a bleep for the first time in five hours; the datavise told him
that there was a channel to the navy ELINT satellite open.
“Bloody hell,” Murphy
said. He datavised the block: “Sir, is that you, sir?”
“Christ, Murphy,”
Kelven Solanki’s datavise gushed into his mind. “What’s happening?”
“Spot of trouble, sir.
Nothing we can’t handle. We’re back on the boat now, heading downriver.”
Louis gave an
exhausted laugh, and flopped onto his back.
“The Kulu team
evacuated,” Kelven Solanki reported. “Their whole embassy contingent upped and
left in the Ekwan this evening. Ralph Hiltch called me from orbit to say
there wasn’t enough room on the spaceplane to pick you up.”
Murphy could sense a
great deal of anger lying behind the lieutenant-commander’s smooth signal.
“Doesn’t matter, sir; we got you a prisoner.”
“Fantastic. One of the
sequestrated ones?”
Murphy glanced over
his shoulder. Jacqueline Couteur was sitting on the deck with her back to the
wheel-house. She gave him a dour stare.
“I think so, sir, she
can interfere with our electronics if we give her half a chance. She’s got to
be watched constantly.”
“OK, when can you have
her back in—” Kelven Solanki’s datavise vanished under a peal of static. The
communications block reported the channel was lost.
Murphy picked up his
TIP carbine and pointed it at Jacqueline Couteur. “Is that you?”
She shrugged. “No.”
Murphy looked back at
the fire on the bank. They were half a kilometre away now. People were walking
along the shoreline where the Isakore had been anchored. The big cherry
oak was still standing, intact, a black silhouette against the blanket of
flame.
“Can they affect our
electronics from here?”
“We don’t care about
your electronics,” she said. “Such things have no place in our world.”
“Are you talking to
them?”
“No.”
“Sir!” Garrett yelled.
Murphy swung round.
The people on the shore were standing in a ring, holding hands. A large ball of
white fire emerged from the ground in their midst and curved over their heads,
soaring out across the river.
“Down!” Murphy
shouted.
The fireball flashed
overhead, making the air roil from its passage, bringing a false daylight to
the boat. Murphy ground his teeth together, anticipating the strike, the pain
as it vaporized his legs or spine. There was a clamorous BOOM from
behind the wheel-house, the boat rocked violently, and the light went out.
“Oh shit, oh shit.”
Garrett was crying.
“What is it?” Murphy
demanded. He pulled himself onto his feet.
The boxy wooden
structure behind the wheel-house was a smoking ruin. Fractured planks with
charred edges pointed vacantly at the sky. The micro-fusion generator it had
covered was a shambolic mass of heat-tarnished metal and dripping plastic.
“You will come to us
in time,” Jacqueline Couteur said calmly. She hadn’t moved from her sitting
position. “We have no hurry.”
The Isakore drifted
round a bend in the river, water gurgling idly around the hull, pulling the
fire from view. A duet of night and silence closed over the boat, a void surer
than vacuum.
Ione wore a gown of
rich blue-green silk gauze. A single strip of cloth which clung to her torso
then flared and flowed into a long skirt, it forked around her neck, producing
two ribbonlike tassels that trailed from each shoulder. Her hair had been given
a damp look, it was bound up and held in place at the back by an exquisite red
flower brooch, its tissue-thin petals carved from some exotic stone. A long
platinum chain formed a cobweb around her neck.
The trouble with
looking so elegant, Joshua thought, was that part of him just wanted to stare
at her, while the other part wanted to rip the dress to shreds so he could get
at the body beneath. She really did look gorgeous.
He ran a finger round
the collar on his own black dinner-jacket. It was too tight. And the butterfly
tie wasn’t straight.
“Leave it alone,” Ione
said sternly.
“But—”
“Leave it. It’s fine.”
He dropped his hand and
glowered at the lift’s door. Two Tranquillity serjeants were in with them,
making it seem crowded. The door opened on the twenty-fifth floor of the StOuen
starscraper, revealing a much smaller lobby than usual. Parris Vasilkovsky’s
apartment took up half of the floor, his offices and staff quarters took up the
other half.
“Thanks for coming
with me,” Joshua said as they stood in front of the apartment door. He could
feel the nerves building in the base of his stomach. This was the real big time
he was bidding for now. And Ione on his arm ought to impress Parris
Vasilkovsky. Precious little else would.
“I want to be with
you,” Ione murmured.
He leant forward to
kiss her.
The muscle membrane
opened, and Dominique was standing behind it. She had chosen a sleeveless black
gown with a long skirt and a deep, highly revealing V-neck. Her thick
honey-blonde hair had been given a slight wave, curling around her shoulders.
Broad scarlet lips lifted in appreciation as she caught the embrace.
Joshua straightened up
guiltily, though his errant eyes remained fixed on Dominique’s cleavage. A host
of memories started to replay through his mind without any assistance from his
neural nanonics. He’d forgotten how impressive she was.
“Don’t mind me,”
Dominique said huskily. “I adore young love.”
Ione giggled.
“Evening, Dominique.”
The two girls kissed
briefly. Then it was Joshua’s turn.
“Put him down,” Ione
said in amusement. “You might catch something. Heaven only knows what he got up
to on Norfolk.”
Dominique grinned as
she let go. “You think he’s been bad?”
“He’s Joshua; I know
he’s been bad.”
“Hey!” Joshua
complained. “That trip was strictly business.”
Both girls laughed.
Dominique led the way into the apartment. Joshua saw her skirt was made up from
long panels, split right up to the top of her hips. The fabric swayed apart as
she walked, giving Joshua brief glimpses of her legs, and a pair of very tight
white shorts.
He held back on a
groan. It was going to be hard to concentrate tonight without that kind of
distraction.
The dining-room had
two oval windows to show Mirchusko’s dusky crescent—south of the equator two
huge white cyclone swirls were crashing, in a drama which had been running for
six days. Slabs of warmly lit coloured glass paved the polyp walls from floor
to ceiling, each with an animal engraved on its surface by fine smoky grooves.
Most of them were terrestrial—lions, gazelles, elephants, hawks—though several
of the more spectacular non-sentient xenoc species were included. The grooves
moved at an infinitesimal speed, causing the birds to flap their wings, the
animals to run; their cycles lasted for hours. The table was made from halkett
wood (native to Kulu), a rich gold in colour, with bright scarlet grain. Three
antique silver candelabras were spaced along the polished wood, with slender
white candles tipped by tiny flames.
There were six people
at the dinner. Parris himself sat at the head of the table, looking spruce in a
black dinner-jacket. The formal evening attire suited him, complementing his
curly silver-grey hair to give him a distinguished appearance. At the other end
of the table was Symone, his current lover, a beautiful twenty-eight-year-old
whose geneered chromosomes had produced a dark walnut skin and hair a shade
lighter than Dominique’s, a striking and delightful contrast. She was eight
months pregnant with Parris’s third child.
Joshua and Dominique
sat together on one side of the table. And Dominique’s long legs had been
riding up and down his trousers all through the meal. He had done his best to
ignore it, but his twitching mouth had given him away to Ione, and, he
suspected, Symone as well.
Opposite them were
Ione and Clement, Parris’s son. He was eighteen, lacking his big sister’s
miscreant force, but quietly cheerful. And handsome, Ione thought, though not
in the mould of Joshua’s wolfish ruggedness; his younger face was softer,
framed with fair curly hair that was recognizably Parris’s. He had just
returned from his first year at university on Kulu.
“I haven’t been to
Kulu yet,” Joshua said as the white-jacketed waiter cleared the dessert dishes
away, assisted by a couple of housechimps.
“Wouldn’t they let you
in?” Dominique asked with honeyed malice.
“The Kulu merchants
form a tight cartel, they’re hard to crack.”
“Tell me about it,”
Parris said gruffly. “It took me eight years before I broke in with fabrics
from Oshanko, until then my ships were going there empty to pick up their
nanonics. That costs.”
“I’ll wait until I get
a charter,” Joshua said. “I’m not going to try head-butting that kind of
organization. But I’d like to play tourist sometime.”
“You did all right
penetrating Norfolk,” Dominique said, eyes wide and apparently innocent over
her crystal champagne glass.
“Hey, neat intro,” he
said enthusiastically. “We just slid into that subject, didn’t we? I never
noticed.”
She stuck her tongue
out at him.
“You got off lightly,
Joshua,” Parris said. “Me, I get lumbered with her subtlety all day every day.”
“I would have thought
she was old enough to have left home by now,” he said.
“Who’d have her?”
“Good point.”
Dominique lobbed a
small cluster of grapes at her father.
Parris caught them
awkwardly, laughing. One went bouncing off across the moss carpet. “Make me an
offer for her, Joshua, anything up to ten fuseodollars considered.”
He saw the warning
gleam in Dominique’s eye. “I think I’ll decline, thanks.”
“Coward.” Dominique
pouted.
Parris dropped the
grapes onto a side plate, and wiped his hand with a napkin. “So how did you do
it, Joshua? My captains don’t get three thousand cases, and the Vasilkovsky
line has been making the Norfolk run for fifty years.”
Joshua activated a
neural nanonics memory cell. “Confidentiality coverage. Agreed?” His gaze went
round the table, recording everyone saying yes. They were legally bound not to
repeat what they heard now. Although quite what he could do about Ione was an
interesting point, since her thought processes were Tranquillity’s legal
system. “I traded something they needed: wood.” He explained about the mayope.
“Very clever,”
Dominique drawled when he finished, though there was a note of respect in
amongst the affected languor. “Brains as well as balls.”
“I like it,” Parris
said. He studied his cut-crystal glass. “Why tell us?”
“Supply and demand,”
Joshua said. “I’ve found a valuable hole in the market, and I want to fill it.”
“But the Lady
Macbeth hasn’t got the capacity to do it by herself,” Clement said.
“Right?”
Joshua had wondered
how smart the lad was. Now he knew. A real chip off the Vasilkovsky block.
“That’s right. I need a partner, a big partner.”
“Why not go to a
bank?” Dominique asked. “Charter some ships for yourself.”
“There’s a loose end
which needs tying up.”
“Ah,” Parris, showing
some real interest at last, leant forward in his seat. “Go on.”
“The power mayope has
over Norfolk lies in keeping it a monopoly, that way we can keep the price
high. I have a provisional arrangement with a distributor on Norfolk who’s
agreed to take as much as we can ship in. What we need to do next is pin down
the supply to a single source, one that only we can obtain. That is going to
take upfront money, the kind which can’t be explained away to bank auditors.”
“You can do that?”
“Parris, I have never
been on a planet more corrupt than Lalonde. It’s also very primitive and
correspondingly poor. If you, with all your money, went there, you would be its
king.”
“No, thank you,”
Parris said sagely.
“Fine, but with money
pushed into the right credit disks we can guarantee that no one else gets an
export licence. OK, it won’t last for ever, administration people move on,
traders will offer counter-bribes when they find what we’re doing; but I figure
we ought to get two of Norfolk’s conjunctions out of it. Two conjunctions where
your ships are filled to capacity with Norfolk Tears.”
“Every ship? I do have
quite a few.”
“No, not every ship.
We have to walk a fine line between greed and squeeze. My Norfolk distributor
will give us most favoured customer status, that’s all. It’ll be up to us to
work out exactly how much we can squeeze them for before they start to protest.
You know how jealously they guard their independence.”
“Yes.” Parris nodded
thoughtfully.
“And what about
Lalonde?” Ione asked quietly. Her glass was dangling casually between thumb and
forefinger, she rocked it from side to side, swirling the champagne around the
bottom.
“What about Lalonde?”
Joshua asked.
“Its people,” Symone
said. “It doesn’t sound as though they get a very good deal out of this. The
mayope is their wood.”
Joshua gave her a
polite smile. Just what I need, bleeding hearts. “What do they get at the
moment?”
Symone frowned.
“He means they get
nothing,” Dominique said.
“We’re developing
their market for them,” Joshua said. “We’ll be pumping hard cash into their
economy. Not much by our standards, I admit, but to them it will buy a lot of
things they need. And it will go to the people too, the colonists who are
breaking their backs to tame that world, not just the administration staff. We
pay the loggers upriver in the hinterlands, the barge captains, the timber-yard
workers. Them, their families, the shops they buy stuff from. All of them will
be better off. We’ll be better off. Norfolk will be better off. It’s the whole
essence of trade. Sure, banks and governments make paper money from the deal,
and we slant it in our favour, but the bottom line is that people benefit.” He
realized he was staring hard at Symone, daring her to disagree. He dropped his
eyes, almost embarrassed.
Dominique gave him a
soft, and for the first time, sincere kiss on his cheek. “You really did pick
yourself the best, didn’t you?” she said challengingly to Ione.
“Of course.”
“Does that answer your
question?” Parris asked his lover, smiling gently at her.
“I guess it does.”
He started to use a
small silver knife to peel the crisp rind from a date-sized purple fruit.
Joshua recognized it as a saltplum from Atlantis.
“I think Lalonde would
be in capable hands if we left it to Joshua,” Parris said. “What sort of
partnership were you looking for?”
“Sixty-forty in your
favour,” he said amicably.
“Which would cost me?”
“I was thinking of two
to three million fuseodollars as an initial working fund to set up our export
operation.”
“Eighty-twenty,” Dominique
said.
Parris bit into the
saltplum’s pink flesh, watching Joshua keenly.
“Seventy-thirty,”
Joshua offered.
“Seventy-five-twenty-five.”
“I get that percentage
on all Norfolk Tears carried by the Vasilkovsky Line while our mayope monopoly
is in operation.”
Parris winced, and
gave his daughter a small nod.
“If you provide the
collateral,” she said.
“You accept my share
of the mayope as collateral, priced at the Norfolk sale value.”
“Done.”
Joshua sat back and
let out a long breath. It could have been a lot worse.
“You see,” Dominique
said wickedly. “Brains as well as breasts.”
“And legs,” Joshua
added.
She licked her lips
provocatively, and took a long drink. “We’ll get the legal office to draw up a
formal contract tomorrow,” Parris said. “I can’t see any problem.”
“The first stage will
be to set up an office on Lalonde and secure that mayope monopoly. The Lady
Mac has still got to be unloaded, then she needs some maintenance work, and
we’re due a grade-E CAB inspection as well thanks to someone I met at Norfolk.
Not a problem, but it takes time. I ought to be ready to leave in ten days.”
“Good,” said Parris.
“I like that, Joshua. No beating around, you get straight to it.”
“So how did you make
your fortune?”
Parris grinned and
popped the last of the saltplum into his mouth. “Given this will hopefully
develop into quite a large operation, I’ll want to send my own representative
with you to Lalonde to help set up our office. And keep an eye on this upfront
money of mine you’ll be spending.”
“Sure. Who?”
Dominique leaned over
until her shoulder rubbed against Joshua’s, a hand made of steel flesh closed
playfully on his upper thigh. “Guess,” she whispered salaciously into his ear.
Durringham had become
ungovernable, a city living on spent nerves, waiting for the final crushing
blow to fall.
The residents knew of
the invaders marching and sailing downriver, everyone had heard the horror
stories of xenoc enslavement, of torture and rape and bizarre bloodthirsty
ceremonies; words distorted and swollen with every kilometre, like the river
down which they travelled. They had also heard of the Kulu Embassy evacuating
its personnel in one madcap night, surely the final confirmation—Sir Asquith
wouldn’t do that unless there was no hope left. Durringham, their homes and
jobs and prosperity, was in the firing line of an unknown, unstoppable threat,
and they had nowhere to run. The jungle belonged to the invaders, the seven
colonist-carrier starships orbiting impotently overhead were full, they
couldn’t offer an escape route. There was only the river and the virgin sea
beyond.
The second morning
after Ralph Hiltch made his dash to the relative safety of the Ekwan,
the twenty-eight paddleboats remaining in the frightened city’s circular
harbours set off in convoy downriver. Price of a ticket was one thousand
fuseodollars per person (including a child). No destination was named: some
talked about crossing the ocean to Sarell; Amarisk’s northern extremity was
mooted. It didn’t matter, leaving Durringham was the driving factor.
Given the exorbitant
price the captains insisted on, and the planet’s relative poverty, it was
surprising just how many people turned up wanting passage. More than could be
accommodated. Tempers and desperation rose with the brutal sun. Several ugly
scenes flared as the gangplanks were hurriedly drawn up.
Frustrated in their
last chance to escape, the crowd surged towards the colonists barricaded in the
transients’ dormitories at the other end of the port. Stones were flung first,
then Molotovs.
Candace Elford
dispatched a squad of sheriffs and newly recruited deputies, armed with
cortical jammers and laser rifles, to quell this latest in a long line of
disturbances. But they ran into a gang ransacking a retail district. The
tactical street battle which followed left eight dead, and two dozen injured.
They never got to the port.
That was when Candace
finally had to call up Colin Rexrew and admit that Durringham was out of
control. “Most urban districts are forming their own defence committees,” she
datavised. “They’ve seen how little effect the sheriffs have against any
large-scale trouble. All the riots we’ve had these last few weeks have shown
that often enough, and everyone’s heard about the Swithland posse. They
don’t trust you and me to defend them, so they’re going to do it for
themselves. There’s been a lot of food stockpiled over the last couple of
weeks. They all think they’re self-sufficient, and they’re not letting anyone
over their district’s boundary. That’s going to cause trouble, because I’m
getting reports of people in the outlying villages to the east abandoning their
land and coming in looking for a refuge. Our residents aren’t letting them
through. It’s a siege mentality out there. People are waiting for Terrance
Smith to come back with a conquering army, and hoping they can hold out in the
meantime.”
“How far away are the
invaders?”
“I’m not sure. We’re
judging their progress by the way our communications with the villages fail.
It’s not constant, but I’d say their main force is no more than ten or fifteen
kilometres from Durringham’s eastern districts. The majority are on foot, which
should give us two or three days’ breathing space. Of course, you and I know
there are nests of them inside the city as well. I’ve had some pretty weird
stories about bogeymen and poltergeists coming in for days now.”
“What do you want to
do?” Colin asked.
“Revert to guarding
our strategic centres; the spaceport, this sector, possibly both hospitals. I’d
like to say the port as well, but I don’t think I’ve got the manpower. There
have been several desertions this week, mostly among the new deputies. Besides,
nearly all of the boats have left now; there’s been a steady exodus of fishing
craft and even some barges since the paddle-boat convoy cast off this morning,
so I can’t see a lot of point.”
“OK,” Colin said with
his head in his hands. “Do it.” He glanced out of the office window at the
sun-lashed rooftops. There was no sign of any of the usual fires that had
marked the city’s torment over the last weeks. “Can we hang on until Terrance
returns?”
“I don’t know. At the
moment we’re so busy fighting each other that I couldn’t tell you what sort of
resistance we can offer to the invaders.”
“Yeah. That sounds
like Lalonde through and through.”
Candace sat behind her
big desk, watching the situation reports paint unwelcome graphics across the
console displays, and issuing orders through her staff. There were times when
she wondered if anyone out there was even receiving them, let alone obeying
them.
Half of her sheriffs
were deployed around the spaceport, spending the afternoon digging in, and
positioning some large maser cannons to cover the road. The rest took up
position around the administration district in the city, covering the
governor’s dumper, the sheriff’s headquarters, various civic buildings, and the
Confederation Navy office. Five combined teams of LDC engineers and sheriffs
went round all the remaining dumpers they could reach, powering down the fusion
generators. If the invaders wanted Durringham’s industrial base, such as it
was, Rexrew was determined to thwart them. The He3 and deuterium
fuel was collected and put into storage at the spaceport. By midafternoon the
city was operating on electron-matrix power reserves alone.
That more than
anything else brought home the reality of the situation to the majority. Fights
and squabbles between gangs and districts ended, those barricades which had
been erected were strengthened, sentry details were finalized. Everyone headed
home, the roads fell silent. The rain which had held off all day began to slash
down. Beneath its shroud of miserable low cloud, Durringham held its breath.
Stewart Danielsson
watched the rain pounding away on the office windows as the conditioner hummed
away efficiently, sucking the humidity from the air. He had made the office his
home over the last week; Ward Molecular had seen a busy time of it. Everybody
in town was keen to have the ancillary circuits on their electron-matrix cells
serviced, especially the smaller units which could double as rifle power
magazines at a pinch. He’d sold a lot of interface cables as well.
The business was doing
fine. Darcy and Lori would be pleased when they got back. They hadn’t actually
said he could sleep over when they left him in charge, but with the way things
were it was only right. Twice he’d scared off would-be burglars.
His sleeping-bag with
the inflatable mattress was comfy, and the office fridge was better than the
one in his lodgings; he’d brought the microwave cooker over from the cabin out
back of the warehouse. So now he had all the creature comforts. It was turning
into a nice little sojourn. Gaven Hough stayed late most nights, keeping him
company. Neither of them had seen Cole Este since the night after the first
anti-Ivet riot. Stewart wasn’t much bothered by that.
Gaven opened the door
in the glass partition wall and stuck his head round. “Doesn’t look like Mr.
Crowther is coming to pick up his unit now, it’s gone four.”
Stewart stretched
himself, and turned the processor block off. He’d been trying to keep their
work records and payments up to date. It had always seemed so easy when Darcy was
handling it. “OK, we’ll get closed up.”
“We’ll be the last in
the city. There’s been no traffic outside for the last two hours. Everyone else
has gone home, scared of these invaders.”
“Aren’t you?”
“No, not really. I
haven’t got anything an army would want.”
“You can stay here
tonight. I don’t think it’ll be safe walking home through this town now, not
with the way people are on edge. There’s enough food.”
“Thanks. I’ll go and
shut the doors.”
Stewart watched the
younger man through the glass partition as he made his way past the workbenches
to the warehouse’s big doors. I ought to be worried, he thought, some of the
rumours flying around town are blatantly unreal, but something is happening
upriver. He gave the warehouse a more thoughtful glance. With its mayope walls
it was strong enough to withstand any casual attempt at damage. But there were
a lot of valuable tools and equipment inside, and everybody knew that. Maybe we
should be boarding the windows up. There was no such thing as an insurance industry
on Lalonde, if the warehouse went so did their jobs.
He turned back to the
office windows, giving them a more objective appraisal; the frames were heavy
enough to nail planks across.
Someone was walking
down the muddy road outside. It was difficult to see with the way the rain was
smearing the glass, but it looked like a man dressed in a suit. A very strange
suit; it was grey, with a long jacket, and there was no seal up the front, only
buttons. And he wore a black hat that looked like a fifty-centimetre column of
brushed velvet. His right hand gripped a silver-topped cane. Rain bounced off
him as though his antique clothes were coated in frictionless plastic.
“Stewart!” Gaven
called from somewhere in the warehouse. “Stewart, come back here.”
“No. Look at this.”
“There’s three of them
in here. Stewart!”
The native panic in
Gaven’s voice made him turn reluctantly from the window. He squinted through
the partition wall. It was dark in the cavernous warehouse, and Gaven had shut
the wide doors. Stewart couldn’t see where he’d got to. Humanoid shapes were
moving around down by the stacks of crates; bigger than men. And it was just
too gloomy to make out quite what—
The window behind him
gave a loud grating moan. He whirled round. The frames groaned again as though
they had been shoved by a hurricane blast. But the rain was falling quite
normally outside. It couldn’t be the wind. The man in the grey suit was
standing in the middle of the road, cane pressing into the mud, both hands
resting on the silver pommel. He stared directly at Stewart.
“Stewart!” Gaven
yelled.
The window-panes
cracked, fissures multiplying and interlacing. Animal reflex made Stewart spin
round, his arms coming up to protect his head. They’re going to smash!
A two and a half metre
tall yeti was standing pressed up against the glass of the partition wall. Its
ochre fur was matted and greasy, red baboon lips were peeled back to show
stained fangs. He gagged at it in amazement, recoiling.
All the glass in the
office shattered at once. In the instant before he slammed his eyelids shut, he
was engulfed by a beautiful prismatic cloud of diamonds, sparkling and
shimmering in the weak light. Then the slivers of glass penetrated his skin.
Blood frothed out of a thousand shallow cuts, staining every square centimetre
of his clothes a bright crimson. His skin went numb as his brain rejected
outright the shocking level of pain. His sight, the misty vermilion of tightly
shut eyes, turned scarlet. Pain stars flared purple. Then the universe went
harrowingly black. Through the numbness he could feel hot coals burning in his
eye sockets.
“Blind, I’m blind!” He
couldn’t even tell if his voice was working.
“It doesn’t have to be
like that,” someone said to him. “We can help you. We can let you see again.”
He tried to open his
eyelids. There was a loathsome sensation of thin tissues ripping. And still
there was only blackness. Pain began to ooze its way inwards, pain from every
part of his body. He knew he was falling, plummeting to the ground.
Then the pain in his legs
faded, replaced by a blissful liquid chill, as if he was bathing in a mountain
tarn. He was given his sight back, a spectral girl sketched against the
infinite darkness. It looked as though she was made up from translucent white
membranes, folded with loving care around her svelte body, then flowing free
somehow to become her fragile robes as well. She was a sublime child, in her
early teens, poised between girlhood and womanhood, what he imagined an angel
or fairy would be like. And she danced all the while, twirling effortlessly
from foot to foot, more supple and graceful than any ballerina; her face
blessed by a bountiful smile.
She held out her arms
to him, ragged sleeves floating softly in the unfelt breeze. “See?” she said.
“We can stop it hurting.” Her arms rose, palms pressing together above her
head, and she spun round again, lightsome laughter echoing.
“Please,” he begged
her. “Oh, please.”
The pain returned to
his legs, making him cry out. His siren vision began to retreat, skipping
lightly over the emptiness.
She paused and cocked
her head. “Is this what you want?” she asked, her dainty face frowning in
concern.
“No! Back, come back.
Please.”
Her smile became
rapturous, and her arms closed around him in a celebratory embrace. Stewart
gave himself up to her balmy caresses, drowning in a glorious tide of white
light.
Ilex coasted out of its wormhole terminus a hundred
thousand kilometres above Lalonde. The warped gateway leading out of space-time
contracted behind the voidhawk as it refocused its distortion field. Sensors
probed round cautiously. The bitek starship was at full combat stations alert.
Waiting tensely on his
acceleration couch in the crew toroid, Captain Auster skimmed through the
wealth of data which both the bitek and electronic systems gathered. His
primary concern was that there were no hostile ships within a quarter of a
million kilometres, and no weapon sensors were locking on to the voidhawk’s
hull. A resonance effect in Ilex’s distortion field revealed various
ship-sized masses orbiting above Lalonde, then there were asteroids,
satellites, moons, boulder-sized debris. Nothing large was in the starship’s
immediate vicinity. It took a further eight seconds for Ilex and Ocyroe,
the weapons-systems officer, working in tandem, to confirm the absence of any
valid threat.
OK, let’s go for a
parking orbit; seven hundred kilometres out, Auster said.
Seven hundred? Ilex queried.
Yes. Your
distortion field won’t be so badly affected at that altitude. We can still run
if we have to.
Very well.
Together their unified
minds arrived at a suitable flight vector. Ilex swooped down the
imaginary line towards the bright blue and white planet.
“We’re going into a
parking orbit,” Auster said aloud for the benefit of the three Adamist naval
officers on the bridge. “I want combat stations maintained at all times; and
please bear in mind who could be here waiting for us.” He allowed an overtone
of stern anxiety to filter out to the Edenist crew to emphasize the point.
“Ocyroe, what’s our local space situation?”
“Nine starships in a
parking orbit, seven colonist-carriers and two cargo ships. There are three
interplanetary fusion drive ships en route from the asteroid Kenyon, heading
for Lalonde orbit. Nothing else in the system.”
“I can’t get any
response from Lalonde civil flight control,” said Erato, the spaceplane pilot.
He looked up from the communication console he was operating. “The
geosynchronous communication platform is working, as far as I can tell. They
just don’t answer.”
Auster glanced over at
Lieutenant Jeroen van Ewyck, the Confederation Navy Intelligence officer they
had brought with them from Avon. “What do you think?”
“This is a backward
planet anyway, so their response isn’t going to be instantaneous. But given the
contents of those fleks I’d rather not take any chances. I’ll try and contact
Kelvin Solanki directly through the navy ELINT satellites. Can you see if you
can get anything from your planetside agents?”
“We’ll broadcast,”
Auster said.
“Great. Erato, see
what the other starship captains can tell us. It looks like they must have been
here some time if there are this many left in orbit.”
Auster added his own
voice to Ilex’s affinity call, spanning the colossal distance to the gas
giant. Aethra answered straight away; but the immature habitat could only
confirm the data which Lori and Darcy had included in their flek to the Edenist
embassy on Avon. Since Kelven Solanki had transmitted the files to Murora there
had only been the usual weekly status updates from Lalonde. The last one, four
days ago, had contained a host of information on the colony’s deteriorating
civil situation.
Can you tell us
what’s happening? Gaura asked
through the affinity link between Aethra and Ilex. He was the chief of
the station supervising the habitat’s growth out at the lonely edge of the star
system.
Nobody is answering
our calls, Auster said. When
we know something, Ilex will inform you immediately.
If Laton is on
Lalonde he may make an attempt to capture and subvert Aethra. He has had over
twenty years to perfect his technique. We have no weaponry to resist him. Can
you evacuate us?
That will depend on
the circumstances. Our orders from the First Admiral’s office are to confirm
his existence and destroy him if at all possible. If he has become powerful
enough to defend himself against the weapons we are carrying, then we must jump
back to Fleet Headquarters and alert them. That takes priority over everything.
Auster extended a burst of
sympathy.
We understand. Good
luck with your mission.
Thank you.
Can you sense Darcy
and Lori? Auster asked Ilex.
No. They do not
answer. But there is a melodic in the affinity band which I’ve never
encountered before.
The voidhawk’s
perceptive faculty expanded into Auster’s mind. He perceived a distant soprano
voice, or a soft whistle; the effect was too imprecise to tell. It was an
adagio, a slow harmonic which slipped in and out of mental awareness like a
radio signal on a stormy night.
Where is it coming
from? Auster asked.
Ahead of us, Ilex said. Somewhere on the planet, but it’s skipping about. I can’t pin
it down.
Keep tuned in to
it, and if you track down its origin let me know right away.
Of course.
Jeroen van Ewyck
datavised his console processor to point one of Ilex’s secondary dishes
at a navy ELINT satellite orbiting Lalonde, then opened a channel down to the
office in Durringham. There was nothing like the usual bit rate available, the
microwave beam emitted by the navy office was well below standard strength. A
flustered rating answered, and switched the call straight through to Kelven
Solanki.
“We’re here in
response to the flek you sent on the Eurydice,” Jeroen van Ewyck said.
“Can you advise us of the situation on the planet, please?”
“Too late,” Kelven
datavised. “You’re too bloody late.”
Auster ordered the
bitek processor in his command console to patch him into the channel.
“Lieutenant-Commander Solanki, this is Captain Auster. We were dispatched as soon
as we were refitted for this mission. I can assure you the Admiralty took the
report from you and our Intelligence operatives very seriously indeed.”
“Seriously? You call
sending one ship a serious response?”
“Yes. We are primarily
a reconnaissance and evaluation mission. In that respect, we are considered
expendable. The Admiralty needs to know if Laton’s presence has been confirmed,
and what kind of force level is required to deal with the invasion.”
There was a moment’s
pause.
“Sorry if I shouted
off,” Kelven said. “Things are getting bad down here. The invaders have reached
Durringham.”
“Are these invaders
acting under Laton’s orders?”
“I’ve no idea yet.” He
started to summarize the events of the last couple of weeks.
Auster listened with
growing dismay, a communal emotion distributed equally around the other
Edenists on board. The Adamists too, if their facial expressions were an
accurate reflection of their thoughts.
“So you still don’t
know if Laton is behind this invasion?” Auster asked when he finished.
“No. I’d say not; Lori
and Darcy had virtually written him off by the time they got to Ozark. If it is
him backing the invaders, then he’s pulling a very elaborate double bluff. Why
did he warn Darcy and Lori about this energy virus effect?”
“Have you managed to
verify that yet?” Jeroen van Ewyck asked.
“No. Although the
supporting circumstantial evidence we have so far is very strong. The invaders
certainly have a powerful electronic warfare technology at their fingertips,
and it’s in widespread use. I suppose Kulu will be the place to ask; the ESA
team managed to get their prisoner outsystem.”
Typical of the ESA,
Erato said sourly.
Auster nodded
silently.
“How bad are
conditions in the city?” Jeroen van Ewyck asked.
“We’ve heard some
fighting around the outlying districts this evening. The sheriffs are
protecting the spaceport and the government district. But I don’t think they’ll
hold out for more than a couple of days. You must get back to Avon and inform
the First Admiral and the Confederation Assembly what’s happening here. At this
point we still can’t discount xenocs being involved. And tell the First Admiral
that Terrance Smith’s mercenary army must be prevented from landing here, as
well. This is far beyond the ability of a few thousand hired soldiers to sort
out.”
“That goes without
saying. We’ll evacuate you and your staff immediately,” Auster said.
Forty-five of them?
Ocyroe asked. That’s
pushing our life-support capacity close to the envelope.
We can always make
a swallow direct to Jospool, That’s only seven light-years away. The crew
toroid can support us for that long.
“There’s some of the
ratings and NCOs I’d like to get off,” Kelven Solanki datavised. “This wasn’t
supposed to be a front-line posting. They’re only kids, really.”
“No, all of you are
coming,” Auster said flatly.
“I’d like to capture
one of these sequestrated invaders if possible,” Jeroen van Ewyck put in
quickly.
What about the
marines, Erato? Auster asked. Do
you think it’s worth a try?
I’ll fly recovery
if we can spot them, the pilot
said. His thoughts conveyed a rising excitement.
Auster acknowledged
his leaked feelings with an ironic thought. Pilots were uniformly a macho
breed, unable to resist any challenge, even Edenist ones.
The Juliffe basin
is proving difficult to resolve, Ilex said with a note
of annoyance. My optical sensors are unable to receive a clearly defined
image of the river and its tributaries for about a thousand kilometres inland.
It’s night over the
basin, and we’re still seventy thousand kilometres away, Auster pointed out.
Even so, the
optical resolution should be better than this.
“Commander Solanki,
we’re going to attempt to recover the marines as well,” Auster said.
“I haven’t been able
to contact them for over a day. God, I don’t even know if they’re still alive,
let alone where they are.”
“None the less, they
are our naval personnel. If there’s any chance, we owe them the effort.”
The statement drew him
a startled glance from Jeroen van Ewyck and the other two Adamists on the
bridge. They quickly tried to hide their gaffe. Auster ignored it.
“Christ but—All
right,” Kelven Solanki datavised. “I’ll fly the recovery myself, though. No
point in risking your spaceplane. It was me who ordered them in there to start
with. My responsibility.”
“As you wish. If our
sensors can locate their fishing boat, do you have an aircraft available?”
“I can get one. But
the invaders knocked out the last plane to fly into their territory. One thing
I do know is that they’ve got some lethal fire-power going for them.”
“So has Ilex,”
Auster said bluntly.
Joshua Calvert fell
back onto the translucent sheet and let out a heartfelt breath. The bed’s
jelly-substance mattress was rocking him gently as the waves slowed. Sweat
trickled across his chest and limbs. He gazed up at the electrophorescent cell
clusters on Ione’s ceiling. Their ornate leaf pattern was becoming highly
familiar.
“That’s definitely one
of the better ways of waking up,” he said.
“One?” Ione unwrapped
her legs from his waist and sat back on his legs. She stretched provocatively,
hands going behind her neck.
Joshua groaned,
staring at her voraciously.
“Tell me another,” she
said.
He sat up, bringing
his face twenty centimetres from hers. “Watching you,” he said in a throaty
voice.
“Does that turn you
on?”
“Yes.”
“Solo, or with another
girl?” She felt his muscles tighten in reflex. Well, that’s my answer, she
thought. But then she’d always known how much he enjoyed threesomes. It wasn’t
Joshua’s cock which was hard to satisfy, just his ego.
He grinned; the Joshua
rogueish-charm grin. “I bet this conversation is going to turn to Dominique.”
Ione gave his nose a
butterfly kiss. They just couldn’t fool each other; it was a togetherness
similar to the one she enjoyed with the habitat personality. Comforting and
eerie at the same time. “You mentioned her name first.”
“Are you upset about
her coming to Lalonde with me?”
“No. It makes sound
business sense.”
“You do disapprove.”
He stroked the side of her breasts tenderly. “There’s no need to be jealous. I
have been to bed with Dominique, you know.”
“I know. I watched you
on that big bed of hers, remember?”
He cupped her breasts
and kissed each nipple in turn. “Let’s bring her to this bed.”
She looked down on the
top of his head. “Not possible, sorry. The Saldanas eradicated the gay gene
from their DNA three hundred years ago. Couldn’t risk the scandal, they are
supposed to uphold the ten commandments throughout the kingdom, after all.”
Joshua didn’t believe
a word of it. “They missed erasing the adultery gene, then.”
She smiled. “What’s
your hurry to hit the mattress with her? The two of you are going to spend a
week locked up in that zero-gee sex cage of yours.”
“You are jealous.”
“No. I never claimed
to have an exclusive right to you. After all, I didn’t complain about Norfolk.”
He pulled his head
back from her breasts. “Ione!” he complained.
“You reeked of guilt.
Was she very beautiful?”
“She was
. . . sweet.”
“Sweet? Why, Joshua
Calvert, I do believe you’re getting romantic in your old age.”
Joshua sighed and
dropped back on the mattress again. He wished she’d make up her mind whether
she was jealous or not. “Do I ask about your lovers?”
Ione couldn’t help the
slight flush that crept up her cheeks. Hans had been fun while it lasted, but
she’d never felt as free with him as she did with Joshua. “No,” she admitted.
“Ah hah, I’m not the
only one who’s guilty, by the looks of it.”
She traced a
forefinger down his sternum and abdomen until she was stroking his thighs.
“Quits?”
“Yes.” His hands found
her hips. “I brought you another present.”
“Joshua! What?”
“A gigantea seed.
That’s an aboriginal Lalonde tree. I saw a couple on the edge of Durringham,
they were eighty metres tall, but Marie said they were just babies, the really
big ones are further inland from the coast.”
“Marie said
that, did she?”
“Yes.” He refused to
be put off. “It should grow all right in Tranquillity’s parkland. But you’ll
have to plant it where the soil is deep and there’s plenty of moisture.”
“I’ll remember.”
“It’ll grow up to the
light-tube eventually.”
She pulled a
disbelieving face.
I will have to run
environmental compatibility tests first, Tranquillity said. Our biosphere is delicately balanced.
So cynical. “Thank you, Joshua,” she said out loud.
Joshua realized he had
regained his erection. “Why don’t you just ease forward a bit?”
“I could give you a
treat instead,” Ione said seductively. “A real male fantasy come true.”
“Yes?”
“Yes. There’s a
girlfriend of mine I’d like you to meet. We go swimming together every morning.
You’d like that, watching us get all wet and slippery. She’s younger than me.
And she never, ever wears a swimming costume.”
“Jesus.” Joshua’s face
went from greed to caution. “This isn’t on the level,” he decided.
“Yes, it is. She’s
also very keen to meet you. She likes it a lot when people wash her. I do it
all the time, sliding my hands all over her. Don’t you want to join me?”
He looked up at Ione’s
mock-innocent expression, and wondered what the hell he was letting himself in
for. Gay gene, like bollocks. “Lead on.”
They had walked fifty
metres down the narrow sandy path towards the cove, Ione’s escort of three
serjeants an unobtrusive ten paces behind, when Joshua stopped and looked
round. “This is the southern endcap.”
“That’s right,” she
said slyly.
He caught up with her
as she reached the top of the bluff. The long, gently curving cove below looked
tremendously enticing, with a border of shaggy palm trees and a tiny island
offshore. Away in the distance he could see the elaborate buildings of the
Laymil project campus.
“It’s all right,” she
said. “I won’t have you arrested for coming here.”
He shrugged and
followed her down the bluff. Ione was running on ahead as he reached the sand.
Her towelling robe was flung away. “Come on, Joshua!” Spray frothed up as her
feet reached the water.
A naked girl, a
tropical beach. Irresistible. He dropped his own robe and jogged down the
slope. Something was moving behind him, something making dull thudding sounds
as it moved, something heavy. He turned. “Jesus!”
A Kiint was running
straight at him. It was smaller than any he’d seen before, about three metres
long, only just taller than him. Eight fat legs were flipping about in a rhythm
which was impossible to follow.
His feet refused to
budge. “Ione!”
She was laughing
hysterically. “Morning, Haile,” she called at the top of her voice.
The Kiint lumbered to
a halt in front of him. He was looking into a pair of soft violet eyes half as
wide as his own face. A stream of warm damp breath poured from the breathing
vents.
“Er . . .”
One of the
tractamorphic arms curved up, the tip formshifting into the shape of a human
hand—slightly too large.
“Well, say hello,
then,” Ione said; she had walked up to stand behind him.
“I’ll get you for
this, Saldana.”
She giggled. “Joshua,
this is my girlfriend, Haile. Haile, this is Joshua.”
Why has he so much
stiffness? Haile asked.
Ione cracked up,
nearly doubling over as she laughed. Joshua gave her a furious glare.
Not want to shake
hands? Not want to initiate human greetings ritual? Not want to be friends? The Kiint sounded mournfully disappointed.
“Joshua, shake hands.
Haile’s upset you don’t want to be friends with her.”
“How do you know?” he
asked out of the corner of his mouth.
“Affinity. The Kiint
can use it.”
He put his hand up.
Haile’s arm reached out, and he felt a dry, slightly scaly, bud of flesh flow
softly around his fingers. It tickled. His neural nanonics were executing a
priority search through the xenoc files he had stored in a memory cell. The
Kiint could hear.
“May your thoughts
always fly high, Haile,” he said, and gave a slight formal bow.
I have much
likening for him!
Ione gave him a
calculating stare. I might have known that charm of his would work on xenocs
too, she thought.
Joshua felt the
Kiint’s flesh deliver a warm squeeze to his hand, then the pseudo-hand peeled
back. The itchy sensation it left in his palm seemed to spread up along his
spine and into his skull.
“Your new girlfriend,”
he said heavily.
Ione smiled. “Haile
was born a few weeks ago. And boy, does she grow fast.”
Haile started to push
Ione towards the water, flat triangular head butting the girl spiritedly, beak
flapping. One of her tractamorphic arms beckoned avidly at Joshua.
He grinned. “I’m
coming.” His scalp felt as if he’d been in the sun too long, an all-over
tingle.
“The water eases her
skin while she’s growing,” Ione said as she skipped ahead of the eager Kiint.
“She needs to bathe two or three times a day. All the Kiint houses have
interior pools. But she loves the beach.”
“Well, I’ll be happy
to help scrub her while I’m here.”
Much gratitude.
“My pleasure,” Joshua
said. He stopped. Haile was standing at the edge of the water, big eyes
regarding him attentively. “That was you.”
Yes.
“What was?” Ione
asked, she looked from one to the other.
“I can hear her.”
“But you don’t have an
affinity gene,” she said, surprised, and maybe a little indignant.
Joshua has thoughts
of strength. Much difficulty to effect interlocution, but possible. Not so with
most humans. Feel hopelessness. Failure sorrow.
He swaggered. “Strong
thoughts, see?”
“Haile hasn’t quite
mastered our language, that’s all,” Ione smiled with menace. “She’s confused
strength with simplicity. You have very elementary thoughts.”
Joshua rubbed his
hands together determinedly, and walked towards her. Ione backed away, then
turned and ran giggling into the water. He caught her after six metres, and the
two of them fell into the small clear ripples whooping and laughing. Haile
plunged in after them.
Much joyness. Much
joyness.
Joshua was interested
by how well the young Kiint could swim. He would have considered her body too
heavy to float, but she could move at a fair speed; her tractamorphic arms
spread out into flippers, and angled back along her flanks. Ione wouldn’t let
her go out to the little island, saying it was still too far, which ruling
Haile accepted with rebellious sulks.
I have seen some of
the all-around’s park space, she
told Joshua proudly as he rubbed the dorsal ridge above her rump. Ione has
shown me. So much to absorb. Adventureness fun. Envy Joshua.
Joshua didn’t quite
understand how to collect his thoughts into a voice Haile could understand,
instead he simply spoke. “You envy me? Why?”
Venture as you
please. Fly to stars so distant. Welcome sights so strange. I want this,
muchness!
“I don’t think you’d
fit in the Lady Mac. Besides, human ships that can carry Kiint have to
be licensed by your government. I haven’t got that licence.”
Sadness. Anger.
Frustration. I may not venture beyond adult defined constraints. Much growth
before I can.
“Bumming round the
universe isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Most of the Confederation planets are
pretty tame, and travelling on a starship is boring; dangerous too.”
Danger? Excitement
query?
Joshua moved down
towards Haile’s flexible neck. Ione was grinning at him over the xenoc’s white
back.
“No, not excitement.
There’s a danger of mechanical failure. That can be fatal.”
You have
excitement. Achievement. Ione narrated many voyages you have undertaken.
Triumph in Ruin Ring. Much gratification. Such boldness exhibited.
Ione turned her giggle
into a cough. You’re a flirt, girl.
Incorrect access
mode to human males, query? Praise of character, followed by dumb admiration
for feats; your instruction.
Yes, I did say
that, didn’t I. Perhaps not quite so literally, though.
“That was a while ago
now,” Joshua said. “Of course, life was pretty tricky in those days. One wrong
move and it could have been catastrophic. The Ruin Ring is an ugly place.
You’ve gotta have determination to be a scavenger. It’s a lonely existence. Not
everyone can take it.”
You achieved legend
status. Most famous scavenger of all.
Don’t push it, Ione warned.
“You mean the Laymil
electronics stack? Yeah, it was a big find, I earned a lot of money from that
one.”
Much cultural
relevance.
“Oh, yeah, that too.”
Ione stopped rubbing
Haile’s neck and frowned. “Joshua, haven’t you accessed the records we’ve been
decoding?”
“Er, what records?”
“Your electronics
stack stored Laymil sensevise recordings. We’ve uncovered huge amounts of data
on their culture.”
“Great. That’s good
news.”
She eyed him
suspiciously. “They were extremely advanced biologically. Well ahead of us on
the evolutionary scale; they were almost completely in harmony with their
habitat environment, so now we have to question just how artificial their
habitats were. Their entire biology, the way they approached living organisms,
is very different to our own perception. They revered any living entity. And
their psychology is almost incomprehensible to us; they could be both highly
individual, and at the same time submerge themselves into a kind of mental homogeneity.
Two almost completely different states of consciousness. We think they may have
been genuine telepaths. The research project geneticists are having furious
arguments over the relevant gene sequence. It is similar to the Edenist
affinity gene, but the Laymil psychology complements it in a way which is
impossible to human Edenist culture. Edenists retain a core of identity even
after they transfer their memories into the habitat personality at death,
whereas the Laymil willingness to share their most private selves has to be the
product of considerable mental maturity. You can’t engineer behavioural
instinct into DNA.”
“Have you found out
what destroyed their habitats yet?” Joshua asked. Haile shuddered below his
hand, a very human reflex. He felt a burst of cold alarm invading his thoughts.
“Hey, sorry.”
Fright. Scared
feel. So many deaths. They had strength. Still were defeated. Query cause?
“I wish I knew,” Ione
said. “They seemed to celebrate life, much more than we do.”
The Isakore was
bobbing about inertly on the Zamjan as though it was a log of elegantly carved
driftwood, ripples slopping against the hull with quiet insistence. They had
rigged up a couple of oarlike outriggers to steer with during the first day—the
rudder alone was no good. And they’d managed to stick more or less to the
centre of the river. It was eight hundred metres wide here, which gave them
some leeway when the current began to shift them towards one of the banks.
According to Murphy
Hewlett’s inertial-guidance block they had floated about thirty kilometres
downriver since the micro-fusion generator had been taken out. The current had
pushed them with dogged tenacity the whole time, taking them away from the
landing site and the burnt antagonistic jungle. Only another eight hundred plus
kilometres to go.
Jacqueline Couteur had
been no trouble, spending her time sitting up in the prow under the canvas
awning. If it hadn’t been for the ordeal they’d been through, the price they’d
paid in their own pain and grief, to capture her, Murphy would have tied the
useless micro-fusion generator round her neck and tossed her overboard. He
thought she knew that. But she was their mission. And they were still alive,
and still intact. Until that changed, Lieutenant Murphy Hewlett was going to
obey orders and take her back to Durringham. There was nothing else left, no
alternative purpose to life.
Nobody had tried to
interfere with them, although their communication channels were definitely
being jammed (none of the other equipment blocks were affected). Even the
villages they had sailed past had shown no interest. A couple of rowing
dinghies had ventured close the first morning, but they’d been warned off with
shots from one of the Bradfields. After that the Isakore had been left
alone.
It was almost a
peaceful voyage. They’d eaten well, cleaned and reloaded the weapons, done what
they could about their wounds. Niels Regehr swam in and out of lucidity, but
the medical nanonic package clamped over his face was keeping him reasonably
stable.
Murphy could just
about allow himself to believe they would return to Durringham. The placid
river encouraged that kind of foolish thinking.
As night fell at the
end of the second day he sat at the stern, holding on to the tiller they had
fixed up, and doing his best to keep the boat in the centre of the river. At
least with this job he didn’t have to use his leg with its achingly stiff knee,
though his left hand was incapable of gripping the tiller pole. The clammy air
from the water made his fatigues uncomfortably sticky.
He saw Louis Beith
making his way aft, carrying a flask. A medical nanonic package made a broad
bracelet around his arm where Jacqueline Couteur had broken the bone and it
glimmered dimly in the infrared spectrum.
“Brought you some
juice,” Louis said. “Straight out the cryo.”
“Thanks.” Murphy took
the mug he held out. With his retinal implants switched to infrared, the liquid
he poured from the flask was a blue so deep it was nearly black.
“Niels is talking to
his demons again,” Louis said quietly.
“Not much we can do
about it, short of loading a somnolence program into his neural nanonics.”
“Yeah, but Lieutenant;
what he says, it’s like it’s for real, you know? I thought people hallucinating
don’t make any sense. He’s even got me looking over my shoulder.”
Murphy took a swallow
of the juice. It was freezing, numbing the back of his throat. Just perfect.
“It bothers you that bad? I could put him under, I suppose.”
“No, not bad. It’s
just kinda spooky, what with everything we saw, and all.”
“I think that
electronic warfare gimmick the hostiles have affects our neural nanonics more
than we like to admit.”
“Yeah?” Louis
brightened. “Maybe you’re right.” He stood with his hands on his hips, staring
ahead to the west. “Man, that is some meteorite shower. I ain’t never seen one
that good before.”
Murphy looked up into
the cloudless night sky. High above the Isakore’s prow the stars were
tumbling down from their fixed constellations. There was a long broad slash of
them scintillating and flashing. He actually smiled, they looked so
picturesque. And the hazy slash was still growing as more of them hit the
atmosphere, racing eastwards. It must be a prodigious swarm gliding in from
interplanetary space, the remains of some burnt-out comet that had
disintegrated centuries ago. The meteorites furthest away were developing huge
contrails as they sizzled their way downwards. They were certainly penetrating
the atmosphere a long way, tens of kilometres at least. Murphy’s smile bled
away. “Oh my God,” he said in a tiny dry voice.
“What?” Louis asked
happily. “Isn’t that something smooth? Wow! I could look at that all night
long.”
“They’re not
meteorites.”
“What?”
“They’re not
meteorites. Shit!”
Louis looked at him in
alarm.
“They’re bloody
kinetic harpoons!” Murphy started to run forwards as fast as his knee would
allow. “Secure yourself!” he shouted. “Grab something and hold on. They’re
coming down right on top of us.”
The sky was turning to
day overhead, blackness flushed away by a spreading stain of azure blue. The
contrails to the west were becoming too bright to look at. They seemed to be
lengthening at a terrific rate, cracks of sunlight splitting open across the
wall of night.
Kinetic harpoons were
the Confederation Navy’s standard tactical (non-radioactive) planetary surface
assault weapon. A solid splinter of toughened, heat-resistant composite, half a
metre long, needle sharp, guided by a cruciform tail, steered by a processor
with preprogrammed flight vector. They carried no explosives, no energy charge;
they destroyed their target through speed alone.
Ilex accelerated in towards Lalonde at eight gees,
following a precise hyperbolic trajectory. The apex was reached twelve hundred
kilometres above Amarisk, two hundred kilometres east of Durringham. Five
thousand harpoons were expelled from the voidhawk’s weapons cradles, hurtling
towards the night-masked continent below. Ilex inverted the direction of
its distortion field’s acceleration wave, fighting Lalonde’s gravity. Stretched
out on their couches, the crew raged impotently against the appalling gee
force, nanonic supplement membranes turning rigid to hold soft weak human
bodies together as the voidhawk dived away from the planet.
The harpoon swarm
sheered down through the atmosphere, hypervelocity friction ablating away the
composite’s outer layer of molecules to leave a dazzling ionic tail over a
hundred kilometres long. From below it resembled a rain of fierce liquid light.
Their silence was
terrifying. A display of such potency should sound like the roar of an angry
god. Murphy clung to one of the rails along the side of the wheel-house,
squinting through squeezed-up eyelids as the solid sheet of vivid destruction
plummeted towards him. He heard Jacqueline Couteur moaning in fear, and felt a
cheap, malicious satisfaction. It was the first time she had shown the
slightest emotion. Impact could only be seconds away now.
The harpoons were
directly overhead, an atmospheric river of solar brilliance mirroring the
Zamjan’s course. They split down the centre, two solid planes of light
diverging with immaculate symmetry, sliding down to touch the jungle away in
the west then racing past the Isakore at a speed too fast even for
enhanced human senses to follow. None of them, not one, landed in the water.
Multiple explosions
obliterated the jungle. Along both sides of the Zamjan gouts of searing purple
flame streaked upwards as the harpoons struck the earth, releasing their
colossal kinetic energy in a single devastating burst of heat. The swath of
devastation extended for a length of seven kilometres along the banks, reaching
a kilometre and a half inland. A thick filthy cloud of loam and stone and wood
splinters belched up high into the air, blotting out the heat flashes. The blast-wave
rolled out in both directions, flattening still more of the jungle.
Then the sound broke
over the boat. The roar of the explosions overlapped, merging into a single
sonic battering-ram which made every plank on the Isakore twang as if it
was an overtuned guitar string. After that came the eternal thunderclap of the
air being ripped apart by the harpoons’ plunge; sound waves finally catching up
with the weapons.
Murphy jammed his
hands across his stinging eardrums. His whole skeleton was shaking, joints
resonating painfully.
Debris started to
patter down, puckering the already distressed surface of the river. A
sprinkling of fires burnt along the banks where shattered trees lay strewn
among deep craters. Pulverized loam and wood hung in the air, an obscure black
fog above the mortally wounded land.
Murphy slowly lowered
his hands, staring at the awful vision of destruction. “It was our side,” he
said in dazed wonder. “We did it.”
Garrett Tucci was at
his side, jabbering away wildly. Murphy couldn’t hear a thing. His ears were
still ringing vociferously. “Shout! Datavise! My ears have packed up.”
Garrett blinked, he
held up his communications block. “It’s working,” he yelled.
Murphy datavised his
own block, which reported the channel to the ELINT satellite was open.
A beam of bright white
light slid over the Isakore, originating from somewhere above. Murphy
watched as the beam swung out over the water, then tracked back towards the
boat. He looked up, beyond surprise. It was coming from a small aircraft
hovering two hundred metres overhead, outlined by the silver stars. Green, red,
and white strobes flashed on the tips of its wings and canards. His neural
nanonics identified the jet-black planform, a BK133.
Murphy’s communication
block bleeped to acknowledge a local channel opening. “Murphy? Are you there,
Murphy?”
“Sir? Is that you?” he
asked incredulously.
“Expecting someone
else?” Kelven Solanki datavised.
The beam found the Isakore
again, and remained trained on the deck.
“Have you still got
your prisoner?”
“Yes, sir.” Murphy
glanced at Jacqueline Couteur, who was staring up at the aircraft, shielding
her eyes against the spotlight.
“Good man. We’ll take
her back with us.”
“Sir, Niels Regehr is
injured pretty badly. I don’t think he can climb a rope ladder.”
“No problem.”
The BK133 was
descending carefully, wings rocking in the thermal microbursts generated by the
harpoons’ impact. Murphy could feel the compressor jets gusting against his
face, a hot dry wind, pleasant after the river’s humidity. He saw a wide hatch
was open on the side of the fuselage. A man in naval fatigues was slowly
winching down towards the Isakore.
Floodlights on the
roof of the navy office showed the grounds around the building were thick with
people. All of them seemed to be looking up into the night sky.
Murphy watched them
through the BK133’s open mid-fuselage hatch as Kelven Solanki piloted it down
onto the roof pad. A wedge-shaped spaceplane was sitting on one side of the
roof, wings retracted; it only just fitted, tail and nose were overhanging the
edges. It was one of the most welcome sights he had seen in a long long while.
“Who are all those
people?” he asked.
“Anyone who saw Ilex’s
spaceplane taking the staff away earlier,” Vince Burtis said. He was the
nineteen-year-old navy rating who had winched the marine squad to safety. To
him the invasion was exactly what he had signed on for, adventure on alien
worlds; he was enjoying himself. Murphy hadn’t the heart to disillusion him. The
kid would realize soon enough.
“I guess they want to
leave too,” Vince Burtis said soberly.
The BK133 settled on
the roof. Kelven datavised the flight computer to power down the internal
systems. “Everyone out,” he said.
“Hurry, please.”
Erato’s appeal was relayed through his communication block. “I’m in touch with
the sheriffs outside. They say the crowd is already at the door.”
“They shouldn’t be
able to get in,” Kelven datavised.
“I think some of the
sheriffs may be with them,” Erato said hesitantly. “They’re only human.”
Kelven released his
straps and hurried back into the cabin. Vince Burtis was guiding Niels Regehr’s
tentative footsteps, helping him down through the hatch. Garrett Tucci and
Louis Beith were already out, marching Jacqueline Couteur towards the
spaceplane at gunpoint.
Murphy Hewlett gave
his superior a tired smile. “Thank you, sir.”
“Nothing to do with
me. If the Ilex hadn’t shown up you’d still be paddling home.”
“Is everyone else from
the office out?”
“Yes, the spaceplane
made a couple of flights earlier this evening, we’re the last,” Kelven said.
They both hopped down
onto the roof. The noise of the spaceplane’s compressors rose, obscuring the
sound of the crowd below. Kelven did his best to ignore the sensation of guilt.
He had made a lot of friends among Lalonde’s civil administration staff.
Candace Elford had turned over the BK133 as soon as he asked, no questions.
Surely some people could have been taken up to the orbiting colonist-carriers.
Who though? And who
would choose?
The best—the only—way
to help Lalonde now was through the Confederation Navy.
The stairwell door on
the other side of the BK133 burst open. People began to spill out onto the
roof, shouting frantically.
“Oh, Christ,” Kelven
said under his breath. He could see three or four sheriffs among them, armed
with cortical jammers, one had a laser hunting rifle. The rest were civilians.
He looked round. Vince Burtis and Niels Regehr were halfway up the stairs to
the airlock. One of the Ilex’s crew was leaning out, offering a hand to
Niels. Vince was staring over his shoulder in shock.
“Get in,” Kelven
datavised, waving his arms.
Two sheriffs were
rounding the nose of the BK133, more people were crouched low scuttling under
the fuselage. Still more were running out of the open door. There must have
been thirty on the roof.
“Wait for us.”
“You can carry one
more.”
“I have money, I can
pay.”
Murphy aimed his
Bradfield into the air and fired off two shots. The heavy-calibre weapon was
startlingly loud. Several people threw themselves down, the rest froze.
“Don’t even think
about it,” Murphy said. The Bradfield lined up on one of the ashen-faced
sheriffs. A cortical jammer fell from the man’s hands.
The noise of the
spaceplane’s compressors was becoming strident.
“There’s no room on
board. Go home before anyone gets hurt.”
Kelven and Murphy
started backing towards the spaceplane. A young brown-skinned woman who had
crawled under the BK133 straightened up, and walked towards them defiantly. She
was holding a small child in front of her, it couldn’t have been more than two
years old. Plump face and wide liquid eyes.
Murphy just couldn’t
bring himself to point the Bradfield at her. He reached the foot of the
spaceplane’s aluminium stairs.
“Take him with you,”
the woman called. She held the child out. “For Jesus’s sake, take my son, if
you have a gram of pity in you. I’m begging you!”
Murphy’s foot found
the first step. Kelven had a hand on his arm, guiding him back.
“Take him!” she
shrieked over the swelling compressor efflux. “Take him, or shoot him.”
He shuddered at her
fervour. She meant it, she really meant it.
“It would be a
kindness. You know what will happen to him on this cursed planet.” The child
was crying, squirming about in her grip.
The other people on
the roof were all motionless, watching him with hard, accusing eyes. He turned
to Kelven Solanki, whose face was a mask of torment.
“Get him,” Kelven
blurted.
Murphy dropped the
Bradfield, letting it skitter away across the silicon roof. He datavised a
codelock into its controlling processor so no one could turn it on the
spaceplane, then grabbed the child with his right hand.
“Shafi,” the woman
shouted as he raced up the stairs. “His name’s Shafi Banaji. Remember.”
He barely had a foot
in the airlock when the spaceplane lifted, its deck tilting up immediately.
Hands steadied him, and the outer hatch slid shut.
Shafi’s baggy cotton
trousers were soiled and stinking; he let out a long fearful wail.
Chapter 03
Including
Tranquillity, there were only five independent (non-Edenist) bitek habitats to
be found within the boundaries of the Confederation. After Tranquillity,
probably the most well known, or notorious depending on your cultural outlook
and degree of liberalism, was Valisk.
Although they were
both, technically, dictatorships, they occupied opposite ends of the political
spectrum, with the dominant ideologies of the remaining three habitats falling
between them, a well-deserved mediocrity. Tranquillity was regarded as elitist,
or even regal given its founder: industrious, rich, and slightly raffish, with
a benevolent, chic ruler, it emphasized the grander qualities of life,
somewhere you aspired to go if you made it. Valisk was older, its glory days
over, or at the very least in abeyance: it played host to a more decadent
population; money here (and there was still plenty) came from exploiting the
darker side of human nature. And its strange governorship repelled rather than
attracted.
It hadn’t always been
so.
Valisk was founded by
an Edenist Serpent called Rubra. Unlike Laton, who terrorized the Confederation
two and a half centuries later, his rebellion was of an altogether more
constructive nature. He was born in Machaon, a habitat orbiting Kohistan, the
largest gas giant in the Srinagar star system. After forty-four years, he
abandoned his culture and his home, sold his not inconsiderable share in his
family’s engineering enterprise, and emigrated to a newly opened Adamist
asteroid settlement in Kohistan’s trailing Trojan cluster.
It was a period of
substantial economic growth for the star system. Srinagar had been colonized by
ethnic-Hindus in 2178 during the Great Dispersal, a hundred and sixteen years
earlier. Basic industrialization had been completed, the world was tamed, and
people were looking for new ways of channelling their energies. All across the
Confederation emerging colony planets were exploiting space resources and
increasing their wealth dramatically. Srinagar was eager to be numbered among
them.
Rubra started with six
leased interplanetary cargo ships. Like all Serpents he was a high achiever in
his chosen field (nearly always to Edenist embarrassment, for so many of them
chose crime). He made a small fortune supplying the Trojan cluster’s small but
wealthy population of engineers and miners with consumer goods and luxuries. He
bought more ships, made a larger fortune, and named his expanding company
Magellanic Itg—joking to his peers that one day he would trade with that
distant star cluster. By 2306, after twelve years of steady growth, Magellanic
Itg owned manufacturing stations and asteroid-mining operations, and had moved
into the interstellar transport market.
At this point Rubra
germinated Valisk in orbit around Opuntia, the fourth of the system’s five gas
giants. It was a huge gamble. He spent his company’s entire financial reserves
cloning the seed, mortgaging half of the starships to boot. And bitek remained
technology non grata for the major religions, including the Hindu faith.
But Srinagar was sufficiently Bolshevik about its new economic independence
from its sponsoring Govcentral Indian states, and energetic enough in its
approach to innovation, to cast a blind eye to proscriptions announced by
fundamentalist Brahmians on a distant imperialist planet over two centuries
earlier. Planet and asteroid governments saw no reason to impose embargoes
against what was rapidly evolving into one of the system’s premier economic
assets. Valisk became, literally, a corporate state, acting as the home port
for Magellanic Itg’s starship fleet (already one of the largest in the sector)
and dormitory town for its industrial stations.
Although Valisk was a
financially advantageous location from which Rubra could run his flourishing
corporate empire, he needed to attract a base population to the habitat to make
it a viable pocket civilization. Industrial stations were therefore granted
extremely liberal weapons and research licences and Valisk started to attract
companies specializing in military hardware. Export constraints were almost
non-existent.
Rubra also opened the
habitat to immigration for “people who seek cultural and religious freedom”,
possibly in reaction to his own formal Edenist upbringing. This invitation
attracted several nonconformist religious cults, spiritual groups, and
primitive lifestyle tribes, who believed that a bitek environment would fulfil
the role of some benevolent Gaia and provide them free food and shelter. Over
nine thousand of these people arrived over the course of the habitat’s first
twenty-five years, many of them drug- or stimulant-program addicts. At this
time, Rubra, infuriated with their unrepentant parasitical nature, banned any
more from entering.
By 2330 the population
had risen to three hundred and fifty thousand. Industrial output was high, and
many interstellar companies were opening regional offices inside.
Then the first
blackhawks to be seen in the Confederation began to appear, all of them
registered with Magellanic Itg, and captained by Rubra’s plentiful offspring.
Rubra had pulled off a spectacular coup against both his competitors and his
former culture. Voidhawk bitek was the most sophisticated ever sequenced;
copying it was a triumph of genetic retro-engineering.
With blackhawks now
acting as the mainstay of his starship fleet, Rubra was unchallengeable. A
large-scale cloning programme saw their numbers rising dramatically; neural
symbionts were used to give captaincies to Adamists who had no qualms about
using bitek, and there were many. By 2365 Magellanic Itg ceased to use anything
other than blackhawks in its transport fleet.
Rubra died in 2390,
one of the wealthiest men in the Confederation. He left behind an industrial
conglomerate used as an example by economists ever since as the classic
corporate growth model. It should have carried on. It had the potential to
rival the Kulu Corporation owned by the Saldana family. Ultimately it might
even have equalled the Edenist He3 cloud-mining operation. No
physical or financial restrictions existed to limit its inherent promise; banks
were more than willing to advance loans, the markets existed, supplied by its
own ships.
But in the end—after
the end—Rubra’s Serpent nature proved less than benign after all. His
psychology was too different, too obsessional. Brought up knowing his
personality pattern would continue to exist for centuries if not millennia, he
refused to accept death as an Adamist. He transferred his personality pattern
into Valisk’s neural strata.
From this point onward
company and habitat started to degenerate. Part of the reason was the
germination of the other independent habitats, all of whom offered themselves
as bases for blackhawk mating flights. The Valisk/Magellanic Itg monopoly was
broken. But the company’s industrial decline, and the habitat’s parallel
deterioration, was due principally to the inheritance problem Rubra created.
When he died he was
known to have fathered over a hundred and fifty children, a hundred and
twenty-two of whom were carefully conceived in vitro and gestated in
exowombs; all had modifications made to their affinity gene, as well as general
physiological improvements. Thirty of the exowomb children were appointed to
Valisk’s executive committee, which ran both the habitat and Magellanic Itg,
while the remainder, along with the rapidly proliferating third generation,
became blackhawk pilots. The naturally conceived children were virtually
disinherited from the company, and many of them returned to the Edenist fold.
Even this nepotistic
arrangement shouldn’t have been too much trouble. There would inevitably be
power struggles within such a large committee, but strong characters would rise
to the top, simple human dynamics demanded it. None ever did.
The alteration Rubra
had made to their affinity gene was a simple one; they were bonded to the
habitat and a single family of blackhawks alone. He robbed them of the Edenist
general affinity. The arrangement gave him access to their minds virtually from
the moment of conception, first through the habitat personality, then after he
died, as the habitat personality.
He shaped them as they
lay huddled in the metal and composite exowombs, and later in their innocent
childhood; a dark conscience nestled maggot-fashion at the centre of their
consciousness, examining their most secret thoughts for deviations from the
path he had chosen. It was a dreadfully perverted version of the love bond
which existed between voidhawks and their captains. His descendants became
little more than anaemic caricatures of himself at his prime. He tried to
instil the qualities which had driven him, and wound up with wretched neurotic
inadequates. The more he attempted to tighten his discipline, the worse their
dependence upon him became. A slow change manifested in the habitat
personality’s psychology. In his growing frustration with his living
descendants he became resentful; of their lives, of their bodily experiences,
of the emotions they could feel, the humanness of glands and hormones running
riot. Rubra was jealous of the living.
Edenist visits to the habitat,
already few and far between, stopped altogether after 2480. They said the
habitat personality had become insane.
Dariat was an
eighth-generation descendant, born a hundred and seventy-five years after
Rubra’s body died. Physically he was virtually indistinguishable from his peer
group; he shared the light coffee-coloured skin and raven hair that signalled
the star system’s ethnic origin. A majority of Valisk’s population originated
insystem, though few of them were practising Hindus. Only his indigo eyes
marked him out as anything other than a straight Srinagar genotype.
He never knew of his
calamitous inheritance until his teens, although even from his infancy he knew
in his heart he was different; he was better, superior to all the other
children in his day club. And when they laughed at him, or teased him, or sent
him to Coventry, he laid into them with a fury that none of them could match.
He didn’t know where it came from himself, only that it lay within, like some
slumbering lake-bottom monster. At first he felt shame at the beatings he
inflicted, blood for a five-year-old is a shocking sight; but even as he ran
home crying a different aspect of the alien ego would appear and soothe him,
calming his pounding heart. There was nothing wrong, he was assured, no crime
committed, only rightness. They shouldn’t have said what they did, catcalled
and sneered. You were right to assert yourself, you are strong, be proud of
that.
After a while the
feelings of guilt ebbed away. When he needed to hit someone he did it without
remorse or regret. His leadership of the day club was undisputed, out of fear
rather than respect.
He lived with his
mother in a starscraper apartment; his father had left her the year he was
born. He knew his father was important, that he helped to manage Magellanic
Itg; but whenever he paid mother and son one of his dutiful visits he was
subject to moody silences or bursts of frantic activity. Dariat didn’t like
him, the grown-up was weird. I can do without him, the boy thought, he’s weak.
The conviction was as strong as one of his didactic imprints. His father
stopped visiting after he was twelve years old.
Dariat concentrated on
science and finance subjects when he began receiving didactic courses at ten
years old, although right at the back of his mind was the faintest notion that
the arts might just have been equally appealing. But they were despicable
moments of weakness, soon swallowed by the pride he felt whenever he passed
another course assessment. He was headed for great things.
At fourteen the crux
came. At fourteen he fell in love.
Valisk’s interior did
not follow the usual bitek habitat convenience of a tropical or sub-tropical
environment. Rubra had decided on a scrub desert extending out from the base of
the northern endcap, then blending slowly into hilly savannah plain of
terrestrial and xenoc grasses before the standard circumfluous salt-water
reservoir at the base of the southern endcap.
Dariat was fond of
hiking round the broad grasslands with their subtle blend of species and
colours. The children’s day club which he used to dominate had long since
broken up. Adolescents were supposed to join sports groups, or general interest
clubs. He had trouble integrating, too many peers remembered his temper and
violence long after he had stopped resorting to such crude methods. They
shunned him, and he told himself he didn’t care. Somebody told him. In dreams
he would find himself walking through the habitat talking to a white-haired old
man. The old man was a big comfort, the things he said, the encouragement he
gave. And the habitat was slightly different, richer, with trees and flowers
and happy crowds, families picnicking.
“It’s going to be like
this once you’re in charge,” the old man told him numerous times. “You’re the
best there’s been for decades. Almost as good as me. You’ll bring it all back
to me, the power and the wealth.”
“This is the future?”
Dariat asked. They were standing on a tall altar of polyp-rock, looking down on
a circular starscraper entrance. People were rushing about with a vigour and
purpose not usually found in Valisk. Every one of them was wearing a Magellanic
Itg uniform. When he lifted his gaze it was as though the northern endcap was
transparent; blackhawks flocked around their docking rings, loaded with
expensive goods and rare artefacts from a hundred planets. Further out, so far
away it was only a hazy ginger blob, Magellanic Itg’s failed Von Neumann
machine spun slowly against the gas giant’s yellow-brown ring array.
“It could be the
future,” the old man sighed regretfully. “If you will only listen how.”
“I will,” Dariat said.
“I’ll listen.”
The old man’s schemes
seemed to coincide with the pressure of conviction and certainty which was
building in his own mind. Some days he seemed so full of ideas and goals he
thought his skull must surely burst apart, whilst on other occasions the dream
man’s long rambling speeches seemed to have developed a tangible echo, lasting
all day long.
That was why he
enjoyed the long bouts of solitude provided by the unadventurous interior.
Walking and exploring obscure areas was the only time the raging thoughts in
his brain slowed and calmed.
Five days after his
fourteenth birthday he saw Anastasia Rigel. She was washing in a river that ran
along the floor of a deep valley. Dariat heard her singing before he saw her.
The voice led him round some genuine rock boulders onto a shelf of naked polyp
which the water had scoured of soil. He squatted down in the lee of the
boulders, and watched her kneeling at the side of the river.
The girl was tall and
much much blacker than anyone he’d seen in Valisk before. She appeared to be in
her late teens (seventeen, he learned later), with legs that seemed to be all bands
of muscle, and long jet-black hair that was arranged in ringlets and woven with
red and yellow beads. Her face was narrow and delicate with a petite nose.
There were dozens of slim silver and bronze bracelets on each arm.
She was only wearing a
blue skirt of some thin cotton. A brown top of some kind lay on the polyp
beside her. Dariat caught some fleeting glimpses of high pointed breasts as she
rubbed water across her chest and arms. It was even better than accessing
bluesense AV fleks and tossing off. For once he felt beautifully calm.
I’m going to have her,
he thought, I really am. The certainty burned him.
She stood up, and
pulled her brown top on. It was a sleeveless waistcoat made from thin supple
leather, laced up the front. “You can come out now,” she said in a clear voice.
Just for a moment he
felt wholly inferior. Then he trotted towards her with a casualness that denied
she had just caught him spying. “I was trying not to alarm you,” he said.
She was twenty
centimetres taller than him; she looked down and grinned openly. “You
couldn’t.”
“Did you hear me? I
thought I was being quiet.”
“I could feel you.”
“Feel me?”
“Yes. You have a very
anguished spirit. It cries out.”
“And you can hear
that?”
“Lin Yi was a distant
ancestress.”
“Oh.”
“You have not heard of
her?”
“No, sorry.”
“She was a famous
spiritualist. She predicted the Big One2 quake in California back on Earth in
2058 and led her followers to safety in Oregon. A perilous pilgrimage for those
times.”
“I’d like to hear that
story.”
“I will tell it if you
like. But I don’t think you will listen. Your spirit is closed against the
realm of Chi-ri.”
“You judge people very
fast. We don’t stand much of a chance, do we?”
“Do you know what the
realm of Chi-ri is?”
“No.”
“Shall I tell you?”
“If you like.”
“Come then.”
She led him up the
river, bracelets tinkling musically at every motion. They followed the tight
curve of the valley; after three hundred metres the floor broadened out, and a
Starbridge village was camped along the side of the river.
Starbridge was the
remnants of the cults and tribes and spiritualists who had moved into Valisk
during its formative years. They had slowly amalgamated down the decades,
bonding together against the scorn and hostility of the other inhabitants. Now
they were one big community, united spiritually with an outré fusion of
beliefs that was often incomprehensible to any outsider. They embraced the
primitive existence, living as tribes of migrants, walking round and round the
interior of the habitat, tending their cattle, practising their handicraft,
cultivating their opium poppies, and waiting for their nirvana.
Dariat looked out on
the collection of ramshackle tepees, stringy animals with noses foraging the
grass, children in rags running barefoot. He experienced a contempt so strong
it verged on physical sickness. He was curious at that, he had no reason to
hate the Starbridge freakos, he’d never had anything to do with them before.
Even as he thought that, the loathing increased. Of course he did, slimy
parasites, vermin on two legs.
Anastasia Rigel
stroked his forehead in concern. “You suffer yet you are strong,” she said.
“You spend so much time in the realm of Anstid.”
She brought him into
her tepee, a cone of heavy handwoven cloth. Wicker baskets ringed the walls.
The light was dim, and the air dusty. The valley’s pinkish grass was matted,
dry and dying underfoot. He saw her sleeping roll bundled up against one
basket, a bright orange blanket with pillows that had some kind of green and
white tree motif embroidered across them, haloed by a ring of stars. He
wondered if that was what he’d do it on, where he’d finally become a real man.
They sat crosslegged
on a threadbare rug and drank tea, which was like coloured water, and didn’t
taste of much. Jasmine, she told him.
“What do you think of
us?” she asked.
“Us?”
“The Starbridge
tribes.”
“Never really thought
about you much,” Dariat said. He was getting itchy sitting on the rug, and it was
pretty obvious there weren’t going to be any biscuits with the tea.
“You should.
Starbridge is both our name and our dream, that which we seek to build. A
bridge between stars, between all peoples. We are the final religion. They will
all come to us eventually; the Christians and Muslims and Hindus and Buddhists,
even the Satanists and followers of Wicca; every sect, every cult. Each and
every one of them.”
“That’s a pretty bold
claim.”
“Not really. Just
inevitable. There were so many of us, you see, when Rubra the Lost invited us
here. So many beliefs, all different, yet really all the same. Then he turned
on us, and confined us, and isolated us. He thought he would punish us, force
us to conform to his materialistic atheism. But faith and dignity is always
stronger than mortal oppression. We turned inwards for comfort, and found we
had so much that we shared. We became one.”
“Starbridge being the
one?”
“Yes. We burned the
old scriptures and prayer books on a bonfire so high the flames reached right
across the habitat. With them went all the ancient prejudices and the myths. It
left us pure, in silence and darkness. Then we rebirthed ourselves, and renamed
what we knew was real. There is so much that old Earth’s religions have in
common; so many identical beliefs and tenets and wisdoms. But their followers
are forced apart by names, by priests who have grown decadent and greedy for
physical reward. Whole peoples, whole planets who denounce one another so that
a few evil men can wear robes of golden cloth.”
“That seems fairly
logical,” Dariat said enthusiastically. “Good idea.” He smiled. From where he
was sitting he could see the whole side of her left breast through the
waistcoat’s lace-up front.
“I don’t think you
have come to faith that quickly,” she said with a trace of suspicion.
“I haven’t. Because
you haven’t told me anything about it. But if you were telling the truth about
hearing my spirit, then you’ve got my full attention. None of the other
religions can offer tangible proof of God’s existence.”
She shifted round on
the rug, bracelets clinking softly. “Neither do we offer proof. What we say is
that life in this universe is only one segment of the great journey a spirit
undertakes through time. We believe the journey will finish when a spirit reaches
heaven, however you choose to define that existence. But don’t ask how close
this universe is to heaven. That depends on the individual.”
“What happens when
your spirit reaches heaven?”
“Transcendence.”
“What sort?”
“That is for God to
proclaim.”
“God. Not a goddess,
then?” he asked teasingly.
She grinned at him.
“The word defines a concept, not an entity, not a white man with a white beard,
nor even an earth mother. Physical bodies require gender. I don’t think the
instigator and sovereign of the multiverse is going to have physical and
biological aspects, do you?”
“No.” He finished the
tea, relieved the cup was empty. “So what are these realms?”
“While the spirit is
riding a body it also moves through the spiritual realms of the Lords and
Ladies who govern nature. There are six realms, and five Lords and Ladies.”
“I thought you said
there was only one heaven?”
“I did. The realms are
not heaven, they are aspects of ourselves. The Lords and Ladies are not God,
but they are of a higher order than ourselves. They affect events through the
wisdoms and deceits they reveal to us. But they have no influence on the
physical reality of the cosmos. They are not the instigators of miracles.”
“Like angels and
demons?” he asked brightly.
“If you like. If that
makes it easier to accept.”
“So they’re in charge
of us?”
“You are in charge of
yourself. You and you alone chose where your spirit roams.”
“Then why the Lords
and Ladies?”
“They grant gifts of
knowledge and insight, they tempt. They test us.”
“Silly thing to do. Why
don’t they leave us alone?”
“Without experience
there can be no growth. Existence is evolution, both on a spiritual and a
personal level.”
“I see. So which is
this Chi-ri I’m closed against?”
Anastasia Rigel
climbed to her feet and went over to one of the wicker baskets. She pulled out
a small goatskin bag. If she was aware of his hungry look following her every
move she never showed it. “These represent the Lords and Ladies,” she said as
she sat back down. The bag’s contents were tipped out. Six coloured
pebble-sized crystals bounced on the rug. They had all been carved, he saw;
cubes with their faces marked by small runes. She picked up the red one. “This
is for Thoale, Lord of destiny.” The blue crystal was held up, and she told him
it was for Chi-ri, Lady of hope. Green was for Anstid, Lord of hatred. Yellow
for Tarrug, Lord of mischief. Venus, Lady of love, was as clear as glass.
“You said there were
six realms,” he said.
“The sixth is the
emptiness.” She proffered a jet-black cube, devoid of runes. “It has no Lord or
Lady, it is where lost spirits flee.” She crossed her arms in front of herself,
fingers touching her shoulders, bracelets falling to the crook of her elbows.
She reminded Dariat of a statue of Shiva he’d seen in one of Valisk’s four temples;
Shiva as Nataraja, king of dancers. “A terrible place,” Anastasia Rigel
murmured coolly.
“You don’t think I
have any hope?” he asked, suddenly annoyed at this primitive paganish nonsense
again.
“You resist it.”
“No, I don’t. I’ve got
lots of hope. I’m going to run this habitat one day,” he added. She ought to be
impressed by that.
Her head was shaken
gently, hair partly obscuring her face. “That is Anstid deceiving you, Dariat.
You spend so much time in his realm, he has an unholy grip upon your spirit.”
“How do you know?” he
said scornfully.
“These are called
Thoale stones. He is the Lord I am beholden to. He shows me what is to unfold.”
A slight, droll smile flickered over her lips. “Sometimes Tarrug intervenes. He
shows me things I should not see, or events I cannot understand.”
“How do the stones
work?”
“Each face is carved
with the rune of a realm. I read the combinations, how they fall, or in the
case of the emptiness where it falls in relation to the others. Would you like
to know what your future contains?”
“Yeah. Go on.”
“Pick up each crystal,
hold it in your hands for a moment, try to impress it with your essence, then
put it in the bag.”
He picked up the clear
one, naturally. Love Lady. “How do I impress it?”
She just shrugged.
He squeezed the crystals
one at a time, feeling increasingly stupid, and dropped them in the goatskin
bag. Anastasia Rigel shook the bag, then tipped the crystals out.
“What does it say?”
Dariat asked, a shade too eagerly for someone who was supposed to be sceptical.
She stared at them a
while, eyes flicking anxiously between the runes. “Greatness,” she said
eventually. “You will come to greatness.”
“Hey, yeah!”
Her hand came up,
silencing him. “It will not last. You shine so bright, Dariat, but for such a
short time, and it is a dark flame which ignites you.”
“Then what?” he asked,
disgruntled.
“Pain, death.”
“Death?”
“Not yours. Many
people, but not yours.”
Anastasia Rigel didn’t
offer to sleep with him that time. Nor any of his visits during the month which
followed. They walked round the savannah together, talking inanities, almost as
brother and sister. She would tell him about the Starbridge philosophy, the
idiosyncrasies of the realms. He listened, but became lost and impatient with a
worldview which seemed to have little internal logic. In return he told her of
his father, the resentment and the confusion of loss; mainly in the hope she’d
feel sorry for him. He took her down into a starscraper; she said she’d never
been in one before. She didn’t like it, the confining walls of the apartments,
although she was fascinated by the slowly spinning starfield outside.
The sexual tension
died down from its initial high-voltage peak, though it was never laid to rest.
It became a sort of game, jibes and smirks, played for points that neither knew
how to win. Dariat enjoyed her company a lot. Someone who treated him fairly,
who took time to hear what he said. Because she wanted to. He could never quite
understand what she got out of the arrangement. She read his future several times,
though none of the readings ever proved quite as dire as the first.
Dariat spent more and
more time with her, almost divorcing himself from the culture lived out in the
starscrapers and industrial stations (except for keeping up on his didactic
courses). The portentous aspirations in his mind lost their grip when he was in
her presence.
He learnt how to milk
a goat, not that he particularly wanted to. They were smelly, bad-tempered
creatures. She cooked him fish which she caught in the streams, and showed him
which plants had edible roots. He found out about the tribe’s way of life, how
they sold a lot of their handicrafts to starship crews, chiefly the rugs and
pottery, how they shunned technology. “Except for nanonic medical packages,”
she said wryly. “Amazing how many women become technocrats around childbirth
time.” He went to some of their ceremonies, which seemed little more than open
air parties where everyone drank a strong distilled spirit, and sang gospel
hymns late into the night.
One evening, when she
was wearing just a simple white cotton poncho, she invited him into her tepee.
He felt all the sexual heat return as the outline of her body was revealed
through the fabric by the light of the tepee’s meagre oil lamp. There was some
kind of clay pot in the centre with a snakelike hose coming from the side. It
was smoking docilely, filling the air with a funny sweet and sour scent.
Anastasia took a puff
on the pipe, and shivered as if she’d swallowed a triple whisky. “Try some,”
she said, her voice rich with challenge.
“What is it?”
“A wide
gate into Tarrug’s realm. You’ll like it. Anstid won’t. He’ll lose all control
over you.”
He looked at the
crimped end of the tube, still wet from her mouth. He wanted to try it. He was
frightened. Her eyes were very wide.
She tipped her head
back, expelling two long plumes of smoke from her nostrils. “Don’t you want to
explore the realm of mischief with me?”
Dariat put the tube in
his mouth and sucked. The next minute he was coughing violently.
“Not so hard,” she said.
Her voice sounded all furred. “Take it down slow. Feel it float through your
bones.”
He did as he was told.
“They’re hollow, you
know, your bones.” Her smile was wide, shining like the light-tube against her
black face.
The world spun round.
He could feel the habitat moving, stars whipping round faster and faster,
smearing across space. Smeared like cream. He giggled. Anastasia Rigel gave him
a long, knowing grin, and took another drag on the tube.
Space was pink. Stars
were black. Water smelt of cheese. “I love you,” he told her. “I love you, I
love you.” The tepee walls were palpitating in and out. He was in the belly of
some huge beast, just like Jonah.
Bloody hell.
“What did you say?”
Shit, I can’t
filter . . . What’s green? What are you—
“My hands are green,”
he explained patiently.
“Are they?” Anastasia
Rigel asked. “That’s interesting.”
What has she given
you?
“Tarrug?” Dariat
asked. Anastasia had said that was who they were going to visit. “Hello,
Tarrug. I can hear him. He’s talking to me.”
Anastasia Rigel was at
right angles to him. She pulled the poncho off over her head, sitting
crosslegged and naked on the rug. Now she was totally upside-down. Her nipples
were black eyes following him.
“That’s not Tarrug you
hear,” she said. “That’s Anstid.”
“Anstid. Hi!”
What is it? What is
in that bloody pipe? Wait, I’m reviewing the local memory . . . Oh,
fuck, it’s salfrond. I can’t hold onto your thoughts when you’re tripping on
that, you little prick.
“I don’t want you to.”
Yes, you do. Oh,
believe me you do, boy. I’ve got the keys to every dark door in this kingdom,
and you’re the golden protégé. Now stop smoking that mind-rotting crap.
Dariat very
deliberately stuck the tube in his mouth, and inhaled until his lungs were
about to burst. His cheeks puffed out. Anastasia Rigel leant forwards and took
the tube from between his lips. “Enough.”
The tepee was spinning
in the opposite direction to the habitat, and outside it was raining shoes.
Black leather shoes with scarlet buckles.
Shit! I’m going to
kill that little black junkie bitch for this. It’s high bloody time I shoved
the Starbridge tribes out of the airlock. Dariat, stand up, boy. Walk outside,
get some fresh air. There’s some medical nanonic packages in the village, the
headman’s got some. They can straighten out your blood chemistry.
Dariat’s giggles
returned. “Piss off.”
GET UP!
“No.”
Weakling! Always
bloody weaklings. You’re no better than your bastard father.
Dariat squeezed his
eyes shut. The colours were behind his eyelids too. “I am not like him.”
Yes, you are. Weak,
feeble, pathetic. All of you are. I should have cloned myself when I had the
chance. Parthenogenetics would have solved all this bullshit. Two fucking
centuries of weaklings I’ve had to endure. Two centuries, fuck it.
“Go away!” Even
stoned, he could tell this wasn’t part of the trip. This was more. This was
much much worse.
“Is he hurting you,
baby?” Anastasia Rigel asked.
“Yes.”
I’ll fucking
cripple you if you don’t get up. Smash your legs, shred your hands to ribbons.
Do you like the sound of that, boy? A life spent grubbing round like a snail.
Can’t walk, can’t feed yourself, can’t wipe your arse.
“Stop it,” Dariat
screamed.
Get up!
“Don’t listen to him,
baby. Close your mind.”
Tell that bitch
from me, she’s dead.
“Please, both of you,
stop it. Leave me alone.”
Get up.
Dariat tried to rise.
He got up to his knees, then fell into Anastasia’s lap.
“You’re mine now,” she
said gladly.
No, you’re not.
You’re mine. Always mine. You can never leave. I won’t allow you to.
Her hands ran over his
clothes, opening seals. Kisses with the sharp cold impact of hailstones fell on
his face. “This is what you wanted, what you always wanted,” she breathed in
his ear. “Me.”
The nauseating colour
stripes blitzing his sight swirled into blackness. Her hot skin sliding up and
down against him. Weight pressing against every part of him. He was doing it!
He was fucking! Tears poured out of his eyes.
“That’s right, baby.
Up inside me. Purge him. Purge him with me. Fly, fly into Venus and Chi-ri.
Leave him behind. Free yourself.”
Always mine.
Dariat woke feeling
awful. He was lying on the stiff tousled grass of the tepee without a stitch of
clothing. The entrance flap was open, a slice of bright morning light sliding
through. A heavy dew mottled his legs. Something had died and decomposed in his
mouth, his tongue by the feel of it. Anastasia Rigel was lying beside him.
Naked and beautiful. Arms tucked up against her chest.
Last night. I fucked
her. I did it!
He tried to smother an
ecstatic laugh.
Feeling better?
Dariat screamed. It
was inside his head. Anstid. The realm demigod.
He jerked around,
hugging himself, biting his lower lip so hard he drew blood.
Don’t be an idiot.
I’m not a bloody spirit bogeyman. There’s no such thing. Religion is a
psychological crutch for mental inadequates. Spiritualism is for mental
paraplegics. Think what that makes your girlie friend.
“What are you?”
Anastasia Rigel woke
up, blinking against the light. She ran her hand through her wild hair and sat
up, looking at him with a curious expression.
I’m your ancestor.
“A lost spirit from
the emptiness?” he asked, wide eyed with fright.
Give me one more
word of mythology and I really will have your legs broken. Now think logically.
I’m your ancestor. Who can I be?
Information from his didactic
history courses tumbled into his thoughts. “Rubra?” The idea didn’t make him
feel any better at all.
Well done. Now stop
panicking, and stop shivering. I don’t normally talk direct to someone your
age, I like to let you have sixteen years to yourself. But I’m not going to
allow you to become a dopehead. Do not ever smoke that stuff again. Understand?
“Yes, sir.”
Stop vocalizing.
Concentrate your thoughts.
“What are you saying,
baby?” Anastasia Rigel asked. “Are you still tripping?”
“No. It’s Rubra, he’s
. . . We’re talking.”
She pulled the white
poncho round herself, giving him an alarmed look.
I’ve got plans for
you, boy, Rubra said. Big
plans. You’re destined for Magellanic Itg’s executive committee.
I am?
Yes. If you play
your cards right. If you do as you’re told.
I will.
Good. Now I’ve been
lenient letting you sow your oats with dinky little Anastasia. I can understand
that, she’s got a nice body, good tits, pretty face. I had a sex drive myself,
once. But you’ve had your fun now; so put your clothes on and say goodbye.
We’ll find someone a bit more suitable.
I can’t leave her.
Not after . . . last night.
Take a real good
look at yourself, boy. Rutting with a bubblehead primitive on a filthy mat in a
tepee. Some friend, she filled your brain with two kinds of shit. That’s not
how Valisk’s future ruler is going to behave. Is it?
No, sir.
Good boy.
He started to pick up
his clothes.
“Where are you going?”
she asked.
“Home.”
“He told you to.”
“I . . .
What is there here?”
She gave him a forlorn
look over the white poncho which was still clasped to her body. “Me. Your
friend. Your lover.”
He shook his head.
“I’m human. That’s
more than he is.”
Come on. Leave.
Dariat pulled on his
shoes. He paused by the entrance flap.
“It’s Anstid,” she
said in a mournful tone. “That’s who you really talk to.”
Pseudobabble.
Ignore her.
Dariat walked slowly
out of the village. Some of the elders gave him strange looks as he passed
their steaming cooking pits. They couldn’t understand. Why would anyone leave
Anastasia’s bed?
That’s their
trouble, boy. They’re too backward. The real world is beyond them. I really
must get round to cleaning them out one day.
Now Dariat knew what
he was, what he was destined for, the didactic courses took on a whole new
level of importance. He listened to Rubra’s advice on the specializations he
needed, the grades he had to achieve. He became obedient, and a shade resentful
at his own compliance. But what else was there? Starbridge?
In return for
acquiescence Rubra taught him how to use the affinity bond with the habitat.
How to access the sensitive cells to see what was going on, how he could call
on vast amounts of processing power, the tremendous amount of stored data that
was available.
One of the first things
Rubra did was to guide him through a list of possible replacement girls, eager
to bury the lingering traces of yearning for Anastasia Rigel. Dariat felt like
a voyeuristic ghost, watching the prospective candidates through the sensitive
cells; seeing them at home, talking to their friends. Some of them he watched
having sex with their boyfriends, two with other girls, which was exciting.
Rubra didn’t seem to object to these prolonged observations. At least it meant
he didn’t have to pay for bluesense fleks any more.
One girl he chanced on
was nice, Chilone, nine months older than him. As black as Anastasia (which was
what first caught his attention), but with dark auburn hair. Shy and pretty,
who talked a lot about sex and boys with her girl friends.
Still he hesitated
from meeting her, even though he knew her daily routine, knew her interests,
what to say, which day clubs she belonged to. He could contrive a dozen
encounters.
Get on with it, Rubra told him after a week of cautious
scrutiny. Screw her brains out. You don’t think Anastasia’s still pining
over you, do you?
What?
Try using the
sensitive cells around the tepee.
That was something
he’d never done, not using the habitat’s perception faculty to spy on her. But
the tone Rubra used had a hint of cruel amusement in it.
Anastasia had a lover,
Mersin Columba, another Starbridge. A man in his forties; overweight, balding,
with white pallid skin. They looked horrible locked together. Anastasia
flinched silently as she lay underneath his pumping body.
The old white-hot
infantile fury rose into Dariat’s mind. He wanted to save her from the
repellent humiliation; his beautiful girl who had loved him.
Take my advice. Go
find young Chilone.
Like juvenile
Edenists, it hadn’t taken Dariat long to discover how to fox the habitat’s
sensitive cells. Unless Rubra’s principal personality pattern was concentrating
on him in particular, the autonomous monitoring of the subroutines could be
circumvented.
Dariat used the
sensitive cells to follow Mersin Columba out of the tepee. The podgy oaf had a
smug smile on his face as he made his way down to the stream. Anastasia Rigel
was curled up on her rug, staring at nothing.
Mersin Columba made
his way down the valley before stripping off his shirt and trousers. He
splashed into a wide pool, and began to wash off the smell and stains of sex.
The first blow from
Dariat’s wooden cudgel caught him on the side of his head, tearing his ear. He
grunted and dropped to his knees. The second blow smashed across the crown of
his skull.
Stop it!
Dariat aimed another
blow; laughing at the surprise on the man’s face. Nobody does that to my girl.
Nobody does that to me! A cascade of blows rained down on Mersin Columba’s
unprotected head. Rubra’s furious demands were reduced to a wasp’s buzz at the
back of Dariat’s raging mind. He was vengeance. He was omnipotent, more than
any realm Lord. He struck and struck, and it felt good.
The water pushed at
Mersin Columba’s inert body. Long ribbons of blood wept from the battered head,
turned to tattered curlicues by the current. Dariat stood over him. The bloody
length of wood dropped from his fingers.
I didn’t realize
what I’d created with you, Rubra
said. The silent voice lacked its usual conviction.
Dariat shivered
suddenly. His heart was pumping hard. Anastasia is mine. Well, she certainly
doesn’t belong to poor old Mersin Columba any more, and that’s a fact.
The body had drifted
five metres downstream. Dariat thought it looked repugnant, sickly white,
bloated.
Now what? he asked sullenly.
I’d better get some
housechimps to tidy up. And you’d better make tracks.
Is that it?
I’m not going to
punish you for killing a Starbridge. But we’re going to have to work on that
temper of yours. It can be useful, but only if it’s applied properly.
For the company.
Yes. And don’t you
forget it. Don’t worry, you’ll improve with age.
Dariat turned and
walked away from the river. He hiked up out of the valley and spent the
afternoon wandering aimlessly around the savannah.
His thoughts were
glacial. He had killed a man, but there was no remorse, no sense of guilt. No
sense of satisfaction, either. He felt nothing, as if the whole incident was an
act he’d seen on an AV recording.
When the light-tube
began to dim into brassy twilight he turned and made his way towards the
Starbridge village.
Where do you think
you’re going? Rubra asked.
She’s mine. I love
her. I’m going to have her. Tonight, always.
No. Only I am for
always.
You can’t stop me.
I don’t care about the company. Keep it. I never wanted it. I want Anastasia.
Don’t be a fool.
Dariat detected
something then, a strand of emotion wound up with the mental voice: anxiety.
Rubra was worried.
What’s happened?
Nothing’s happened.
Go home. It’s been a hellish day.
No. He tried to use the sensitive cells to show him
the village. Nothing, Rubra was blocking his affinity.
Go home.
Dariat started
running.
Don’t, boy!
It was over a
kilometre back to the valley. The pink and yellow grass came up to his waist in
places, blades whipping his legs. He reached the brow of the slope and looked
down in dismay. The village was packing up, moving on. Half of the tepees were
already down, folded into bundles and put on the carts. Animals were being
rounded up. All the fire pits were out. It was a crazy time to be moving. Night
was almost here. His sense of calamity redoubled.
Dariat sprinted down
the steep slope, falling twice, grazing his knees and shins. He didn’t care.
Faces turned to watch as he dashed towards Anastasia’s tepee.
He was shouting her
name as he shoved the entrance flap aside.
The rope had been tied
to the apex of the tepee. She must have used a stack of her wicker baskets to
stand on. They were scattered all over the floor.
Her head was tilted to
one side, the rope pressing into her left cheek, just behind the ear. She
swayed slightly from side to side, the tepee’s poles letting out quiet creaks.
Dariat stared at her
for some immeasurable time. He didn’t understand why. Not any of it.
Come on, boy. Come
on home.
No. You did this.
You made me leave her. She was mine. This would never have happened if you’d
stayed out of my life. Tears
were pouring down his cheeks.
I am your life.
You’re not. Not not
not. He closed out the voice.
Refusing to hear the pleas and threats.
One of the wicker
baskets had a piece of paper lying on top. It was weighted down by Anastasia’s
goatskin bag. Dariat picked it up, and read the message she’d written.
Dariat, I know it was
you. I know you thought you did it for me. You didn’t. You did it because it’s
what Anstid wanted, he will never allow you an alliance with Thoale. I thought
I could help you. But I see I can’t; I’m not strong enough to defy a realm
Lord. I’m sorry.
I can’t see any
purpose in staying in this universe any more. I’m going to free my spirit and
continue my flight towards God. The Thoale stones are my gift to you; use them
please. You have so many battles to fight. Seeing the future may help you win
some.
I want you to know I
loved you for all the time we were together.
Anastasia Rigel
He loosened the thong
at the top of the bag and spilled the six crystals onto the dusty rug. The five
which were carved with runes landed with the blank face uppermost. He slowly
picked them up, and threw them again. They came up blank. The empty realm,
where lost spirits go.
Dariat fled the
Starbridge village. He never went back. He stopped taking didactic courses,
refused to acknowledge Rubra’s affinity bond, argued a lot with his mother, and
moved into a starscraper apartment of his own at fifteen.
There was nothing
Rubra could do. His most promising protégé for decades was lost to him. The
affinity window into Dariat’s mind remained closed; it was the most secure
block the habitat personality pattern had ever known, remaining in place even
while the boy slept. After a month of steady pressure Rubra gave up, even
Dariat’s subconscious was sealed against subliminal suggestions. The block was
more than conscious determination, it was a profound psychological inhibition.
Probably trauma based.
Rubra cursed yet
another failure descendant, and switched his priority to a new fledgeling.
Monitoring of Dariat was assigned to an autonomic sub-routine. Occasional
checks by the personality’s principal consciousness revealed a total drop-out,
a part-time drunk, part-time hustler picking up beer money by knowing people
and where to find them, getting involved with deals which were dubious even for
Valisk. Dariat never got a regular job, living off the starscraper food pap,
accessing MF albums, sometimes for days on end. He never approached a girl
again.
It was a stand-off
which lasted for thirty years. Rubra had even stopped his intermittent checks
on the wrecked man. Then the Yaku arrived at Valisk.
The Yaku’s
emergence above Opuntia six days after it left Lalonde never raised a query.
None of Graeme Nicholson’s fleks had yet reached their destination when the
cargo starship asked for and was granted docking permission. As far as both the
habitat personality and the Avon Embassy’s small Intelligence team (the only
Confederation observers Rubra would allow inside) were concerned it was just
another cargo starship visiting a spaceport which handled nearly thirty
thousand similar visits a year.
Yaku had emerged a little further away from Valisk
than was normal, and its flight vector required a more than average number of
corrections—the fusion drive was fluctuating in an erratic fashion. But then a
lot of the Adamist starships using Valisk operated on the borderline of CAB
spaceworthiness requirements.
It docked at a
resupply bay on the edge of the three-kilometre-wide disk which was the
habitat’s non-rotational spaceport. The captain requested a quantity of He3
and deuterium, as well as oxygen, water, and some food. Spaceport service
companies were contracted within ten minutes of its arrival.
Three people
disembarked. Their passport fleks named them as Marie Skibbow, Alicia Cochrane,
and Manza Balyuzi; the last two were members of Yaku’s crew. All three
cleared Valisk’s token immigration and customs carrying small bags with a
single change of clothing.
The Yaku undocked
four hours later, its cryogenic tanks full, and flew down towards Opuntia.
Whatever its jump coordinate was, the gas giant was between it and Valisk when
it activated its energy patterning nodes. No record of its intended destination
existed.
Dariat was sitting up
at the bar in the Tabitha Oasis when the girl caught his eye. Thirty years of
little exercise, too much cheap beer, and a diet of starscraper gland
synthesized pastes had brought about a detrimental effect on his once slim
physique. He was fat verging on obese, his skin was flaky, his hair was dulled
by a week’s accumulation of oil. Appearance wasn’t something he paid a lot of
attention to. A togalike robe covered a multitude of laxities.
That girl, though:
teenaged, long limbed, large breasted, exquisite face, bronzed, strong. Wearing
a tight white T-shirt and short black skirt. He wasn’t alone in watching her.
The Tabitha Oasis attracted a tough crew. Girl like that was a walking
gang-bang invitation. It had happened before. But she hadn’t got a care in the
world, there was an élan to her which was mesmerizing. All the more
surprising, then, was her table companion.
Anders Bospoort:
physically her counterpart; late twenties, slab muscles, the best swarthy face
money could buy. But he didn’t have her youthful exuberance, his mouth and eyes
smiled (for that money they ought to) but there was no emotion powering the
expression. Anders Bospoort was in almost equal proportions gigolo, pimp,
pusher, and blue-sense star.
Strange she couldn’t
see that. But he could pile on the charm when necessary, and the expensive wine
bottle sitting on the table between them was nearly empty.
Dariat beckoned the
barkeeper over. “What’s her name?”
“Marie. Arrived on a
ship this afternoon.”
That explained a lot.
Nobody had warned her. Now the wolves of the Tabitha Oasis were circling the
camp-fire, enjoying her elaborate seduction. Later they would be able to share
the corruption of youth, sensevising Anders Bospoort’s boosted penis sliding up
between her legs. Have her surprise and pleading in their ears. Feel the ripe
body molested by powerful skilled hands.
Maybe Anders wasn’t so
stupid, Dariat thought, bringing her here was a good advert. He could ask an
easy ten per cent over the odds for her flek.
The barkeeper shook
his head sadly. He was three times Dariat’s age, and he’d spent his every year
in Valisk. He’d seen it all, so he claimed, every human foible. “Pity, nice
girl like that. Someone should tell her.”
“Yeah. Anywhere else,
and someone might.” Dariat looked at her again. Surely a girl with her beauty
couldn’t be that naïve about men?
Anders Bospoort
extended a gracious arm as they rose from the table. Marie smiled and accepted
it. He thought she looked glad at the opportunity to stay close. The gazes she
drew from the men of the Tabitha Oasis weren’t exactly coy. His size and
measured presence was a reassurance. She was safe with him.
They walked across the
vestibule outside the bar, and Anders datavised the starscraper’s mechanical
systems control processor for a lift.
“Thank you for taking
me there,” Marie said.
He saw the excitement
in her eyes at the little taste of the illicit. “I don’t always go there. It
can get a little rough. Half of the regulars have Confederation warrants
hanging over them. If the navy ever comes visiting Valisk the population on
penal planets would just about double overnight.”
The lift arrived. He
gestured her through the open doors. Halfway there, and it was going so
smoothly. He’d been a perfect gentleman from the moment they met outside the
Apartment Allocation Office (always the best place to pick up clean meat),
every word clicking flawlessly into place. And she’d been drawn closer and
closer, hypnotized by the old Bospoort magic.
She glanced
uncertainly at the floor as the doors closed, as if she’d only just realized
how far from her home and family she was. All alone with her only friend in the
whole star system. No going back for her now.
He felt a tightening
in his stomach as the anticipation heightened. This would all go on the flek;
the prelude, the slow-burning conquest. People appreciated the build in
tension. And he was an artiste supreme.
The doors opened to
the eighty-third floor.
“It’s a walk down two
floors,” Anders told her apologetically. “The lifts don’t work below here. And
the maintenance crews won’t come down to fix them. Sorry.”
The vestibule hadn’t
been cleaned for a long time and rubbish was accumulating in the corners. There
was graffiti on the walls, a smell of urine in the air. Marie looked round
nervously, and stayed close to Anders’ side.
He guided her to the
stairwell. The light was dim, a strip of electrophorescent cells on the wall
whose output had faded to an insipid yellow. Dozens of big pale moths whirred
incessantly against it. Water leaked down the walls from cracks in the polyp. A
cream-coloured moss grew along the edge of every step.
“It’s very kind of you
to let me stay with you,” Marie ventured.
“Just until you get
your own apartment sorted out. There are hundreds of unused ones. It’s one of
life’s greater mysteries why it always takes so long for the Allocation Office
to assign one.”
Nobody else was using
the stairs. Anders very rarely got to meet any of his neighbours. The bottom of
the starscraper was perfect for him. No quick access, everyone stayed behind
closed doors to conduct their chosen business in life, and no questions were
ever asked. The cops Magellanic Itg contracted to maintain a kind of order in
the rest of Valisk didn’t come down here.
They left the
stairwell on his floor, and he datavised a code at his apartment door. Nothing
happened. He flashed her a strained smile, and datavised the code again. This
time it opened, juddering once or twice as it slid along its rails. Marie went
in first. Anders deliberately kept the inside lights low, and codelocked the
door behind him—at least the processor acknowledged that. He put his arm round
her shoulder and steered her into the biggest of the three bedrooms. That door
was codelocked too.
Marie walked into the
middle of the room, eyes straying to the double bed. There were long velvet
straps fixed to each corner.
“Take your clothes
off,” Anders told her. An uncompromising sternness appeared in his voice. He
datavised an order to the overhead light panel, but it remained at its lowest
level. Shit! And she was obediently stripping off. Nothing for it, he’d have to
stay with the deep shadows and hope everyone found it erotic.
“Now take mine off,”
he ordered. “Slowly.”
He could feel her
hands trembling as she pushed the shirt off his broad shoulders, which made a
nice touch. Nervous ones were always more responsive.
His eyes ran over her
with expert tracking as she walked ahead of him to the bed, capturing every
square centimetre of flesh on display. When she was lying on the water mattress
his hands traced the same route. Then his boosted cock was swelling to its full
length, and he focused on her face to make sure he captured her fear. That was
always a big turn on for the punters.
Marie was smiling.
The lights sprang up
to full intensity.
Anders twisted round
in confusion. “Hey—”
At first he thought
someone had crept up and snapped handcuffs round his wrists, but when he looked
he saw it was Marie’s elegant feminine hands gripping him.
“Let go.” The pain as
she squeezed harder was frightening. “Bitch! Let go. Christ—”
She laughed.
He looked back down at
her, and gasped. She was sprouting hair right across her chest and stomach,
thick black bristles that scratched and pricked his skin where he lay on top of
her. Individual strands began to harden. It was like lying on a hedgehog hide.
The long tips were puncturing his own skin, needling in through the
subcutaneous layers of fat.
“Fuck me, then,” she
said.
He tried to struggle,
but all that did was push more needle spines into his abdomen. Marie let go of
one wrist. He hit her then, on the side of her ribs, and her flesh gave way
below his fist. When he brought his hand away it was covered in yellow and red
slime. The spines piercing him turned to worms, slick and greasy, licking round
inside the swath of puncture holes down his torso. Blood trickled out.
Anders let out an
insane howl. She was rotting below him, skin melting away into a putrescent
crimson film of mucus. It was acting like glue, sticking him to her. The stench
was vile, stinging his eyes. He puked, the wine from the Tabitha Oasis
splattering down on her deliquescing face.
“Kiss me.”
He bucked and
floundered against her, weeping helplessly, praying to a God he hadn’t
addressed in over a decade. The worms were wriggling between his abdominal
muscles, twining round tendon fibres. Blood and pus squelched and intermingled,
forming a sticky glue which wedded them belly to belly like Siamese twins.
“Kiss me, Anders.”
Her free hand clamped
onto the back of his skull. It felt like there was nothing left on it but bone.
Sludge dripped into his coiffured hair.
“No!” he whimpered.
Her lips had dribbled
away like candle wax, leaving a wide gash in the bubbling corruption that was
her face. The teeth were a permanent grin. His head was being forced down
towards her. He saw her teeth parting, then they were rammed against his own
face.
The kiss. And hot,
black, gritty liquid surged up out of her throat. Anders couldn’t scream any
more. It was in his own mouth, kneading its way down his air passage like a
fat, eager serpent.
A voice from nowhere
said: “We can stop it.”
The liquid detonated
into his lungs. He could feel it, hot and rancid inside his chest, swelling out
to invade every delicate cavity. His ribcage heaved at the alien pressure from
within. He had stopped struggling.
“She’ll kill you
unless you let us help. She’s drowning you.”
He wanted to breathe.
He wanted air. He would do anything to breathe. Anything.
“Then let us in.”
He did.
Using the sensitive
cells in the polyp above Anders Bospoort’s bed, Dariat watched as the injuries
and manifestations reversed themselves. Marie’s glutinous skin hardened,
bristles retracting. The wounds down Anders Bospoort’s abdomen closed up. They
became what they were before: satyr and seraph.
Anders began to stroke
himself, hands tracing lines of muscle across his chest. He looked down on his
body with a childlike expression of awe which swiftly became a broad grin. “I’m
magnificent,” he whispered. “Utterly magnificent.” The accent was different to
Anders’ usual. Dariat couldn’t quite place it.
“Yes, you look pretty
good,” she replied indifferently. She sat up. The sheets were stained a faint
pink below her back.
“Let me have you.”
Her mouth wrinkled up
with indecision.
“Please. You know I
need to. Hell, it’s been seven hundred years. Show a little compassion here.”
“All right then.” She
lay back down. Anders started to lick her body, reminding Dariat of a feeding
dog. They fucked for twenty minutes, Anders rutting with a fervour he’d never
shown in any of his fleks. Electric lights and household equipment went berserk
as they thrashed about. Dariat quickly checked the neighbouring apartments; a
stimulant-program writer was yelling in frustration as his processors crashed
at tremendous speed; a clone merchant’s vats seethed and boiled as regulators
fried the fragile cell clusters which they were wired up to. Doors all around
the vestibule opened and shut like guillotines. He had to launch a flurry of
subversive affinity orders into the floor’s neural cells to prevent the local
personality subroutines from alerting Rubra’s principal consciousness.
When he arrived,
puffing heavily, outside the apartment, Marie and Anders Bospoort were getting
dressed. He used a black-market customized processor block to break the door’s
codelock, and walked straight in.
Marie and Anders
looked up in alarm. They ran out of the bedroom. The processor block died in
Dariat’s hand and the apartment was plunged into pitch darkness.
“The dark doesn’t
bother me,” he said loudly. The sensitive cells showed him the two of them were
walking towards him menacingly.
“Nothing will bother
you from now on,” Marie replied.
The belt of his toga
robe began to tighten round his belly. “Wrong. Firstly you won’t be able to
tyrannize me like you did poor old Anders, I’m not that weak. Secondly, if I
die Rubra will see exactly what’s been going on, and what you are. He might be
crazy, but he’ll fight like a lion to defend his precious habitat and
corporation. Once he knows you exist you’ve lost ninety per cent of your
advantage. You’ll never take over Valisk without my help.”
The lights came back
on. His belt loosened. Marie and Anders regarded him with expressionless faces.
“It’s only thanks to
me he doesn’t know already. You obviously don’t understand much about bitek. I
can help there as well.”
“Perhaps we don’t care
if he knows,” Anders said.
“OK, fine. You want me
to lift the limiter orders I put on this floor’s sensitive cells?”
“What do you want?”
Marie asked.
“Revenge. I’ve waited
thirty years for you. It’s been so long, so very tiring; I nearly broke on more
than one occasion. But I knew you would come in the end.”
“You expected me?” she
asked derisively.
“What you are, yes.”
“And what am I?”
“The dead.”
Chapter 04
Gemal emerged from its jump six hundred and fifty
thousand kilometres above Mirchusko, where the gas giant’s gravity anchored it
in a slightly elliptical orbit; Tranquillity, in its lower circular orbit, was
trailing by two hundred thousand kilometres. Oliver Llewelyn, the colonist-carrier’s
captain, identified his starship to the habitat personality, and requested
approach and docking permission.
“Do you require
assistance?” Tranquillity asked.
“No, we’re fully
functional.”
“I don’t get many
colonist-carrier vessels visiting. I thought you might have been making an
emergency maintenance call.”
“No. This flight is
business.”
“Does your entire
passenger complement wish to apply for residency?”
“Quite the opposite.
The zero-tau pods are all empty. We’ve come to hire some military specialists
who live here.”
“I see. Docking and
approach request granted. Please datavise your projected vector to spaceport
flight control.”
Terrance Smith
datavised a sensor access request into the starship’s flight computer, and
watched the massive bitek habitat growing larger as they accelerated towards
rendezvous in a complex manoeuvre at two-thirds of a gee. He opened a channel
to the habitat’s communication net, and asked for a list of starships currently
docked. Names and classifications flowed through his mind. A collation program
sorted through them, indicating possibles and probables.
“I didn’t realize this
was such a large port,” he said to Oliver Llewelyn.
“It has to be,” the
captain replied. “There are at least five major family-owned civil carrier
fleets based here purely because of the tax situation, and most of the other
line companies have offices in the habitat. Then you’ve got to consider the
residents. They import one hell of a lot; everything you need to live the good
life, from food to clothes to pretentious art. You don’t think they’ll eat the
synthesized pulp the starscrapers grow, do you?”
“No, I suppose not.”
“A lot of ships pick
up contracts for them, bringing stuff in from all over the Confederation. And
of course Tranquillity is the Confederation’s principal base for blackhawk
mating flights now Valisk is falling from favour with the captains. The eggs
gestate down in the big inner ring. It all adds together. The Lords of Ruin
have built it into one of the most important commercial centres in this
sector.”
Terrance looked across
the bridge. Seven acceleration couches were arranged in a petal pattern on its
composite decking, and only one of them was empty. The compartment had an
industrial look, with cables and ducts fixed to the walls rather than being
tucked neatly out of sight behind composite panels. But then that was a uniform
characteristic throughout the Gemal and her sister ships which shuttled
between Earth and stage one colony worlds. They were bulk carriers whose cargo happened
to be people, and the line companies didn’t waste money on cosmetic finishes.
Captain Llewelyn was
lying inertly on his acceleration couch, surrounded by a horseshoe of bulky
consoles; a well-built sixty-eight-year-old oriental with skin as smooth as any
adolescent. His eyes were shut as he handled the datavise from the flight
computer.
“Have you been here
before?” Terrance asked.
“I stopped over two
days, that was thirty-five years ago when I was a junior officer in a different
company. Don’t suppose it’s changed much. Plutocrats put a lot of stock in
stability.”
“I’d like you to talk
to the other captains for me, the independent trader starships we want to hire.
I haven’t exactly done this kind of work before.”
Oliver Llewelyn
snorted softly. “You let people know what kind of flight you’re putting
together, then start flashing that overloaded Jovian Bank credit disk around,
and you’ll be beating them off with a stick.”
“What about the
mercenaries and general troops?”
“The captains will put
you in touch. Hell, the combat boosted will pay the captains for an
introduction. You want my advice, delegate. Find yourself ten or twenty officer
types with some solid experience, and let them recruit troops for you. Don’t
try and do it all yourself. We haven’t got time, for a start. Rexrew gave us a
pretty tight schedule.”
“Thanks.”
“You’re paying,
remember?”
“Yeah.” It had taken
twenty thousand fuseodollars just to get Oliver Llewelyn to agree to take the Gemal
to Tranquillity. “Not part of my LDC contract,” the captain had said
stubbornly. Money was easier than datavising legal requirements at him.
Terrance suspected it was going to cost a lot more to take the Gemal back
to Lalonde. “You sound like you know what you’re talking about,” he said,
mildly intrigued.
“I’ve flown a lot of
different missions in my time,” the old captain said indifferently.
“So where do I meet
these starship captains?”
Oliver Llewelyn
accessed a thirty-five-year-old file in his neural nanonics. “We’ll start at
Harkey’s Bar.”
Fifteen hours later
Terrance Smith had to admit that Oliver Llewelyn had been perfectly correct. He
didn’t need to make any effort, the people he wanted came to him. Like iron to
a magnet, he thought, or flies to shit. He was sitting in a wall booth, feeling
like an old-style tsar holding court, receiving petitions from eager subjects.
Harkey’s Bar was full with starship crews hunched around tables, or
concentrating in small knots at the bar. There was also a scattering of the combat
boosted in the room. He had never seen them before, not in the flesh—if that’s
what it could be called. Several of them resembled cosmoniks, with a tough
silicon outer skin, and dual—even triple—lower arms, sockets customized for
weapons. But the majority had a sleeker appearance than the cosmoniks, whose
technology they pilfered; they’d been sculpted for agility rather than blunt
EVA endurance, although Terrance could see one combat boosted who was almost
globular, his (her?) head a neckless dome, with a wrap-around retinal strip,
grainy auburn below its clear lens. The lid rippled constantly, a blink moving
round and round. There were four stumpy legs, and four arms, arranged
symmetrically. The arms were the most human part of the modified body, since only
two of them ended in burnished metal sockets. He tried not to stare at the
assembled grotesqueries, not to show his inner nerves.
The bar’s atmosphere
was subdued, heavy with anticipation. It was long past the time the band were
usually jamming on stage, but tonight they were drinking back in the kitchen,
resigned to a blown gig.
“Captain André
Duchamp,” Oliver Llewelyn said. “Owner of the Villeneuve’s Revenge.”
Terrance shook hands
with the smiling round-faced captain. There was some contradiction in his mind
that such a jovial-seeming man should want to join a military mission. “I need
starships capable of landing a scout team on a terracompatible planet, then
backing them up with tactical ground strikes,” he said.
André put his
wineglass down squarely on the table. “The Villeneuve’s Revenge has four
X-ray lasers and two electron-beam weapons. Planetary bombardment from low
orbit will not be a problem.”
“There could also be
some anti-ship manoeuvres required from you. Some interdiction duties.”
“Again, monsieur, this
is not a problem from my personal position; we do have combat-wasp
launch-cradles. However, you would have to provide the wasps themselves. And I
would require some reassurance that we will not be involved in any
controversial action in a system where Confederation Navy ships are present. As
a commercial vessel I have no licence to carry such items.”
“You would be
operating under government licence, which allows you to carry any weapons
system quite legitimately. This entire mission is completely legal.”
“So?” André Duchamp
gave him a quizzical glance. “This is excellent news. A legal combat mission is
one I will welcome. As I say, I have no objection to conducting anti-ship
engagements. May I ask which government you represent?”
“Lalonde.”
André Duchamp had a
long blink while his neural nanonics almanac file reviewed the star system. “A
stage one colony world. Interesting.”
“I am negotiating with
several astroengineering companies with stations here at Tranquillity for
combat wasps,” Terrance Smith said. “There will also be several nuclear-armed
atmospheric-entry warheads to be taken on the mission. Would you be prepared to
carry and deploy them?”
“Oui.”
“In that case, I
believe we can do business, Captain Duchamp.”
“You have yet to
mention money.”
“I am authorized to
issue a five hundred thousand fuseodollar fee for every ship which registers
for Lalonde naval duty, payable on arrival at our destination. Pay for an
individual starship is three hundred thousand fuseodollars per month, with a minimum
of two months’ duty guaranteed. There will be bonuses for enemy starships and
spaceplanes destroyed, and a completion bonus of three hundred thousand
fuseodollars. We will not, however, be providing insurance cover.”
André Duchamp took a
leisurely sip of wine. “I have one further question.”
“Yes?”
“Does this enemy use
antimatter?”
“No.”
“Very well. I would
haggle the somewhat depressing price . . .” He cast a glance around
the crowded room, crews not quite watching to see what the outcome would be.
“But I feel I am not in a strong bargaining position. Today it is a buyer’s
market.”
From his table on the
other side of the bar Joshua watched André Duchamp rise from Terrance Smith’s
booth. The two of them shook hands again, then André went back to the table
where his crew were waiting. They all went into a tight huddle. Wolfgang
Kuebler, captain of the Maranta, was shown to Smith’s booth by Oliver
Llewelyn.
“That looks like five
ships signed up,” Joshua said to his crew.
“Big operation,”
Dahybi Yadev said. He drained his beer glass and sat it down on the table.
“Starships, combat-boosted mercs, enhanced troops; that’s a long, expensive
shopping list. Big money involved.”
“Lalonde can’t be
paying, then,” Melvyn Ducharme said. “It doesn’t have any money.”
“Yes, it does,” Ashly
Hanson said quietly. “A colony world is a massive investment, and a very solid
one if you get in early enough. A healthy percentage of my zero-tau maintenance
trust-fund portfolio is made up from development company shares, purely for the
long-term stability they offer. I’ve never, ever heard of a colony failing once
the go-ahead has been given. The money may not be floating around the actual
colonists themselves, but the amount of financial resources required simply to
initiate such a venture runs close to a trillion fuseodollars. And Lalonde has
been running for over a quarter of a century, they’d even started an asteroid
industrial settlement project. Remember? The development company has the money;
more than enough to hire fifteen independent traders and a few thousand
mercenary troops. I doubt it would even cause a ripple in their accountancy
program.”
“What for, though?”
Sarha Mitcham asked. “What couldn’t the sheriffs handle by themselves?”
“The Ivet riots,”
Joshua said. Even he couldn’t manage any conviction. He shrugged under the
sceptical looks the others gave him. “Well, there was nothing else while we
were there. Marie Skibbow was worried about the scale of the civil disturbance.
Nobody quite knew what was happening upriver. And the number of troops this
Smith character is trying to recruit implies some kind of ground action is
required.”
“Hard to believe,”
Dahybi Yadev muttered. “But the actual mission objective won’t be known until
after they’ve jumped away from Tranquillity. Simple security.”
“All right,” Joshua
said. “We all know the score. With Parris Vasilkovsky backing us on the mayope
venture we have a chance to make macro money. And at the same time, with the
money we made from the Norfolk run we certainly don’t need to hire on with any
mercenary fleet.” He looked at each of them in turn. “Given the circumstances,
we can hardly take Lady Mac to Lalonde ahead of the fleet. I’ve heard
that Terrance Smith has ordered a batch of combat wasps from the McBoeing and
Signal-Yakovlev industrial stations. He’s clearly expecting some kind of
conflict after they arrive. So the question is, do we go with him to find out
what’s happening, and maybe protect our interest, or do we wait here for news?
We’ll take a vote, and it must be unanimous.”
Time Universe’s
Tranquillity office was on the forty-third floor of the StCroix starscraper. It
was the usual crush of offices, studios, editing rooms, entertainment suites,
and electronic workshops; a micro-community where individual importance was
graded by allocated desk space, facility size, and time allowance. Naturally,
given the make-up of the habitat’s population, it had a large finance and
commerce bureau, but it also provided good Confederationwide news coverage.
Oliver Llewelyn walked
into the wood-panelled lobby at ten thirty local time the day after the Gemal
had docked. The receptionist palmed him off on a junior political
correspondent called Matthias Rems. In the composite-walled office Matthias
used to assemble his reports he produced the flek Graeme Nicholson had given
him and named a carriage fee of five thousand fuseodollars. Matthias wasn’t
stupid, the fact that the Gemal’s captain had come direct from Lalonde
was enough to warrant serious attention. By now the entire habitat knew about
the mercenary fleet being assembled by Terrance Smith, though its purpose
remained unknown. Rumour abounded. Lalonde was immediate news; plenty of
Tranquillity residents would have LDC shares sleeping in their portfolios.
First-hand sensevises of the planet and whatever was happening there would have
strong ratings clout. Ordinarily Matthias Rems might have hesitated about the
shameless rip-off fee (he guessed correctly that Llewelyn had already been
paid), especially after he accessed the company personnel file on Graeme
Nicholson; but given the circumstances he knuckled under and paid.
After the captain
left, Matthias slotted the flek into his desktop player block. The sensevise
recording was codelocked, so Graeme Nicholson had obviously considered it
important. He pulled Nicholson’s personal code from his file, then sat back and
closed his eyes. The Crashed Dumper invaded his sensorium; its heat and noise
and smell, the taste of a caustic local beer tarring his throat, unaccustomed
weight of a swelling belly. Graeme Nicholson held the fragments of a broken
glass in his hand, his arms and legs trembling slightly; both eyes focused
unwaveringly on a tall man and lovely teenage girl over by the crude bar.
Twelve minutes later a
thoroughly shaken Matthias Rems burst in on Claudia Dohan, boss of Time
Universe’s Tranquillity operation.
The ripple effect of
Graeme Nicholson’s flek was similar to the sensation Ione’s appearance had
caused the previous year, in every respect save one. Ione had been a feel-good
item: Laton was the antithesis. He was terror and danger, history’s nightmare
exhumed.
“We have to show a
sense of responsibility,” a twitchy Claudia Dohan said after she surfaced from
the sensevise. “Both the Confederation Navy and the Lord of Ruin must be told.”
The AV cylinder on her
desktop processor block chimed. “Thank you for your consideration,”
Tranquillity said. “I have informed Ione Saldana about Laton’s reappearance. I
suggest you contact Commander Olsen Neale yourself to convey the contents of
the flek.”
“Right away,” Claudia
Dohan said diligently.
Matthias Rems was
glancing nervously round the office, disturbed by the reminder of the habitat
personality’s perpetual vigilance.
Claudia Dohan broke
the news on the lunchtime programme. Eighteen billion fuseodollars was wiped
off share values on Tranquillity’s trading floor within quarter of an hour of
the sensevise being broadcast. Values crept back up during the rest of the
afternoon as brokers assessed possible war scenarios. By the end of the day
seven billion fuseodollars had been restored to prices—mainly on
astro-engineering companies which would benefit from armaments sales.
The Time Universe
office had done its work well, considering the short period it had in which to
prepare. Its current affairs channel’s usual afternoon schedule was replaced by
library memories of Laton’s earlier activities and earnest studio panel
speculation. While Tranquillity’s residents were being informed, Claudia Dohan
started hiring starships to distribute copies of Graeme Nicholson’s flek across
the Confederation. This time she had a small lever against the captains, unlike
Ione’s very public appearance; she had a monopoly on Laton’s advent and they
were bidding against each other to deliver fleks. By the evening she had
dispatched eighteen starships to various planets (Kulu, Avon, Oshanko, and
Earth being the principals). Those Time Universe offices would in turn send out
a second wave of fleks. Two weeks ought to see the entire Confederation brought
up to speed. And warned, Claudia Dohan thought, Time Universe alone alerting
the human and xenoc races to the resurgent danger. A greater boost to company
fortunes simply wasn’t possible.
She took the whole
office out to a five-star meal that night. This coup, following so soon after
Ione, should bring them all some heady bonuses, as well as boosting them way
ahead of their contemporaries on the promotion scale. She was already thinking
of a seat on the board for herself.
But it was a hectic
afternoon. Matthias Rems (making his debut as a front-line presenter)
introduced forty-year-old recordings of the broken Edenist habitat Jantrit, its
shell cracked like a giant egg where the antimatter had detonated. Its atmosphere
jetted out of a dozen breaches in the five-hundred-metre-thick polyp, huge
grey-white plumes which acted like rockets, destabilizing the cylinder’s
ponderous rotation. The wobble built over the period of a few hours, until it
developed into an uncontrollable tumble. On the outside, induction cables
lashed round in anarchic hundred-kilometre arcs, preventing even the most agile
voidhawks from rendezvousing. Inside, water and soil were tossed about, acting
like a permanent floating earthquake. Starscrapers, weakened by the blast,
broke off like rotten icicles, whirling away at terrific velocities. And all
the while their air grew thinner.
Some people were saved
as the voidhawks and Adamist starships hurtled after the spinning starscrapers.
Eight thousand out of a population of one and a quarter million. Even then
utter disaster might have been averted. The dying Edenists should have
transferred their memories into the habitat personality. But Laton had infected
Jantrit’s neuron structure with his proteanic virus and its rationality was
crumbling as trillions upon trillions of cells fell to the corruption every
second. The other two habitats orbiting the gas giant were too far away to
provide much assistance; personality transference was a complex function,
distance and panic confused the issue. Twenty-seven thousand Edenists managed
to bridge the gulf; three thousand patterns were later found to be incomplete,
reduced to traumatized childlike entities. Voidhawks secured another two
hundred and eighty personalities, but the bitek starships didn’t have the
capacity to store any more, and they were desperately busy anyway, chasing the
starscrapers.
For Edenists it was the
greatest tragedy since the founding of their culture. Even Adamists were
stunned by the scale of the disaster. A living sentient creature thirty-five
kilometres in length mind-raped and killed, nearly one and a quarter million
people killed, over half a million stored personality patterns wiped.
And it had all been a
diversion. A tactic to enable Laton and his cohorts to flee without fear of
capture after their coup failed. He used the community’s deaths as a cover;
there was no other reason for it, no grand strategic design.
Every voidhawk, every
Confederation Navy ship, every asteroid settlement, every planetary government
searched for Laton and the three blackhawks he had escaped with.
He was cornered two
months later in the Ragundan system: three blackhawks, armed with antimatter
and refusing to surrender. Three voidhawks and five Confederation Navy frigates
were lost in the ensuing battle. An asteroid settlement was badly damaged with
the loss of a further eight thousand lives when the blackhawks tried to use it
as a hostage, threatening to bomb it with antimatter unless the navy withdrew.
The naval flotilla’s commanding admiral called their bluff.
As with all space
engagements there was nothing left of the vanquished but weak nebulas of
radioactive molecules. There was no body to identify. But it couldn’t have been
anyone else.
Now it seemed there
must have been four blackhawks. Nobody could mistake that tall, imperious man
standing on the steps of the Yaku’s spaceplane, laughing at a cowering
Graeme Nicholson.
The guests Matthias
Rems invited into the studio, a collection of retired navy officers, political
professors, and weapons engineers, observed that Laton’s actual goal had never
been declared. Speculation had been rife for years after the event. It
obviously involved some kind of physical (biological) and mental domination,
subverting the Edenists through the (fortunately) imperfect proteanic virus he
had developed. Changing them and the habitats. But to what grandiose ideal had
been thought for ever unknown. The studio debate concentrated on whether Laton
was behind the current conflict on Lalonde, and if it was the first stage in
his bid to impose his will on the Confederation again. Graeme Nicholson had
certainly believed so.
Laton was different to
the kind of planetary disputes like Omuta and Garissa; the perennial squabbling
between asteroid settlements and their funding companies over autonomy. Laton
wasn’t a violence-tinged argument over resources or independence, he was after
people, individuals. He wanted to get into your genes, your mind, and alter
you, mould you to his own deviant construct. Laton was deadly personal.
One of the keenest
observers of the Time Universe programmes was Terrance Smith. The Laton
revelation had come as a profound shock. He, and the Gemal’s crew,
became the objects of intense media interest. Hounded every time he left the
colonist-carrier, he eventually had to appeal to Tranquillity for privacy. The
habitat personality agreed (a resident’s freedom from intrusion was part of the
original constitution Michael Saldana had written), and the reporters were
called off. They promptly switched their attention to anyone who had signed on
as a member of the mercenary fleet, all of whom protested (truthfully) that
they knew nothing of Laton.
“What do we do?”
Terrance Smith asked in a bleak voice. He was alone with Oliver Llewelyn on the
Gemal’s bridge. Console holoscreens were showing the Time Universe
evening news programme, cutting between a studio presenter and segments of
Graeme Nicholson’s recording. The captain was someone whose opinion Terrance
valued, in fact he’d grown heavily dependent on him during the last couple of
days. There weren’t many other people he confided in.
“You don’t have many
options,” Oliver Llewelyn pointed out. “You’ve already paid the registration
fee to twelve ships, and you’ve got a third of the troops you wanted. Either
you go ahead as originally planned, or you cut and run. Doing nothing isn’t a
valid alternative, not now.”
“Cut and run?”
“Sure. You’ve got
enough money in the LDC’s credit account to lose yourself. Life could get very
comfortable for you and your family.” Oliver Llewelyn watched Terrance Smith
closely, trying to anticipate his reaction. The notion obviously appealed, but
he didn’t think the bureaucrat would have enough backbone.
“I . . . No,
we can’t. There are too many people depending on me. We have to do something to
help Durringham. You weren’t down there, you don’t know what it was like that
last week. These mercenaries are the only hope they’ve got.”
“As you wish.” Pity,
Oliver Llewelyn thought, a great pity. I’m getting too old for this kind of
jaunt.
“Do you think fifteen
ships is enough to go up against Laton?” Terrance Smith asked anxiously. “I
have the authority to hire another ten.”
“We’re not going up
against Laton,” Oliver Llewelyn said patiently.
“But—”
The captain gestured
at one of the console holoscreens. “You accessed Graeme Nicholson’s sensevise.
Laton has left Lalonde. All your mercenaries are faced with is a big mopping-up
operation. Leave Laton to the Confederation; the navy and the voidhawks will be
going after him with every weapon they’ve got.”
The notion of taking
on Laton was something the starship captains had been discussing among
themselves. Only three were sufficiently alarmed to return Terrance Smith’s
registration fee. He had no trouble in attracting replacements, and bringing
the number of the fleet up to nineteen—six blackhawks, nine combat-capable
independent traders, three cargo carriers, and the Gemal itself.
Virtually none of the general troops or the combat-boosted mercenaries
resigned. Fighting Laton’s legions, being on the right side, gave the
whole enterprise a kudos like few others; old hands and fresh youngsters queued
up to sign on.
Three and a half days
after he arrived, Terrance Smith had all he came for. The one request from
Commander Olsen Neale to hold off and wait for a Confederation naval
investigatory flight was smilingly refused. Durringham needs us now, Terrance
told him.
Ione and Joshua walked
down one of Tranquillity’s winding valleys in the late afternoon, dew-heavy
grass staining their sandals. She was wearing a long white cotton skirt and a
matching camisole, a loose-fitting outfit which allowed the air to circulate
over her warm skin. Joshua just wore some long dark mauve shorts. His skin was
tanning nicely, she thought, he was almost back to his old colour. They had
spent most of his stopover outside; swimming with Haile, riding, walking, having
long sexual adventures. Joshua seemed to get very turned on having sex beside
and in the bountiful streams meandering through the habitat.
Ione stopped at a long
pool which formed the intersection of two streams. It was lined by mature
rikbal trees, whose droopy branches stroked the water with their long, thin
leaves. They were all in flower, bright pink blooms the size of a child’s fist.
Gold and scarlet fish
slithered through the water. It was tranquillity, Ione thought, small t,
created by big T; name chasing form, name creating form. The lake—the whole
park—was a pause from the habitat’s bustle; the habitat was a pause from the
Confederation’s bustle. If you wanted it to be.
Joshua pushed her
gently against a rikbal trunk, kissing her cheek, her neck. He opened the front
of her camisole.
Hair fell down across
her eyes, she was wearing it longer these days. “Don’t go,” she said quietly.
His arms dropped
inertly to his sides, head slumping forwards until his brow touched hers. “Good
timing.”
“Please.”
“You said you weren’t
going to dump this possessive scene on me.”
“This isn’t being
possessive.”
“What then? It sounds
like it.”
Her head came up
sharply, pink spots burning on both cheeks. “If you must know, I’m worried
about you.”
“Don’t be.”
“Joshua, you’re flying
into a war zone.”
“Not really. We’re
flying escort duty for a troop convoy, that’s all. The soldiers and combat
boosted are in at the hard edge.”
“Smith wants the
starships to provide ground strikes; he’s bought combat wasps for interdiction
missions. That’s the hard edge, Joshua, that’s the dead edge. Bloody hell,
you’re going up against Laton in an antique wreck that barely rates its CAB
spaceworthiness licence. And there’s no reason. None. You don’t need mayope,
you don’t need Vasilkovsky.” She held his arm, imploring. “You’re rich. You’re
happy. Don’t try and tell me you’re not. I’ve watched you for three years.
You’ve never had so much fun as when you gallivanted around the galaxy in the Lady
Macbeth. Now look at what you’re doing. Paper deals, Joshua. Making paper
money you can never spend. Sitting behind a desk, that’s your destination.
That’s where you’re flying to, Joshua, and it isn’t you.”
“Antique, huh?”
“I didn’t mean—”
“How old is
Tranquillity, Ione? At least I own the Lady Mac, it doesn’t own me.”
“I’m just trying to
shock some sense into you. Joshua, it’s Laton you’re facing. Don’t you watch
the AV recordings? Didn’t you access Graeme Nicholson’s sensevise?”
“Yes. I did. Laton
isn’t on Lalonde. He left on the Yaku. Did you miss that bit, Ione? If I
wanted to go on suicide flights I’d chase after the Yaku. That’s where
the danger is. That’s where the navy heroes are going. Not me, I’m protecting
my own interests.”
“But you don’t need
it!” she said. God, but he could be bonehead stubborn at times.
“You mean you don’t.”
“What?”
“Not convenient, is
it? Me having that much money. That much money would mean I make the decisions,
I make the choices. It gives me control over my life. Where does that fit into
your cosy scenario of us, Ione? I won’t be so easy to manipulate then, will I?”
“Manipulate! One
glimpse of a female nipple and your fly seal bursts apart from the pressure.
That’s how complicated your personality is. You don’t need manipulating,
Joshua, you need hormone suppressors. All I’m doing is trying to think ahead
for you, because God knows you can’t do it for yourself.”
“Jesus, Ione!
Sometimes I can’t believe you’re bonded to a cubic kilometre of neuron cells,
you don’t display the IQ of an ant most days. This is my chance, I can
make it. I can be your equal.”
“I don’t want an
equal.” Ione jammed her mouth shut. She’d nearly done it, nearly said: “I just
want you.” But torture wouldn’t bring that from her lips, not now.
“Yeah, so I noticed,”
he said. “I started with a broken-down ship. I made that work, I earned a
living flying it. And now I’m moving on, moving up. That’s life, Ione. Growing,
evolving. You should try it sometime.” He turned and stomped off through the
trees, sweeping the hanging branches aside impatiently. If she wanted to say
sorry, she could damn well come after him and do it.
Ione watched him go,
and fumbled with the front of her camisole. What an arsehole. He might be
psychic, but only at the expense of common sense.
I’m so sorry, Tranquillity said gently.
She sniffed hard. What
about?
Joshua.
There’s no reason.
If he wants to go, let him. See if I care.
You do care. He is
right for you.
He doesn’t think
so.
Yes, he does. But
he is prideful. As are you.
Thanks for nothing.
Don’t cry.
Ione glanced down,
seeing her hands as blobs. Her eyes were horribly warm. She wiped at them
vigorously. God, how could I have been so stupid? He was just supposed to be a
fun stud. Nothing more.
I love you, Tranquillity said, so full of cautious warmth
that Ione had to smile. Then she winced as her stomach churned, and promptly
threw up. The bile was acid and disgusting. She cupped her hands to capture
some of the cool pool water so she could rinse her mouth out.
You are pregnant, Tranquillity observed.
Yes. The last time
Joshua came back, before he made the Norfolk run.
Tell him.
No! That would only
make it worse.
You are both fools,
Tranquillity said with
unaccustomed ardour.
Stars slid across the
window behind Commander Olsen Neale. Choisya was the only one of Mirchusko’s
moons visible, a distant grey-brown crescent sliver peeping up over the bottom
of the oval every three minutes. Erick Thakrar didn’t like the sight of the
starfield, it was too close, too easy to reach. He wondered, briefly, if he was
developing a space-phobia. It wasn’t unheard of, and there were a lot of
associations involved. That horrified, distraught voice coming from the Krystal
Moon; a fifteen-year-old girl. What had Tina looked like? It was a question
he’d been asking himself a lot recently. Did she have a boyfriend? What mood
fantasy bands did she cherish? Had she enjoyed her life on the old
interplanetary vessel? Or did she find it intolerable?
What the fuck was she
doing in the forward compartment below the communication dishes?
“The micro-fusion
generators were handed directly over to the Nolana as soon as we
docked,” Erick said. “They never even passed through Tranquillity’s
cargo-storage facility. Which means there was no data work, no port manager’s
inspection. And of course we were all on board the Villeneuve’s Revenge until
the transfer was finished. I couldn’t get a message out to you.”
“We’ll track the Nolana,
of course,” Olsen Neale said. “See where the generators go. It should expose
the distribution net. You’ve done well,” he added encouragingly. The young
captain looked haggard, nothing like the bright eager agent who had wangled
himself a berth on the Villeneuve’s Revenge those long months ago.
It hits us all in the
end, son, Olsen Neale thought soulfully to himself. We deliberately bring
ourselves down to their level so we can blend in, and sometimes it costs just
too much. Because nothing can go lower than human beings.
Erick remained unmoved
by the compliment. “You can have Duchamp and the rest of the crew arrested
immediately,” he said. “My neural nanonics recording of our attack on the Krystal
Moon will be more than enough to convict them. I want you to tell the
prosecutor to ask for maximum penalties. We can have them all committed to a
penal planet. The whole lot of them, and that’s better than they deserve.”
And it transfers your
guilt, as well, Neale thought silently. “I don’t think we can do that right
now, Erick,” he said.
“What? Three people
have died just so that you have enough evidence against Duchamp. Two of them I
killed myself.”
“I’m truly sorry,
Erick, but circumstances have changed somewhat radically since your mission
began. Have you accessed Time Universe’s Lalonde sensevise?”
Erick gave him a
demoralized stare, guessing what was coming. “Yes.”
“Terrance Smith has
signed on the Villeneuve’s Revenge for his mercenary fleet. We’ve got to
have somebody there, Erick. It’s a legal mission for a planetary government,
there’s nothing I can do to prevent them from leaving. Christ, this is Laton
we’re talking about. I was about ten years old when he destroyed Jantrit. One
and a quarter million people just so he could make a clean getaway, and the
habitat itself; the Edenists had never lost a habitat before, their life
expectancy is measured in millennia. And now he’s had nearly forty years to
perfect his megalomaniac schemes. Shit, we don’t even know what they are; but
what I’ve heard about Lalonde is enough to frighten me. I’m scared, Erick, I’ve
got a family. I don’t want him to get his hands on them. We have to know where
he went on the Yaku. Nothing is more important than that. Piracy and
flogging off black-market goods are totally irrelevant by comparison. The navy
has to find him and exterminate him. Properly this time. Until he’s dead, we
have no other goal. I’ve already sent a flek to Avon, a courier left on a
blackhawk an hour after the Time Universe people told me about their
recording.”
Erick’s brow crinkled
in surprise.
Olsen Neale gave a
modest smile. “Yes, a blackhawk. They’re fast, they’re good. And Laton will
ultimately have them too if we don’t stop him. Their captains are just as
unnerved by him as we are.”
“All right.” Erick
gave up. “I’ll go.”
“Anything. Any piece
of data. What he’s done out in the Lalonde hinterlands. Where the Yaku went.
Just anything.”
“I’ll get whatever I
can.”
“You could try asking
this journalist, Graeme Nicholson.” He shrugged at Erick’s expression. “The
man’s smart, resourceful. If anyone on that planet had the presence of mind to
track the Yaku’s jump coordinate, it’ll be him.”
Erick rose to his
feet. “OK.”
“Erick . . .
take care.”
The heavy curtains in
Kelly Tirrel’s bedroom were drawn across the two oval windows. Ornate
wall-mounted glass globes emitted a faint turquoise light. It made the white
bedsheets shimmer as if they were the surface of a moonlit lake; human skin was
dark and tantalizing.
Kelly let Joshua run
his hands over her, parting her legs so he could probe the damp cleft hidden
below her tangle of pubic hair.
“Nice,” she purred,
squirming over the rumpled sheets.
His teeth shone as he
parted his lips. “Good.”
“If you take me with
you, there will be five days of this. Nonstop; and in free fall, too.”
“A powerful argument.”
“Money as well.
Collins will pay triple rate for my passage.”
“I’m already rich.”
“So get richer.”
“Jesus, you’re a pushy
bitch.”
“Is that a complaint?
Did you want to be with someone else tonight?”
“Er, no.”
“Good.” Her hand slid
round his balls. “This is the one for me, Joshua. This is my make or break
chance. I blew the Ione story because of someone not a million kilometres from
here.” Her fingers tightened slightly. “Opportunities like this don’t come to a
place like Tranquillity three times in a life. If I pull it off I’ll be made;
top of the seniority table, good assignments, a decent bureau posting, a real
salary. You owe me this, Joshua. You owe me very big.”
“Suppose the mercenaries
don’t want you with them?”
“You leave them to me.
The way I’ll pitch it at them, they’ll eat up the offer. Heroes up against
frightening odds helping to flatten Laton, rogues with a heart of gold,
sensevised into every home in the Confederation. Come on!”
“Jesus.” There was
still an uncomfortable pressure round his balls, long red nails touching his
scrotum, a little too sharply to be described as tickling. She wouldn’t. Would
she? Her smart, expensive grey-blue Crusto suit was folded neatly over a chair
by the dresser. It had been taken off with military regimentation as she prepared
for sex.
She probably would.
Jesus.
“Of course I’ll take
you.”
Thumb and forefinger
nipped one ball impishly.
“Yow!” His eyes
watered. “You don’t think you’re getting carried away with this idea, do you? I
mean, there are career moves and career moves. Landing on a hostile planet
behind enemy lines is pushing company loyalty to extremes.”
“Crap.” Kelly rolled
onto one elbow and glared at him. “Did you see who Time Universe had
introducing their studio segments? Matthias bastard Rems, that’s who. Just
because he was in the right place at the right time. That lucky little shit.
He’s younger than me, barely out of his nursery pen. And they gave him three
days prime scheduling time. And market research says he’s popular because he’s boyish.
Some women like that, it turns out. Eighty-year-old virgins, I should
think. The reason Time Universe won’t let him record sensevises is because then
we’d all know for sure he hasn’t got any balls.”
“Not a problem in your
case, is it?”
It came out before he
could think. Kelly spent a hot violent twenty minutes making him wish it
hadn’t.
The nineteen starships
under Terrance Smith’s command assembled a thousand kilometres beyond
Tranquillity’s spaceport: the Gemal with five thousand general troops,
three cargo clippers carrying their equipment and supplies, and fifteen
combat-capable ships, six of which were blackhawks.
Tranquillity watched
their drives come on, and the flotilla moved in towards Mirchusko at one gee.
The Adamist starships employed a single-file formation (with Gemal leading)
which the blackhawks encircled insolently. Strategic-defence sensor-platforms
detected a vast amount of encrypted data traffic being exchanged between the
ships as communication channels were tested and combat tactics exchanged.
They curved around the
gas giant, heading towards its penumbra. Their drive exhausts shortened and
vanished while they were still a hundred and eighty-four thousand kilometres
above the unruly cloudscape, coasting towards the jump co-ordinate.
Tranquillity saw the faint blue flickers of ion jets perfecting their orbital
tracks; then the thermo-dump panels and sensor clusters began to withdraw. The
blackhawks rushed away from the main convoy, freed of the constraints imposed
by their Adamist partners, expanding in a perfectly spaced rosette. Then the
bitek starships performed their swallow manoeuvre, jumping on ahead to scout
for any possible trouble. Space reverberated with the gravity-wave backwash of
their wormhole interstices snapping shut behind them, impinging on the
habitat’s sensitive mass-detection organs.
Gemal jumped. Tranquillity noted its spacial location
and velocity vector. The trajectory was aligned exactly on Lalonde. One by one
the remaining starships fell into the same jump coordinate and triggered their
energy patterning nodes, squeezing themselves out of space-time.
Chapter 05
Since the advent of
its independence in 2238, Avon’s government had contracted civil
astroengineering teams to knock fifteen large (twenty- to twenty-five-kilometre
diameter) stony iron asteroids into high orbit above the planet using precisely
placed and timed nuclear explosions. Fourteen of them followed the standard formula
of industrialization adopted throughout the Confederation. After their orbits
were stabilized with a perigee no less than a hundred thousand kilometres,
their ores had been mined out and the refined metal sent down to the planet
below in the form of giant lifting bodies which coasted through the atmosphere
to a splash-glide landing in the ocean. The resulting caverns were expanded,
regularized into cylindrical shapes, the surface sculpted into a landscape,
sealed, then turned into habitable biospheres. At the same time the original
ore refineries would gradually be replaced by more sophisticated industrial
stations, allowing the asteroid’s economy to shift its emphasis from the bulk
production of metals and minerals to finished micro-gee engineered products.
The refineries moved on to a fresh asteroid in order to satisfy the demand of
the planetary furnaces and steel mills, keeping the worst aspects of
raw-material exploitation offplanet where the ecological pollution on the
aboriginal biota was zero.
Anyone arriving at a
terracompatible planet in the Confederation could tell almost at a glance how
long it had been industrialized by the number of settled asteroids in orbit
around it.
Avon had been opened
for colonization to ethnic Canadians in 2151 during the Great Dispersal, and
conformed to the usual evolutionary route out of an agrarian economy into
industrialization in slightly less than a century. A satisfactory achievement,
but nothing remarkable. It remained a pedestrian world until 2271 when it played
host to the head of state conference called to discuss the worrying upsurge in
the use of antimatter as a weapon of mass destruction. From that conference was
born the Confederation, and Avon seized its chance to leapfrog an entire
developmental stage by offering itself as a permanent host for the Assembly.
Without any increase in exports, foreign currency poured in as governments set
up diplomatic missions; and the lawyers, interstellar companies, finance
institutions, influence peddlers, media conglomerates, and lobbyists followed,
each with their own prestige offices and staff and dependents.
There was also the
Confederation Navy, which was to police the fragile new-found unity between the
inhabited stars. Avon contributed to that as well, by donating to the Assembly
an orbiting asteroid named Trafalgar which was in the last phase of mining.
Trafalgar was unique
within the Confederation in that it had no industrial stations after the miners
moved out. It was first, foremost, and only, a naval base, developing from a
basic supply and maintenance depot for the entire Confederation Navy (such as
it was in the early days) up to the primary military headquarters for the eight
hundred and sixty-two inhabited star systems which made up the Confederation in
2611. When First Admiral Samual Aleksandrovich took up his appointment in 2605
it was the home port for the 1st Fleet and headquarters and training centre for
the Marine Corps. It housed the career Officer Academy, the Engineering School,
the Navy Technical Evaluation Office, the First Admiral’s Strategy Office, the
Navy Budget Office, the principal research laboratories for supralight
communications, and (more quietly) the headquarters of the Fleet Intelligence
Arm. A black and grey peanut shape, twenty-one kilometres long, seven wide,
rotating about its long axis; it contained three cylindrical biosphere caverns
which housed a mixed civilian and military population of approximately three
hundred thousand. There were non-rotational spaceports at each end: spheres two
kilometres in diameter, the usual gridwork of girders and tanks and pipes,
threaded with pressurized tubes carrying commuter cars, and docking-bays ringed
by control cabins. Their surface area was just able to cope with the vast
quantity of spaceship movements. The spindles were both fixed to Trafalgar’s
axis at the centre of deep artificial craters two kilometres wide which the
voidhawks used as docking-ledges.
As well as its
responsibility for defence and anti-pirate duties across the Confederation it
coordinated Avon’s defence in conjunction with the local navy. The
strategic-defence platforms protecting the planet were some of the most
powerful ever built. Given the huge numbers of government diplomatic ships, as
well as the above average number of commercial flights using the low-orbit
docking stations, security was a paramount requirement. There hadn’t been an
act of piracy in the system for over two and a half centuries, but the
possibility of a suicide attack against Trafalgar was uppermost in the minds of
navy tacticians. Strategic sensor coverage was absolute out to a distance of
two million kilometres from the planetary surface. Reaction time by the
patrolling voidhawks was near instantaneous. Starships emerging outside
designated areas took a formidable risk in doing so.
Ilex was calling for help even before the wormhole
terminus closed behind it. Auster had ordered the voidhawk to fly straight to
Avon, over four hundred light-years from Lalonde. Even for a voidhawk, the
distance was excessive. Ilex needed to recharge its energy patterning
cells after ten swallows, which involved a prolonged interval of ordinary
flight to allow its distortion field to concentrate the meagre wisps of
radiation which flittered through the interstellar medium.
The voyage had taken
three and a half days. There were sixty people on board, and the bitek
life-support organs were rapidly approaching their critical limit. The air
smelt bad, membrane filters couldn’t cope with the body gases, CO2 was building
up, oxygen reserves were almost exhausted.
Trafalgar was five
thousand kilometres away when the wormhole terminus sealed. Legally, it should
have been a hundred thousand. But a long sublight flight to a docking-ledge
would have pushed Ilex’s life-support situation from critical to
catastrophic.
The asteroid
immediately went to defence condition C2, allowing the duty officer to engage
all targets at will. Nuclear-pumped gamma-ray lasers locked onto the voidhawk’s
hull within three-quarters of a second of the wormhole opening.
Every Edenist officer
in Trafalgar’s strategic-defence command-centre heard Ilex’s call. They
managed to load a five-second delay order into the defence platforms. Auster
gave a fast resume of the voidhawk’s situation. The delay was extended for
another fifteen seconds while the duty officer made her evaluation. A squadron
of patrol voidhawks closed on Ilex at ten gees.
“Stand down,” the duty
officer told the centre, and datavised a lockdown order into the fire-command
computer. She looked across at the nearest Edenist. “And tell that idiot
captain from me I’ll fry his arse off next time he pulls a stunt like this.”
Ilex swooped in towards Trafalgar at five gees as
traffic control cleared a priority approach path ahead of it. Six patrol
voidhawks spiralled round it like over-protective avian parents, all seven
bitek starships exchanging fast affinity messages of anxiety, interest, and
mild rebuke. The northern axial crater was a scene of frantic activity while Ilex
chased the asteroid’s rotation, looping around the globular non-rotating
spaceport to fly in parallel to the spindle. It settled on a titanium pedestal
with eight balloon-tyre maintenance vehicles and crew buses racing towards it,
bouncing about in the low gravity.
Lalonde’s navy office
personnel disembarked first, hurrying along the airlock tube to the waiting
bus, all of them taking deep gulps of clean, cool air. A medic team carried
Niels Regehr off in a stretcher, while two paediatric nurses soothed and patted
a blubbering Shafi Banaji. Environment-maintenance vehicles plugged hoses and
cables into the crew toroid’s umbilical sockets, sending gales of fresh air
gusting through the cabins and central corridor. Resenda, Ilex’s
life-support officer, simply vented the fouled atmosphere they’d been breathing
throughout the voyage, and grey plumes jetted up out of the toroid, seeded with
minute water crystals that sparkled in the powerful lights mounted on the
spindle to illuminate the crater.
Once the first bus
trundled away, a second nosed up to the airlock. A ten-strong marine squad in
combat fatigues and armed with chemical projectile guns marched on board.
Rhodri Peyton, the squad’s captain, saluted an exhausted, unwashed, and
unshaven Lieutenant Murphy Hewlett.
“This is her?” he
asked sceptically.
Jacqueline Couteur
stood in the middle of the corridor outside the airlock, with Jeroen van Ewyck
and Garrett Tucci training their Bradfields on her. She was even dirtier than
Murphy, the check pattern of her cotton shirt almost lost below the engrained
grime picked up in the jungle.
“I’m tempted to let
her show you what she can do,” Murphy said.
Kelven Solanki stepped
forwards. “All right, Murphy.” He turned to the marine captain. “Your men are
to have at least two weapons covering her at all times. She’s capable of
emitting an electronic warfare effect, as well as letting loose some kind of
lightning bolt. Don’t try to engage her in physical combat, she’s quite capable
of ripping you apart.”
One of the marines snickered
at that. Kelven didn’t have the energy left to argue.
“I’ll go with her,”
Jeroen van Ewyck said. “My people need to be briefed anyway, and I’ll let the
science officers know what’s required.”
“What is required?”
Jacqueline Couteur asked.
Rhodri Peyton turned,
and gave a start. In place of the dumpy middle-aged woman there was a tall,
beautiful, twenty-year-old girl wearing a white cocktail gown. She gave him a
silent entreating look, the maiden about to be offered to the dragon. “Help me.
Please. You’re not like them. You’re not an emotionless machine. They want to
hurt me in their laboratories. Don’t let them.”
Garrett Tucci jabbed
the Bradfield into her back. “Pack it in, bitch,” he said roughly.
She twisted, like an
AV projection with a broken focus, and the old Jacqueline Couteur was standing
there, a mocking expression on her face. Her jeans and shirt were now clean and
pressed.
“My God,” Rhodri
Peyton gasped.
“Now do you see?”
Kelven asked.
The now nervous marine
squad escorted their prisoner along the connecting tube to the bus. Jacqueline
Couteur sat beside one of the windows, five guns lined up on her. She watched
the bare walls of sterile rock impassively as the bus rolled back across the
crater and into a downward sloping tunnel that led deep into the asteroid.
First Admiral Samual
Aleksandrovich hadn’t set foot on his native Russian-ethnic birth planet
Kolomna for the last fifty-three of his seventy-three years; he hadn’t been
back for a holiday, nor even his parents’ funeral. Regular visits might have
been deemed inappropriate given that Confederation Navy career officers were
supposed to renounce any national ties when they walked through the academy entrance;
for a First Admiral to display any undue interest would have been a completely
unacceptable breach of diplomatic etiquette. People would have understood his
attending the funerals, though. So everyone assumed he was applying the same
kind of steely discipline to his private affairs that ruled his professional
life.
They were all wrong.
Samual Aleksandrovich had never been back because there was nothing on the
wretched planet with its all-over temperate climate which interested him, not
family nor culture nor nostalgic scenery. The reason he left in the first place
was because he couldn’t stand the idea of spending a century helping his four
brothers and three sisters run the family fruit-farming business. The same
geneering which had produced his energetic one metre eighty frame, vivid copper
hair, and enhanced metabolism, bestowed a life expectancy of at least a hundred
and twenty years.
By the time he was
nineteen years old he had come to realize that such a life would be a prison
sentence given the vocations available on a planet just emerging from its
agrarian phase. A potentially blessed life should not be faced with such finite
horizons, for if it was it would turn from being a joy into a terrible burden.
Variety was sanity. So on the day after his twentieth birthday he had kissed
his parents and siblings goodbye, walked the seventeen kilometres into town
through a heavy snowfall, and signed on at the Confederation Navy recruitment
office.
Metaphorically, and
otherwise, he had never looked back. He had never been anything other than an
exemplary officer; he’d seen combat seven times, flown anti-pirate
interdictions, commanded a flotilla raiding an illegal antimatter-production
station, and gained a substantial number of distinguished service awards. But
appointment to the post of First Admiral required a great deal more than an
exemplary record. Much as he hated it, Samual Aleksandrovich had to play the
political game; appearing before Assembly select committees, giving unofficial
briefings to senior diplomats, wielding Fleet Intelligence information with as
much skill as he did the rapier (he was year champion at the academy). His
ability to pressure member states was admired by the Assembly President’s
staffers, as much for its neatness as the millions of fuseodollars saved by
circumventing fleet deployment to trouble spots; and their word counted for a
great deal more than the Admiralty, who advanced the names of candidates to the
Assembly’s Navy Committee.
In the six years he
had held the office he had done a good job keeping the peace between sometimes
volatile planetary governments and the even more mercurial asteroid
settlements. Leaders and politicians respected his toughness and fairness.
A great deal of his
renowned even-handed approach was formed when at the age of thirty-two he was
serving as a lieutenant on a frigate that had been sent to Jantrit to assist
the Edenists in some kind of armed rebellion (however unbelievable it sounded
at the time). The frigate crew had watched helplessly while the antimatter was
detonated, then spent three days in exhausting and often fruitless manoeuvres
to rescue survivors of the tragedy. Samual Aleksandrovich had led one of the
recovery teams after they rendezvoused with a broken starscraper. With heroic work
that won him a commendation he and his crew-mates saved eighteen Edenists
trapped in the tubular honeycomb of polyp. But one of the rooms they forced
their way into was filled with corpses. It was a children’s day club that had
suffered explosive decompression. As he floated in desolated horror across the
grisly chamber, he realized the Edenists were just as human as himself, and
just as fallible. After that the persistent snide comments from fellow officers
about the tall aloof bitek users annoyed him intensely. From then on he devoted
himself body and soul to the ideal of enforcing the peace.
So when the Eurydice
had docked at Trafalgar carrying a flek from Lieutenant-Commander Kelven
Solanki about the small possibility (and he had been most unwilling to commit
himself) that Laton was still alive and stirring from his self-imposed exile,
First Admiral Samual Aleksandrovich had taken a highly personal interest in the
Lalonde situation.
Where Laton was
concerned, Samual Aleksandrovich exhibited neither his usual fairness nor a
desire for justice to be done. He just wanted Laton dead. And this time there
would be no error.
Even after his staff
had edited down Murphy Hewlett’s neural nanonics recording of the marine
squad’s fateful jungle mission, to provide just the salient points, there was
three hours of sensorium memory to access. When he surfaced from Lalonde’s
savage heat and wearying humidity, Samual Aleksandrovich remained lost in
thought for quarter of an hour, then took a commuter car down to the Fleet
Intelligence laboratories.
Jacqueline Couteur had
been isolated in a secure examination room. It was a cell cut into living rock
with a transparent wall of metallized silicon whose structure was reinforced
with molecular-binding-force generators. On one side it was furnished with a
bed, wash-basin, shower, toilet, and a table, while the other side resembled a
medical surgery with an adjustable couch and a quantity of analysis equipment.
She sat at the table,
dressed in a green clinical robe. Five marines were in the cell with her, four
of them carrying chemical-projectile guns, the fifth a TIP carbine.
Samual Aleksandrovich
stood in front of the transparent wall looking at the drab woman. The
monitoring room he was in resembled a warship’s bridge, a white composite cube
with a curved rank of consoles, all facing the transparent wall. The
impersonality disturbed him slightly, an outsized vivarium.
Jacqueline Couteur
returned his stare levelly. She should never have been able to do that, not a
simple farmer’s wife from a backwoods colony world. There were diplomats with
eighty years of experienced duplicity behind them who broke into a sweat when
Samual Aleksandrovich turned his gaze on them.
He likened the
experience to looking into the eyes of an Edenist habitat mayor at some formal
event, when the consensus intellect of every adult in the habitat looked back
at him. Judging.
Whatever you are, he
thought, you are not Jacqueline Couteur. This is the moment I’ve dreaded since
I took my oath of office. A new threat, one beyond anything we know. And the
burden of how to deal with it will inevitably fall heaviest on my navy.
“Do you understand the
method of sequestration yet?” He asked Dr Gilmore, who was heading the research
team.
The doctor made a
penitent gesture. “Not as yet. She’s certainly under the control of some
outside agency, but so far we haven’t been able to locate the point where it
interfaces with her nervous system. I’m a neural nanonics expert, and we’ve got
several physicists on the team. But I’m not entirely sure we even have a
specialization to cover this phenomenon.”
“Tell me what you
can.”
“We ran a full body and
neural scan on her, looking for implants. You saw what she and the other
sequestrated colonists could do back on Lalonde?”
“Yes.”
“That ability to
produce the white fireballs and electronic warfare impulses must logically have
some kind of focusing mechanism. We found nothing. If it’s there it’s smaller
than our nanonics, a lot smaller. Atomic sized, at least, maybe even
sub-atomic.”
“Could it be
biological? A virus?”
“You’re thinking of
Laton’s proteanic virus? No, nothing like that.” He turned and beckoned to
Euru.
The tall black-skinned
Edenist left the monitor console he was working at and came over. “Laton’s
virus attacked cells,” he explained. “Specifically neural cells, altering their
composition and DNA. This woman’s brain structure remains perfectly normal, as
far as we can tell.”
“If she can knock out
a marine’s combat electronics at over a hundred metres, how do you know your
analysis equipment is giving you genuine readings?” Samual Aleksandrovich
asked.
The two scientists
exchanged a glance.
“Interference is a
possibility we’ve considered,” Euru admitted. “The next stage of our
investigation will be to acquire tissue samples and subject them to analysis
outside the range of her influence—if she lets us take them. It would require a
great deal of effort if she refused to cooperate.”
“Has she been
cooperative so far?”
“For most of the time,
yes. We’ve witnessed two instances of visual pattern distortion,” Dr Gilmore
said. “When her jeans and shirt were removed she assumed the image of an
apelike creature. It was shocking, but only because it was so unusual and
unexpected. Then later on she tried to entice the marines to let her out by
appearing as an adolescent girl with highly developed secondary sexual
characteristics. We have AV recordings of both occasions; she can somehow
change her body’s photonic-emission spectrum. It’s definitely not an induced
hallucination, more like a chameleon suit’s camouflage.”
“What we don’t
understand is where she gets the energy to produce these effects,” Euru said.
“The cell’s environment is strictly controlled and monitored, so she can’t be
tapping Trafalgar’s electrical power circuits. And when we ran tests on her
urine and faeces we found nothing out of the ordinary. Certainly there’s no
unusual chemical activity going on inside her.”
“Lori and Darcy
claimed Laton warned them of an energy virus,” Samual Aleksandrovich said. “Is
such a thing possible?”
“It may well be,” Euru
said. His eyes darkened with emotion. “If that creature was telling the
truth he would probably have been attaching the nearest linguistic equivalents
to a totally new phenomenon. An organized energy pattern which can sustain
itself outside a physical matrix is a popular thesis with physicists.
Electronics companies have been interested in the idea for a long time. It
would bring about a radical transformation in our ability to store and
manipulate data. But there has never been any practical demonstration of such
an incorporeal matrix.”
Samual Aleksandrovich
switched his glance back to the woman behind the transparent wall. “Perhaps you
are looking at the first.”
“It would be an
extraordinary advance from our present knowledge base,” Dr Gilmore said.
“Have you asked the
Kiint if it is possible?”
“No,” Dr Gilmore
admitted.
“Then do so. They may
tell us, they may not. Who understands how their minds work? But if anyone
knows, they will.”
“Yes, sir.”
“What about her?”
Samual Aleksandrovich asked. “Has she said anything?”
“She is not very
communicative,” Euru said.
The First Admiral
grunted, and activated the intercom beside the cell’s door. “Do you know who I
am?” he asked.
The marines inside the
cell stiffened. Jacqueline Couteur’s expression never changed; she looked him
up and down slowly.
“I know,” she said.
“Who exactly am I
talking to?”
“Me.”
“Are you part of
Laton’s schemes?”
Was there the faintest
twitch of a smile on her lips? “No.”
“What do you hope to
achieve on Lalonde?”
“Achieve?”
“Yes, achieve. You
have subjugated the human population, killed many people. This is not a
situation I can allow to continue. Defending the Confederation from such a
threat is my responsibility, even on a little planet as politically
insignificant as Lalonde. I would like to know your motives so that a solution
to this crisis may be found which does not involve conflict. You must have
known that ultimately your action would bring about an armed response.”
“There is no
‘achievement’ sought.”
“Then why do what you
have done?”
“I do as nature binds
me. As do you.”
“I do what my duty
binds me to do. When you were on the Isakore you told the marines that
they would come to you in time. If that isn’t an objective I don’t know what
is.”
“If you believe I will
aid you to comprehend what has happened, you are mistaken.”
“Then why did you
allow yourself to be captured? I’ve seen the power you possess; Murphy Hewlett
is good, but not that good. He couldn’t get you here unless you wanted to
come.”
“How amusing. I see
governments and conspiracy theories are still inseparable. Perhaps I’m the
lovechild of Elvis and Marilyn Monroe come to sue the North American Govcentral
state in the Assembly court for my rightful inheritance.”
Samual Aleksandrovich
gave her a nonplussed look. “What?”
“It doesn’t matter.
Why did the navy want me here, Admiral?”
“To study you.”
“Precisely. And that
is why I am here. To study you. Which of us will learn the most, I wonder?”
Kelven Solanki had
never envisaged meeting the First Admiral quite so early in his career. Most
commanders were introduced, certainly those serving in the 1st Fleet. But not
lieutenant-commanders assigned to minor field-diplomat duties. Yet here he was
being shown into the First Admiral’s office by Captain Maynard Khanna.
Circumstances muted the sense of excitement. He wasn’t sure how the First Admiral
viewed his handling of events on Lalonde, and the staff captain had given him
no clues.
Samual
Aleksandrovich’s office was a circular chamber thirty metres across, with a
slightly domed ceiling. Its curving wall had one window which looked out into
Trafalgar’s central biosphere cavern, and ten long holoscreens, eight slowly
flicking through images from external sensors and the remaining two showing
tactical displays. The ceiling was ribbed with bronze spars, with a fat AV
cylinder protruding from the apex resembling a crystalline stalactite. There
were two clusters of furniture; a huge teak desk with satellite chairs; and a
sunken reception area lined by padded leather couches.
Maynard Khanna showed
him over to the desk where the First Admiral was waiting. Auster, Dr Gilmore,
Admiral Lalwani, the Fleet Intelligence chief, and Admiral Motela Kolhammer,
the 1st Fleet Commander, were all sitting before the desk in the curved
blue-steel chairs that had extruded out of the floor like pliable mercury.
Kelven stood to
attention and gave a perfect salute, very conscious of the five sets of eyes
studying him. Samual Aleksandrovich smiled thinly at the junior officer’s
obvious discomfort. “At ease, Commander.” He gestured at one of the two new
chairs formatting themselves out of the floor material. Kelven removed his cap,
tucked it under his arm, and sat next to Maynard Khanna.
“You handled Lalonde
quite well,” the First Admiral said. “Not perfectly, but then you weren’t
exactly prepared for anything like this. Under the circumstances I’m satisfied
with your performance.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“Bloody ESA people
didn’t help,” Motela Kolhammer muttered.
Samual Aleksandrovich
waved him quiet. “That is something we can take up with their ambassador later.
Though I’m sure we all know what the outcome will be. Regrettable or not, you
acted properly the whole time, Solanki. Capturing one of the sequestrated was
exactly what we required.”
“Captain Auster made
it possible, sir,” Kelven said. “I wouldn’t have got the marines out otherwise.”
The voidhawk captain
nodded thankfully in acknowledgement.
“None the less, we
should have given your situation a higher priority to begin with, and provided
you with adequate resources,” Samual Aleksandrovich said. “My mistake,
especially given who was involved.”
“Has Jacqueline
Couteur confirmed Laton’s existence?” Kelven asked. Part of him was hoping that
the answer was going to be a resounding no.
“She didn’t have to.”
Samual Aleksandrovich sighed ponderously. “A blackhawk”—he paused, raising his
bushy ginger eyebrows in emphasis—“has just arrived from Tranquillity with a
flek from Commander Olsen Neale. Under the circumstances I can quite forgive
him for using the ship as a courier. If you would like to access the
sensevise.”
Kelven sank deeper
into the scoop of his chair as Graeme Nicholson’s recording played through his
brain. “He was there all along,” he said brokenly. “In Durringham itself, and I
never knew. I thought the Yaku’s captain left orbit because of the
deteriorating civil situation.”
“You are not in any
way to blame,” Admiral Lalwani said.
Kelven glanced over at
the grey-haired Edenist woman. There was an inordinate amount of sympathy and
sadness in the tone.
“We should never have
stopped checking, all those years ago,” she continued. “The presence of Darcy
and Lori on Lalonde was a rather miserable token to appease our paranoia. Even
we were guilty of wishing Laton dead. The hope overwhelmed reason and rational
thought. All of us knew how resourceful he was, and we knew he had acquired
data on Lalonde. The planet should have been thoroughly searched. Our mistake.
Now he has returned. I don’t like to think of the price we will all have to pay
before he is stopped this time.”
“Sir, Darcy and Lori
seemed very uncertain that he was behind this invasion,” Kelven said. “Laton
actually warned them of this illusion-creating ability the sequestrated have.”
“And Jacqueline
Couteur agrees he isn’t a part of this,” Dr Gilmore said. “That’s one of the
few things she will admit to.”
“I hardly think we can
take her word for it,” Admiral Kolhammer said.
“Precise details are
for later,” Samual Aleksandrovich said. “What we have with Lalonde is shaping
up into a major, and immediate, crisis. I’m tempted to ask the Assembly
President to declare a state of emergency; that would put national navies at my
disposal.”
“In theory,” Admiral
Kolhammer said drily.
“Yes, and yet anything
less may not suffice. This undetectable sequestration ability has me deeply
worried. It has been used so freely on Lalonde, hundreds of thousands of
people, if not millions. How many people does the agency behind it intend to
subjugate? How many planets? It is a threat which the Assembly cannot be
allowed to ignore in favour of its usual horse trading.” He considered the
option of total mobilization before reluctantly dismissing it. There wasn’t
enough evidence to convince the president, not yet. It would come eventually,
he was in no doubt of that. “For the moment we will do what we can to contain
the spread of this plague, whilst trying to find Laton. The flek from Olsen
Neale also went on to report that Terrance Smith has met with some success in
recruiting mercenaries and combat-capable starships for Governor Rexrew. That
blackhawk made excellent time from Tranquillity; a little over two days, the
captain told me. So we may just be able to put a brake on Lalonde before it
gets totally out of hand. Terrance Smith’s ships are scheduled to depart from
Tranquillity today. Lalwani, you estimate it will take them a week to reach
Lalonde?”
“Yes,” she said. “It
took the Gemal six days to get from Lalonde to Tranquillity. With the
starships in Smith’s fleet having to match formation after each jump, a single
extra day is a conservative estimate. Even a navy flotilla would be hard pushed
to match that. And those are not front-line ships.”
“Apart from the Lady
Macbeth,” Maynard Khanna said in a quiet voice. “I accessed the list of
ships Smith recruited; the Lady Macbeth is a ship I am familiar with.”
He glanced at the First Admiral.
“I know that name
. . .” Kelven Solanki ran a search program through his neural
nanonics. “The Lady Macbeth was orbiting Lalonde when the trouble first
broke out upriver.”
“That wasn’t mentioned
in any of your reports,” Lalwani said. Her slim forehead showed a frown.
“It was a commercial
flight. Slightly odd, the captain wanted to export aboriginal wood, but as far
as we could tell perfectly legitimate.”
“This name does seem
to be popping up with suspicious regularity,” Maynard Khanna said.
“We should be able to
look into it easily enough,” Samual Aleksandrovich said. “Commander Solanki,
the principal reason I asked you here was to inform you that you are to act as
an adviser to the squadron which will blockade Lalonde.”
“Sir?”
“We’re launching a
dual programme to terminate this threat. The first aspect is a
Confederationwide alert for Laton. We have to know where the Yaku went,
where it is now.”
“He won’t stay on
board,” Lalwani said. “Not after he reaches a port. But we’ll find him. I’m
organizing the search now. All the voidhawks in the Avon system will be
conscripted and dispatched to alert national governments. I’ve already sent one
to Jupiter; once the habitat consensus is informed, every voidhawk in the Sol
system will be used to relay the news. I estimate it will take four to five
days to blanket the Confederation.”
“Time Universe will
probably beat you to it,” Admiral Kolhammer said gruffly.
Lalwani smiled. The
two of them were sparring partners from way back. “In this case I wouldn’t mind
in the least.”
“Be a lot of panic.
Stock markets will take a tumble.”
“If it makes people
take the threat seriously, so much the better,” Samual Aleksandrovich said.
“Motela, you are to assemble a 1st Fleet squadron, a large one, to be held on
fifteen-minute-departure alert. When we find Laton, eliminating him is going to
be your problem.”
“What problem?”
“I admire the
sentiment,” Samual Aleksandrovich said with a touch of censure. “But kindly
remember he escaped from us last time, when we were equally hungry for blood.
That mistake cannot be repeated. This time I shall require proof, even though
it will no doubt be expensive. I imagine Lalwani and Auster will agree.”
“We do,” Lalwani said.
“All Edenists do. If there is any risk in confirming the target is Laton, then
we will bear it.”
“In the meantime, I
want Lalonde to be completely isolated,” Samual Aleksandrovich said. “The
mercenary force is not to be allowed to land, nor do I want any surface
bombardments from orbit. Those colonists have suffered enough already. The
solution to this sequestration lies in discovering the method by which it is
implemented, and devising a counter. Brute force is merely dumping plutonium in
a volcano. And I suspect the mercenaries would simply be sequestrated
themselves should they land. Dr Gilmore, this is your field.”
“Not really,” the
doctor said expressively. “But we shall put our female subject through an
extensive series of experiments to see if we can determine the method of the
sequestration and how to cancel it. However, judging by what we know so far,
which is virtually nothing, I have to say an answer is going to take a
considerable time to formulate. Though you are quite right to instigate a
quarantine. The less contact Lalonde has with the rest of the Confederation the
better, especially if it turns out Laton isn’t behind the invasion.”
“The doctor has a
point,” Lalwani said. “What if the Lalonde invasion is the start of a xenoc
incursion, and Laton himself has been sequestrated?”
“I’m keeping it in
mind,” Samual Aleksandrovich said. “We need to know more, either from the
Couteur woman or Lalonde itself. Our principal trouble remains what it has always
been: reaction time. It takes us far too long to amass any large force. Always
our conflicts are larger than they would have been if we had received a warning
of problems and threats earlier in their development. But just this once, we
may actually be in luck. Unless there was some supreme diplomatic foul-up,
Meredith Saldana’s squadron was due to leave Omuta three days ago. They were in
the system mainly for pomp and show, but they carried a full weapons load. A
squadron of front-line ships already assembled and perfectly suited to these
duties; we couldn’t have planned it better. It’ll take them five days to get
back to Rosenheim. Captain Auster, if Ilex can get there before they
dock at 7th Fleet headquarters and all the crews go on leave, then Meredith
might just be able to get to Lalonde before Terrance Smith. And if not before,
then certainly in time to prevent the bulk of the mercenary troops from
landing.”
“Ilex will
certainly try, First Admiral,” Auster said. “I have already asked for auxiliary
fusion generators to be installed in the weapons bays. The energy patterning
cells can be recharged directly from them, reducing the flight time between
swallows considerably. We should be ready to depart in five hours, and I
believe we can make the two-day deadline.”
“My thanks to Ilex,”
Samual Aleksandrovich said formally.
Auster inclined his
head.
“Lieutenant-Commander
Solanki, you’ll travel with Captain Auster, and carry my orders for
Rear-Admiral Saldana. And I think we can manage a promotion to full commander
before you go. You’ve shown considerable initiative over the last few weeks, as
well as personal courage.”
“Yes, sir, thank you,
sir,” Kelven said. The promotion barely registered, some irreverent section of
his mind was counting up the number of light-years he had flown in a week. It
must be some kind of record. But he was going back to Lalonde, and bringing his
old friends help. That felt good. I’ve stopped running.
“Add an extra order
that the Lady Macbeth and her crew is to be arrested,” Samual
Aleksandrovich told Maynard Khanna. “They can try explaining themselves to
Meredith’s Intelligence officers.”
The Santa Clara materialized
a hundred and twenty thousand kilometres above Lalonde, almost directly in line
between the planet and Rennison. Dawn was racing over Amarisk, half of the
Juliffe’s tributary network flashing like silver veins in the low sunlight. The
early hour might have accounted for the lack of response from civil traffic
control. But Captain Zaretsky had been to Lalonde before, he knew the way the
planet worked. Radio silence didn’t particularly bother him.
Thermo-dump panels
slid out of the hull, and the flight computer plotted a vector which would deliver
the starship to a five hundred kilometre equatorial orbit. Zaretsky triggered
the fusion drive and the ship moved in at a tenth of a gee. Santa Clara was
a large cargo clipper, paying a twice-annual visit to the Tyrathca settlements,
bringing new colonists and shipping out their rygar crop. There were over fifty
Tyrathca breeders on board, all of them shuffling round the cramped
life-support capsules; the dominant xenocs refused to use zero-tau pods (though
their vassal castes were riding the voyage in temporal suspension). Captain
Zaretsky didn’t particularly like being chartered by Tyrathca merchants, but
they always paid on time, which endeared them to the ship’s owners.
Once the Santa
Clara was underway, he opened channels to the nine starships in parking
orbit. They told him about the riots, and rumours of invaders, and the fighting
in Durringham which had lasted four days. There had been no information coming
up from the city for two days now, they said, and they couldn’t decide what to
do.
Zaretsky didn’t share
their problem. Santa Clara had a medium-sized VTOL spaceplane in its
hangar, his contract didn’t call for any contact with the human settlements.
Whatever rebellion the Ivets were staging, it didn’t affect him.
When he opened a
channel to the Tyrathca farmers on the planet they reported a few skirmishes
with humans who were “acting oddly;” but they had prepared their rygar crop,
and were waiting for the equipment and new farmers the Santa Clara was
bringing. He acknowledged the call, and continued the slow powered fall into
orbit, the Santa Clara’s fusion exhaust drawing a slender thread of
incandescence across the stars.
Jay Hilton sat on the
rock outcrop fifty metres from the savannah homestead cabin, her legs crossed,
head tipped back to watch the starship decelerating into orbit, and mournful
curiosity pooling in her eyes. The weeks of living with Father Horst had
brought about a considerable change in her appearance. For a start her lush
silver-white hair had been cropped into a frizz barely a centimetre long,
making it easier to keep clean. She had cried bucketfuls the day Father Horst
took the scissors to it. Her mother had always looked after it so well, washing
it with special shampoo brought from Earth, brushing it to a shine each night.
Her hair was her last link with the way things used to be, her last hope that
they might be that way again. When Father Horst had finished his snipping she
knew in her heart that her most precious dream, that one day she’d wake up to
find everything had returned to normal, was just a stupid child’s imagination.
She had to be tough now, had to be adult. But it was so hard.
I just want Mummy
back, that’s all.
The other children
looked up to her. She was the oldest and strongest of the group. Father Horst
relied on her a great deal to keep the younger ones in order. A lot of them
still cried at night. She heard them in the darkness, crying for their lost
parents or siblings, crying because they wanted to go back to their arcology
where none of this horrid confusion and upset happened.
Dawn’s rosy crown gave
way to a tide of blue which swept across the sky, erasing the stars. Rennison
faded to a pale crescent, and the starship’s exhaust became more difficult to
see. Jay unfolded her legs and clambered down off the rocks.
The homestead on the
edge of the savannah was a simple wooden structure, its solar-cell roof sheets
glinting in the strong morning light. Two of the dogs, a Labrador and an
Alsatian, were out and about. She patted them as she went up the creaking
wooden stairs to the porch. The cows in the paddock were making plaintive
calls, their udders heavy with milk.
Jay went in through
the front door. The big lounge whiffed strongly—of food, and cooking, and too
many people. She sniffed the air suspiciously. Someone had wet their bedding
again, probably more than one.
The floor was a solid
patchwork of sleeping-bags and blankets, their occupants only just beginning to
stir. Grass stuffing from the makeshift mattresses of canvas sacks had leaked
out again.
“Come on! Come on!”
Jay clapped her hands together as she pulled the reed blinds open. Streamers of
gold-tinged sunlight poured in, revealing children blinking sleep from their
eyes, wincing at the brightness. Twenty-seven of them were crammed together on
the mayope floorboards, ranging from a toddler about two years old up to Danny,
who was nearly the same age as Jay. All of them with short haircuts and
rough-tailored adult clothes which never quite fitted. “Up you get! Danny, it’s
your gang’s turn to do the milking. Andria, you’re in charge of cooking this
morning: I want tea, oatmeal, and boiled eggs for breakfast.” A groan went up,
which Jay ignored; she was just as fed up with the changeless diet as they
were. “Shona, take three girls with you and collect the eggs, please.”
Shona gave a timid
smile as well as she could, grateful for being included in the work assignments
and not being treated any differently to the others. Jay had drilled herself
not to flinch from looking at the poor girl. The six-year-old’s face was
covered in a bandage mask of glossy translucent epithelium membrane, with holes
cut out for her eyes and mouth and nose. Her burn marks were still a livid pink
below the overlapping membrane strips, and her hair was only just beginning to
grow back. Father Horst said she ought to heal without any permanent scarring,
but he was forever grieving over the lack of medical nanonic packages.
Coughs and grumbles
and high-pitched chattering filled the room as the children struggled out of
bed and into their clothes. Jay saw little Robert sitting brokenly on the side
of his sleeping-bag, head in his hands, not bothering to get dressed. “Eustice,
you’re to get this room tidied up, and I want all the blankets aired properly
today.”
“Yes, Jay,” she
answered sullenly.
The outside door was
flung open as five or six children rushed out laughing, and ran for the
lean-to, which they used as a toilet.
Jay picked her way
over the rectangles of bedding to Robert. He was only seven, a black-skinned
boy with fluffy blond hair. Sure enough, the navy blue pants he wore were damp.
“Pop down to the
stream,” she said kindly. “There will be plenty of time to wash before
breakfast.”
His head was lowered
even further. “I didn’t mean to,” he whispered, on the verge of tears.
“I know. Remember to
wash out your sleeping-bag as well.” She caught the sound of someone giggling.
“Bo, you help him take the bag down to the stream.”
“Oh, Jay!”
“It’s all right,”
Robert said. “I can manage.”
“No, you won’t, not if
you want to be back in time for breakfast.” The big table was already being
pulled out from the kitchen corner by three of the boys, scraping loudly across
the floor. They were shouting for people to get out of the way.
“Don’t see why I
should have to help him,” Bo said intransigently. She was an eight-year-old,
meaty for her age, with chubby red cheeks. Her size was often deployed to help
boss the smaller children around.
“Chocolate,” Jay said
in warning.
Bo blushed, then
stalked over to Robert. “Come on then, you.”
Jay knocked once on
Father Horst’s door and walked in. The room had been the homestead’s main
bedroom when they moved in; it still had a double bed in it, but most of the
floor space was taken up with packets, jars, and pots of food they’d taken from
the other deserted homestead cabins. Clothes and cloth and powered tools,
anything small or light enough to be carried, filled the second bedroom in
piles that were taller than Jay.
Horst was getting up
as the girl came in. He’d already got his trousers on, thick denim jeans with
leather patches, a working man’s garment, requisitioned from one of the other
savannah homesteads. She picked up the faded red sweatshirt from the foot of
the bed and handed it to him. He had lost a lot of weight—a lot of fat—over the
last weeks; slack bands of flesh hung loosely from his torso. But even the
folds were shrinking, and the muscles they covered were harder than they had
ever been, though at night they felt like bands of ignescent metal. Horst spent
most of every day working, hard manual work; keeping the cabin in shape,
repairing and strengthening the paddock fence, building a chicken run, digging
the latrines; then in the evening there would be prayers and reading lessons.
At night he dropped into bed as if a giant had felled him with its fist. He had
never known a human body could perform such feats of stamina, least of all one
as old and decrepit as his.
Yet he never wavered,
never complained. There was a fire in his eyes that had been ignited by his
predicament. He was embarked on a crusade to survive, to deliver his charges to
safety. The bishop would be hard pressed to recognize that dreamy well-meaning
Horst Elwes who had left Earth last year. Even thinking about his earlier self
with its disgusting self-pity and weaknesses repelled him.
He had been tested as
few had ever been before, his faith thrown onto towering flames that had
threatened to reduce him to shreds of black ash so powerful was the doubt and
insecurity fuelling them: but he had emerged triumphant. Born of fire, and
reforged, his conviction in self, and Christ the Saviour, was unbreakable.
And he had the
children to thank. The children who were now his life and his task. The hand of
God had brought them together. He would not fail them, not while there was a
breath left in his body.
He smiled at Jay who
was as grave faced as she always was at the break of day. The sounds of the
usual morning bedlam were coming through the door as bedding was put away and
the furniture brought out.
“How goes it today,
Jay?”
“Same as always.” She
sat on the end of the bed as he pulled on his heavy hand-tooled boots. “I saw a
starship arrive. It’s coming down into low orbit.”
He glanced up from his
laces. “Just one?”
“Uh huh,” she nodded
vigorously.
“Ah well, it’s not to
be today, then.”
“When?” she demanded. Her small beautiful face was
screwed up in passionate rage.
“Oh, Jay.” He pulled
her against him, and rocked her gently as she sniffled. “Jay, don’t give up
hope. Not you.” It was the one thing he promised them, repeating it every night
at prayers so they would believe. On a world far away lived a wise and powerful
man called Admiral Aleksandrovich, and when he heard what terrible things had
happened on Lalonde he would send a fleet of Confederation Navy starships to
help its people and drive away the demons who possessed them. The soldiers and
the navy crews would come down in huge spaceplanes and rescue them, and then
their parents, and finally put the world to rights again. Every night Horst
said it, with the door locked against the wind and rain, and the windows
shuttered against the dark empty savannah. Every night he believed and they
believed. Because God would not have spared them if it was not for a purpose.
“They will come,” he promised. He kissed her forehead. “Your mother will be so
proud of you when she returns to us.”
“Really?”
“Yes, really.”
She pondered this.
“Robert wet his bed again,” she said.
“Robert is a fine
boy.” Horst stomped on the second boot. They were two sizes too large, which
meant he had to wear three pairs of socks, which made his feet sweat, and
smell.
“We should get him
something,” she said.
“Should we now? And
what’s that?”
“A rubber mat. There
might be one in another cabin. I could look,” she said, eyes all wide with
innocence.
Horst laughed. “No,
Jay, I haven’t forgotten. I’ll take you out hunting this morning, and this time
it will be Danny who stays behind.”
Jay let out a squeal
of excitement and kicked her legs in the air. “Yes! Thank you, Father.”
He finished tying his
laces and stood up. “Don’t mention the starship, Jay. When the navy comes it
will be in a mighty flotilla, with their exhaust plumes so strong and bright
they will turn night into day. Nobody will mistake it. But in the meantime we
must not pour cold water on the others’ hopes.”
“I understand, Father.
I’m not as dumb as them.”
He ruffled her hair,
which she pretended not to like, wriggling away. “Come along now,” he said.
“Breakfast first. Then we’ll get our expedition sorted out.”
“I suppose Russ will
come with us?” she asked in a martyred voice.
“Yes, he will. And
stop thinking uncharitable thoughts.”
The children already
had most of the bedding off the floor. Two boys were sweeping up the dried
grass from the sack mattresses (Must find a better replacement, Horst thought).
Eustice’s voice could be heard through the open door, yelling instructions to
the children airing the linen outside.
Horst helped to pull the
big table into the middle of the room. Andria’s team were scurrying round the
kitchen corner, tending the equipment and the meal. The big urn was just
starting to boil, and the three IR plates were heating up the boiling pans
ready for the eggs.
Once again Horst gave
a fast prayer of thanks that the solar-powered equipment functioned so well. It
was easy enough for the children to use without hurting themselves, and most of
them had helped their mothers with the cooking before. All they needed was some
direction, as they did in every task he set them. He didn’t like to think how
he would have coped if the homestead hadn’t been empty.
It took another
fifteen minutes before Andria’s cooking party were ready to serve breakfast.
Several of the eggs Shona brought back were broken, so Horst himself scrambled
them up in a pan on a spare IR plate. It was easier to feed Jill, the toddler,
that way.
The tea was finally
ready, and the eggs boiled. Everyone lined up with their mug and cutlery and
eggcup, and filed past the kitchen bar which doubled as a serving counter. For
a few wonderful minutes the room was actually quiet as the children drank, and
cracked their eggs open, and pulled faces as they munched the dry oatmeal
biscuits, dunking them in the tea to try and soften them up first. Horst looked
round his extended family and tried not to feel frightened at the
responsibility. He adored them in a way he had never done with his
parishioners.
After breakfast it was
wash time, with the extra two tanks he had installed in the rafter space
struggling to provide enough hot water. Horst inspected them all to make sure
they were clean and that they had jell-rinsed their teeth. That way he could
have a few words with each of them, make them feel special, and wanted, and
loved. It also gave him the chance to watch for any sign of illness. So far
there had been remarkably little, a few colds, and one nasty outbreak of
diarrhoea a fortnight ago, which he suspected was from a batch of jam that had
come from another homestead.
The morning would
follow its standard pattern while he and Jay were away. Clothes to be washed in
the stream and hung out to dry. Hay to be taken into the cows, corn to be
measured out into the chicken-run dispensers (they never did that very well),
lunch to be prepared. When he went away it was always the packets of
protein-balanced meals from Earth—all they had to do was put them in the microwave
for ninety seconds, and nothing could go wrong. Sometimes he allowed a group to
pick elwisie fruit from the trees on the edge of the jungle. But not today; he
gave Danny a stern lecture that no one was to wander more than fifty metres
from the cabin, and someone must be on watch the whole time in case a kroclion
turned up. The plains carnivores hadn’t often plagued the homesteads, but his
didactic memory showed what a menace the lumbering animals could be. The boy
nodded earnestly, eager to prove his worth.
Horst was still
suffering from stings of doubt when he led the group’s one horse from its
stable. He trusted Jay to be left in charge, she acted far older than her
years. But he had to hunt for meat, there were hardly any fish in the nearby
stream. If they stuck to the cache of food in his bedroom it would be gone
within ten days; it existed to supplement what he killed and stored in the
freezer, and acted as an emergency reserve just in case he ever did get ill.
And Jay deserved a break from the homestead, she hadn’t been away since they
arrived.
He took two other
children with him as well as Jay. Mills, an energetic eight-year-old from
Schuster village, and Russ, a seven-year-old who simply refused to ever leave
Horst’s side. The one and only time he had gone hunting without him the boy had
run off into the savannah and it had taken the whole afternoon to find him.
Jay was grinning and
waving and playing up to her jealous friends when they set off. The savannah
grass quickly rose up around their legs; Horst had made Jay wear a pair of
trousers instead of her usual shorts. A thick layer of mist started to lift
from the waving stalks and blades now the sun was rising higher into the sky.
Haze broke the visibility down to less than a kilometre.
“This humidity is
worse than the Juliffe back in Durringham,” Jay exclaimed, waving her hand
frantically in front of her face.
“Cheer up,” Horst
said. “It might rain later.”
“No, it won’t.”
He glanced round to
where she was walking in the track he was making through the stiff grass.
Bright eyes gleamed mischievously at him from below the brim of her tatty felt
sun-hat.
“How do you know?” he
asked. “It always rains on Lalonde.”
“No, it doesn’t. Not
any more, not during the day.”
“What do you mean?”
“Haven’t you noticed?
It only ever rains at night now.”
Horst gave her a
perplexed stare. He was about to tell her not to be silly. But then he couldn’t
remember the last time he’d rushed indoors to shelter from one of Lalonde’s
ferocious downpours—a week, ten days? He had an uncomfortable feeling it might
even have been longer. “No, I hadn’t noticed,” he said temperately.
“That’s all right,
you’ve had a lot on your mind lately.”
“I certainly have.”
But the chirpy mood was broken now.
I should have noticed,
he told himself. But then who regards the weather as something suspicious? He
was sure it was important though, he just couldn’t think how, or why. Surely
they couldn’t change the weather.
Horst made it a rule
that he was never away for more than four hours. That put seven other homestead
cabins within reach (eight counting the ruins of the Skibbow building) as well
as allowing enough time to shoot a danderil or some vennals. Once he had shot a
pig that had run wild, and they’d eaten ham and bacon for the rest of the week.
It was the most delicious meat he’d ever tasted, terrestrial beasts were pure
ambrosia compared to the coarse and bland aboriginal animals.
There was hardly
anything of any value left in the cabins now, he had stripped them pretty
thoroughly. After another couple of visits there would be little point in
returning. He caught himself before brooding turned to melancholia; he wouldn’t
need to go back, the navy would come. And don’t ever think anything different.
Jay bounded up to walk
beside him, adjusting her stride to match his. She gave him a sideways smile,
then returned her gaze to the front, perfectly content.
Horst felt his own
tensions seeping away. Having her so close was like the time right after that
dreadful night. She had screamed and fought him as he pulled her away from Ruth
and Jackson Gael. He had forced her through the village towards the jungle,
only once looking back. He saw it all then, in the light of the fire which
pillaged their sturdy tranquil village, snuffing out their ambitions of a fair
future as swiftly as rain dissolved the mud castles the children built on the
riverbank. Satan’s army was upon them. More figures were marching out of the
dark shadows into the orange light of the flames, creatures that even Dante in
his most lucid fever-dreams had never conceived, and the screams of the
ensnared villagers rose in a crescendo.
Horst had never let
Jay look back, not even after they reached the trees. He knew then that waiting
for the hunting party to return was utter folly. Laser rifles could not harm
the demon legions Lucifer in his wrath had loosed upon the land.
They had carried on
far into the jungle, until a numbed, petrified Jay had finally collapsed. Dawn
found them huddled together in the roots of a qualtook tree, soaked and shivering
from a downpour in the night. When they eased their way cautiously back towards
Aberdale and hid themselves in the vines ringing the clearing they saw a
village living a dream.
Several buildings were
razed to the ground. People walked by without paying them a glance. People
Horst knew, his flock, who should have been overwrought by the damage. That was
when he knew Satan had won, his demons had possessed the villagers. What he had
seen at the Ivet ceremony had been repeated here, again and again.
“Where’s Mummy?” Jay
asked miserably.
“I have no idea,” he
said truthfully. There were fewer people than there should have been, maybe
seventy or eighty out of the population of five hundred. They acted as though
devoid of purpose, walking slowly, looking round in befogged surprise, saying
nothing.
The children were the
exception. They ran around between the somnolent, shuffling adults, crying and
shouting. But they were ignored, or sometimes cuffed for their trouble. Horst
could hear their distraught voices from his sanctuary, deepening his own
torment. He watched as a girl, Shona, trailed after her mother pleading for her
to say something. She tugged insistently at the trousers, trying to get her to
stop. For a moment it looked like she had succeeded. Her mother turned round.
“Mummy,” Shona squealed. But the woman raised a hand, and a blast of white fire
streamed from her fingers to smite the girl full in the face.
Horst cringed,
crossing himself instinctively as she dropped like a stone, not even uttering a
cry. Then anger poured through him at his own cravenness. He stood up and
strode purposefully out of the trees.
“Father,” Jay squeaked
behind him. “Father, don’t.”
He paid her no heed.
In a world gone mad, one more insanity would make no difference. He had sworn
himself to follow Christ, a long time ago, but it meant more to him now than it
ever had. And a child lay suffering before him. Father Horst Elwes was through
with evasions and hiding.
Several of the adults
stopped to watch as he marched into the village, Jay scuttling along behind
him. Horst pitied them for the husks they were. The human state of grace had
been drained from their bodies. He could tell, accepting the gift of knowledge
as his right. Six or seven villagers formed a loose group standing between him
and Shona, their faces known but not their souls.
One of the women,
Brigitte Hearn, never a regular churchgoer, laughed at him, her arm rising. A
ball of white fire emerged from her open fingers and raced towards him. Jay
screamed, but Horst stood perfectly still, face resolute. The fireball started
to break apart a couple of metres away from him, dimming and expanding. It
burst with a wet crackle as it touched him, tiny strands of static burrowing
through his filthy sweatshirt. They stung like hornets across his belly, but he
refused to reveal his pain to the semicircle of watchers.
“Do you know what this
is?” Horst thundered. He lifted the stained and muddied silver crucifix that
hung round his neck, brandishing it at Brigitte Hearn as though it was a
weapon. “I am the Lord’s servant, as you are the Devil’s. And I have His work
to do. Now stand aside.”
A spasm of fright
crossed Brigitte Hearn’s face as the silver cross was shaken in front of her.
“I’m not,” she said faintly. “I’m not the Devil’s servant. None of us are.”
“Then stand aside.
That girl is badly hurt.”
Brigitte Hearn glanced
behind her, and took a couple of steps to one side. The other people in the
group hurriedly parted, their faces apprehensive, one or two walked away. Horst
gestured briefly at Jay to follow him, and went over to the fallen girl. He
grimaced at the singed and blackened skin of her face. Her pulse was beating
wildly. She had probably gone into shock, he decided. He scooped her up in his
arms, and started for the church.
“I had to come back,”
Brigitte Hearn said as Horst walked away. Her body was all hunched up, eyes
brimming with tears. “You don’t know what it’s like. I had to.”
“It?” Horst asked
impatiently. “What is it?”
“Death.”
Horst shuddered,
almost breaking his stride. Jay looked round fearfully at the woman.
“Four hundred years,”
Brigitte Hearn called out falteringly. “I died four hundred years ago. Four
hundred years of nothing.”
Horst barged into the
small infirmary at the back of the church, and laid Shona down on the wooden
table which doubled as an examination bed. He snatched the medical processor
block from its shelf and applied a sensor pad to the nape of her neck. The
metabolic display appeared as he described her injuries to the processor. Horst
read the results and gave the girl a sedative, then started spraying a
combination analgesic and cleansing fluid over the burns.
“Jay,” he said
quietly. “I want you to go into my room and fetch my rucksack from the
cupboard. Put in all the packets of preprocessed food you can find, then the
tent I used when we first arrived, and anything else you think will be useful
to camp out in the jungle—the little fission blade, my portable heater, that
kind of stuff. But leave some space for my medical supplies. Oh, and I’ll need
my spare boots too.”
“Are we leaving?”
“Yes.”
“Are we going to
Durringham?”
“I don’t know. Not
straight away.”
“Can I go and fetch
Drusilla?”
“I don’t think it’s a
good idea. She’ll be better off here than tramping through the jungle with us.”
“All right. I
understand.”
He heard her moving
about in his room as he worked on Shona. The younger girl’s nose was burnt
almost down to the bone, and the metabolic display said only one retina was
functional. Not for the first time he despaired the lack of nanonic medical
packages; a decent supply would hardly have bankrupted the Church.
He had flushed the
dead skin from Shona’s burns as best he could, coating them in a thin layer of
corticosteroid foam to ease the inflammation, and was binding her head with a
quantity of his dwindling stock of epithelium membrane when Jay came back in
carrying his rucksack, It was packed professionally, and she had even rolled up
his sleeping-bag.
“I got some stuff for
myself,” she said, and held up a bulging shoulder-bag.
“Good girl. You didn’t
make the bag too heavy, did you? You might have to carry it a long way.”
“No, Father.”
Someone knocked
timidly on the door post. Jay shrank into the corner of the infirmary.
“Father Horst?”
Brigitte Hearn poked her head in. “Father, they don’t want you here. They say
they’ll kill you, that you can’t defend yourself against all of them.”
“I know. We’re
leaving.”
“Oh.”
“Will they let us
leave?”
She swallowed and
looked over her shoulder. “Yes. I think so. They don’t want a fight. Not with
you, not with a priest.”
Horst opened drawers
in the wooden cabinet at the back of the infirmary, and started shoving his
medical equipment into the rucksack. “What are you?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” she
said woefully.
“You said you had
died?”
“Yes.”
“What is your name?”
“Ingrid Veenkamp, I
lived on Bielefeld when it was a stage one colony world, not much different to
this planet.” She twitched a smile at Jay. “I had two girls. Pretty, like you.”
“And where is Brigitte
Hearn now?”
“Here, in me. I feel
her. She is like a dream.”
“Possession,” Horst
said.
“No.”
“Yes! I saw the red
demon sprite. I witnessed the rite, the obscenity Quinn Dexter committed
to summon you here.”
“I’m no demon,” the
woman insisted. “I lived. I am human.”
“No more. Leave this
body you have stolen. Brigitte Hearn has a right to her own life.”
“I can’t! I’m not
going back there. Not to that.”
Horst took a grip on
his trembling hands. Thomas had known this moment, he thought, when the
disciple doubted his Lord’s return, when in prideful arrogance he refused to
believe until he had seen the print of nails in His hand. “Believe,” he
whispered. “Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing ye might
have life through His name.”
The Brigitte/Ingrid
woman bowed her head.
Horst asked the
question that should never be asked: “Where? Where, damn you!”
“Nowhere. There is
nothing for us. Do you hear? Nothing!”
“You lie.”
“There is nothing,
just emptiness. I’m sorry.” She took an unsteady breath, seemingly gathering up
a remnant of dignity. “You must leave now. They are coming back.”
Horst shut the flap on
his rucksack and sealed it. “Where are the rest of the villagers?”
“Gone. They hunt fresh
bodies for other souls trapped in the beyond, it has become their quest. I
haven’t the stomach for it, nor have the others who remained in Aberdale. But
you take care, Father. Your spirit is hale, but you could never withstand one
of us for long.”
“They want more people
to possess?”
“Yes.”
“But why?”
“Together we are
strong. Together we can change what is. We can destroy death, Father. We shall
bring eternity into existence here on this planet, perhaps even across the
entire Confederation. I shall stay as I am for all time now; ageless,
changeless. I am alive again, I won’t give that up.”
“This is lunacy,” he
said.
“No. This is wonder,
it is our miracle.”
Horst pulled his
rucksack onto his back, and picked Shona up. Several adults had started to
gather around the church. He walked down the steps pointedly disregarding them,
Jay pressing into his side. They stared at him, but no one made a move. He
turned and headed for the jungle, mildly surprised to see Ingrid Veenkamp
walking with him.
“I told you,” she
said. “They lack nerve. You will be safer if I am with you. They know I can
strike back.”
“Would you?”
“Perhaps. For the
girl’s sake. But I don’t think we will find out.”
“Please, lady,” Jay
said, “do you know where my mummy is?”
“With the others, the
pernicious ones. But don’t look for her, she is no longer your mother. Do you
understand?”
“Yes,” she mumbled.
“We’ll get her back
for you, Jay,” Horst said. “One day, somehow. I promise.”
“Such faith,” Ingrid
Veenkamp said.
He thought she was
mocking, but there was no trace of a smile on her face. “What about the other
children?” he asked. “Why haven’t you possessed them?”
“Because they are
children. No soul would want a vessel so small and frail, not when there are
plentiful adults to be had. Millions on this planet alone.”
They had reached the
fields, and the soft loam was clinging to Horst’s feet in huge claggy lumps.
With the weight of the rucksack and Shona conspiring to push him into the
ground he wasn’t even sure he could make it to the first rank of trees. Sweat
was dripping from his forehead at the effort. “Send the children after me,” he wheezed.
“They are hungry and they are frightened. I will take care of them.”
“You make a poor Pied
Piper, Father. I’m not even sure you’ll last until nightfall.”
“Mock and scorn as you
like, but send them. They’ll find me. For God knows I’ll not be able to travel
far or fast.”
She dipped her head
briefly. “I’ll tell them.”
Horst staggered into
the jungle with Jay beside him, her big shoulder-bag knocking against her legs.
He managed another fifty metres through the inimical vines and undergrowth,
then sank panting painfully to his knees, face perilously red and hot.
“Are you all right?”
Jay asked anxiously.
“Yes. We’ll just have
to take it in short stages, that’s all. I think we’re safe for now.”
She opened the
shoulder-bag’s seal. “I brought your cooler flask, I thought you might need it.
I filled it with the high-vitamin orange juice you had in your room.”
“Jay, you are a
twenty-four-carat angel.” He took the flask from her and drank some of the
juice; she had set the thermostat so low it poured like slushy snow. They heard
someone pushing their way through the undergrowth behind them, and turned. It
was Russ and Andria, the first of the children.
Trudging across the
savannah wasn’t quite the holiday Jay had told herself it would be. But it was
lovely being away from the homestead, even if it was only going to be for a few
hours. She longed to ride the horse, too; though there was no way she was going
to plead with Father Horst in front of the boys.
They arrived at the
Ruttan family’s old homestead after forty minutes’ walking. Untended, it had
suffered from Lalonde’s rain and winds. The door which had been left open had
swung to and fro until the hinges broke, and now it lay across the small porch.
Animals (probably sayce) had used it for shelter at some time, adding to the
disarray inside.
Jay waited with the
two boys while Father Horst went in, carrying his laser hunting rifle, and
checked over the three rooms. The abandoned cabin was eerie after the noise and
bustle of their own homestead. She heard a distant rumble, and looked up,
thinking it was approaching thunder. But the sky remained a perfect basin of
blue. The noise grew louder, swelling out of the west.
Father Horst emerged
from the homestead carrying a wooden chair. “It sounds like a spaceplane,” he
said.
The grimed
window-panes were rattling in their frames. Jay searched the sky frantically as
the sound began to fade into the east. But there was nothing to be seen, the
spaceplane was too high. She gave the distant mountains to the south a forlorn
glance. It must have been going to the Tyrathca farmers, she thought.
“Have a hunt round,”
Horst said. “See if you can find anything useful; you might try the barn as
well. I’m going to the roof to cut the solar-cell sheets down.” He put the
chair down under the eaves, and stood on it, squirming his way up onto the
roof.
There was nothing much
in the cabin; fans of grey fungus had established a foothold in the cracks
between the planks, and greenish ripples of mould patterned the damp
mattresses. She pulled a couple of clay mugs out from under one of the beds,
and Russ found some shirts in a box below the kitchen workbench.
“They’ll be all right
once we wash them,” Jay declared, holding up the smelly, soiled garments.
They had more luck in
the barn: two sacks of protein-concentrate cakes used to feed young animals
that had just come out of hibernation, and Mills discovered a small
fission-blade saw behind a pile of old cargo-pods. “Good work!” Horst told them
as he clambered down. “And look what I got, all three sheets. We’ll be able to
heat the water tanks up in half the time now.”
Jay rolled up the
solar-cell sheets while he lifted the sacks into the plough horse’s big
saddle-bags.
Horst handed round his
chill flask full of icy elwisie juice, then they set off again. Jay was glad of
her hat. The sunlight was scorchingly hot on her arms and back, air rippled and
shimmered all around. I never thought I’d miss the rains.
There was a river to
cross before they reached the Soebergs’ homestead. It was less than a metre
deep, but about fifteen metres wide. A fast, steady flow from the mountains,
winding in broad curves along the savannah’s gentle contours. The bottom was
smooth rock and rounded pebbles. Snowlily plants were growing right across it,
their long fronds waving in the current. Flower buds as big as her head bobbed
on the surface, the first splits starting to appear in their sides.
Jay and Horst took
their boots off, and waded across clinging to the side of the horse. The water
was invigorating, numbing her toes. She could easily believe it must have come
directly from the snow peaks themselves, she wouldn’t have been surprised to
see nuggets of ice bobbing about. After she sat on the bottom of the bank and
dried her feet she thought she could walk for another hundred kilometres. Her
skin was still tingling delightfully when they started up the bank.
They had been walking
for another ten minutes when Horst held up his hand. “Mills, Russ, come down
off the horse,” he said with quiet insistence.
The tone he used set
up an uncomfortable prickling along Jay’s spine. “What is it?” she asked.
“The Soebergs’
homestead. I think.”
She peered over the
tops of the wavering grass stems. There was something up ahead, a white
silhouette against the indistinct horizon, but the sun-roiled air made it hard
to tell exactly what.
Horst fished his
optical intensifier from a pocket. It was a curving band of black composite
that fitted over his eyes. He studied the scene ahead for a while, his right
forefinger adjusting the magnification control.
“They are coming
back,” he said in a soft murmur.
“Can I see?” she
asked.
He handed her the
band. It was large and quite heavy; the edges annealed to her skin with a
pinching sensation.
She thought she was
looking at some kind of AV recording, a drama play perhaps. Sitting in the
middle of the savannah was a lovely old three-storey manor house, surrounded by
a wide swath of tidy lawns. It was made of white stone, with a grey slate roof
and large bay windows. Several people were standing under the portico.
“How do they do that?”
Jay asked, more curious than alarmed.
“When you sell your
soul to Satan, the material rewards are generous indeed. It is what he asks in
return you should fear.”
“But Ingrid Veenkamp
said—”
“I know what she
said.” He removed the band from her face, and she blinked up at him. “She is a
lost soul, she knows not what she does. Lord forgive her.”
“Do they want our
homestead too?” Jay asked.
“I shouldn’t think so.
Not if they can build that in a week.” He sighed, and took one final look at
the miniature mansion. “Come along, we’ll see if we can find a nice fat
danderil. If we get back early I’ll have time to mince the meat, and you can
have burgers tonight. What do you say?”
“Yeah!” the two boys
chanted in chorus, grinning.
They turned round, and
started to trek back across the heat-soaked savannah to the homestead.
Kelven Solanki floated
through the open hatch into the Arikara’s bridge. The blue-grey
compartment was the largest he’d ever seen in a warship before. As well as the
normal flight crew it had to accommodate the admiral’s twenty-strong
squadron-coordination staff. Most of their couches were empty now. The flagship
was orbiting Takfu, the largest gas giant in the Rosenheim star system, taking
on fuel.
Commander Mircea
Kroeber was stretched out along his couch, supervising the fuelling operation
with three other crew-members. Kelven had seen the cryogenic tanker as Ilex docked
with the huge flagship. A series of spherical tanks stacked on top of a
reaction drive section, and sprouting thermo-dump panels like the wings of a
mutant butterfly.
The squadron of
twenty-five ships was in formation around the Arikara, holding station
five hundred kilometres away from Uhewa, the Edenist habitat which was
resupplying them with both fuel and consumables. It was just one of the
priority operations Ilex’s arrival in the star system had kicked off ten
hours ago. Rosenheim’s planetary government had immediately placed a
restriction on all starship passengers and crew wanting to visit the surface.
They now had to go through a rigorous screening process to make sure Laton
wasn’t amongst them, creating a vast backlog in the low orbit port stations.
The system’s asteroid settlements had swiftly followed suit. Reserve naval
officers were being called up, and the 7th Fleet elements present in the system
had been put on alert status along with the national navy.
Kelven was beginning
to feel like a plague carrier, infecting the Confederation with panic.
Rear-Admiral Meredith
Saldana was hanging in front of a console in the C&C section of the bridge,
his soles touching the decking’s stikpads. He was wearing an ordinary naval
ship-suit, but it seemed so much smarter on him, braid stripes shining brightly
on his arm. A couple of his staff officers were in attendance behind him. One
of the console’s AV projection pillars was emitting a low-frequency laser
sparkle. When Kelven looked straight at it he saw Jantrit breaking apart.
Meredith Saldana
datavised a shutdown order at the console as Kelven let the stikpad claim his
shoes. The Rear-Admiral was six centimetres taller than him, and possessed a
more distinguished appearance than the First Admiral. Could the Saldanas
sequence dignity into their genes?
“Commander Kelven
Solanki reporting as ordered, sir.”
Meredith Saldana gave
him a frank stare. “You are my Lalonde advisory officer?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Just been promoted,
Commander?”
“Yes, sir.”
“It always shows.”
“Sir, I have your
orders flek from the First Admiral.” Kelven held it out.
Meredith Saldana took
the black coin-sized disk with some reluctance. “I don’t know which is worse.
Three months of these ridiculous ceremonial fly-bys and flag-waving exercises
in the Omutan system, or a combat mission which is going to get us shot at by
unknown hostiles.”
“Lalonde needs our
help, sir.”
“Was it bad, Kelven?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I suppose I’d better
access this flek, hadn’t I? All we’ve received so far are the emergency
deployment orders from Fleet headquarters and the news about Laton showing up
again.”
“There is a full
situation briefing included, sir.”
“Excellent. If we run
to schedule we should be departing for Lalonde in eight hours. I’ve requested
another three voidhawks be assigned to the squadron for liaison and
interdiction duties. Is there anything else you think I need immediately? This
mission’s code rating gives me the authority to requisition almost any piece of
hardware the navy has in the system.”
“No, sir. But you will
have a fourth extra voidhawk, Ilex has been assigned to the squadron as
well.”
“You can never have
too many voidhawks,” Meredith said lightly. There was no response from the
young commander. “Carry on, Kelven. Find yourself a berth, and get settled in.
Report for duty here to me an hour before departure time, you can give me a
first-hand account of what we can expect. I always feel a lot happier being
brought up to date by someone with hands-on experience. Meanwhile I suggest you
get some sleep, you look like you need it.”
“Yes, sir, thank you,
sir.”
Kelven twisted his
feet free of the stikpad, and pushed off towards the hatch.
Meredith Saldana
watched him manoeuvre through the open oval without touching the rim. Commander
Solanki seemed to be a very tense man. But then I’d probably be the same in his
place, the admiral thought. He held up the flek with a sense of foreboding,
then slotted it into his couch player to find out exactly what he was up
against.
Horst was always glad
to get back to the homestead and greet his scampish charges; after all, when
all was said and done, they were only children. And profoundly shocked children
at that. They should never be left on their own, and if he had his way they
never would. Practicality dictated otherwise, of course, and there had never
yet been any major disaster while he was roaming the savannah for meat and
foraging the other homesteads. To some extent he had grown blasé about his trips.
But this time, after encountering the possessed out at the Soeberg homestead,
he had forced the return pace, stopping only to kill a danderil, his mind host
to a whole coven of thoughts along the theme of what if.
When he topped a small
rise six hundred metres away and saw the familiar wood cabin with the children
sporting around outside he felt an eddy of relief. Thank you, Lord, he said
silently.
He slowed down for the
last length, giving Jay a respite. Sweat made her blue blouse cling to her
skinny frame. The heat was becoming a serious problem. It seemed to have
banished the hardy chikrows back into the jungle. Even the danderil he’d shot
had been sheltering in the shade of one of the savannah’s scarce trees.
Horst blinked up at
the unforgiving sky. Surely they don’t mean to burn this world to cinders? They
have form now, stolen bodies; and all the physical needs, urges, and failings
which go with them.
He squinted at the
northern horizon. There seemed to be an effete pink haze above the jungle, dusting
the sharp seam between sky and land, like the flush of dawn refracted over a
deep ocean. The harder he tried to focus upon it, the more insubstantial it
became.
He couldn’t believe it
was a natural meteorological rara avis. More an omen. His humour, already
tainted by the Soeberg homestead, sank further.
Too much is happening
at once. Whatever polluted destiny they are manufacturing, it is reaching its
zenith.
They were a hundred
metres from the cabin when the children spotted them. A scrum of small bodies
came running over the grass, Danny in the lead. Both of the homestead’s dogs
chased around them, barking loudly.
“Freya’s here,” the
boy yelled out at the top of his voice. “Freya’s here, Father. Isn’t it
wonderful?”
Then they were all
clinging to him, shouting jubilantly and smiling up with enthusiasm as he
laughed and patted them and hugged them. For a moment he revelled in the
contact, the hero returning. A knight protector and Santa Claus rolled into
one. They expected so much of him.
“What did you find in
the cabins, Father?”
“You were quick
today.”
“Please, Father, tell
Barnaby to give my reading tutor block back.”
“Was there any more
chocolate?”
“Did you find any
shoes for me?”
“You promised to look
for some story fleks.”
With his escort
swirling round and chattering happily, Horst led the horse over to the cabin.
Russ and Mills had slithered off its back to talk with their friends.
“When did Freya
arrive?” Horst asked Danny. He remembered the dark-haired girl from Aberdale,
Freya Chester, about eight or nine, whose parents had brought a large variety
of fruit trees with them. Kerry Chester’s grove had always been one of the
better maintained plots around the village.
“About ten minutes
ago,” the boy said. “It’s great, isn’t it?”
“Yes. It certainly
is.” Remarkable, in fact. He was surprised she had survived this long. Most of
the children had turned up during the first fortnight while they were still
camping in a glade a kilometre away from Aberdale. Five of them walking from
Schuster. They had said a woman was with them for most of the journey—Horst
suspected it was Ingrid Veenkamp. Several others, the youngest ones, he had
found himself as they wandered aimlessly through the jungle. He and Jay made a
regular circuit of the area round the village in the hope of finding still
more. And for every one they did save he suffered the images of ten more lost
in the ferocious undergrowth, stalked by sayce and slowly starving to death.
At the end of a
fortnight it was obvious that the messy, hot, damp glade was totally
impractical as a permanent site. By that time he had over twenty children to
look after. It was Jay who suggested they try a homestead cabin, and four days
later they were safely installed. Only five more children had turned up since
then, all of them in a dreadful state as they tramped down the overgrown track
between Aberdale and the savannah. Dispossessed urchins, totally unable to fend
for themselves, sleeping in the jungle and stealing food from the village when
they could, which wasn’t anything like often enough. The last had been Eustice,
two weeks ago when Horst skirted the jungle on a hunting trip; a skeleton with
skin, her clothes reduced to tattered grey rags. She couldn’t walk, if the
Alsatian hadn’t scented her and raised the alarm she would have been dead
inside of a day. As it was, he had nearly lost her.
“Where is Freya?”
Horst asked Danny.
“Inside, Father,
having a rest. I said she could use your bed.”
“Good lad. You did the
right thing.”
Horst let Jay and some
of the girls lead the horse over to the water trough, and detailed a group of
boys to remove the danderil carcass he’d secured to its back. Inside the cabin
it was degrees cooler than the air outside, the thick double layer of mayope
planks which made up the walls and ceiling proving an efficient insulator. He
said a cheery hello to a bunch of children sitting around the table who were
using a reading tutor block, and went into his own room.
The curtains were
drawn, casting a rich yellow light throughout the room. There was a small
figure lying on the bed wearing a long navy-blue dress, legs tucked up. She
didn’t appear starved, or even hungry. Her dress was as clean as though it had
just been washed.
“Hello, Freya,” Horst
said softly. Then he looked at her fully, and even more of the savannah’s
warmth was drained from his skin.
Freya raised her head
lazily, brushing her shoulder-length hair from her face. “Father Horst, thank
you so much for taking me in. It’s so kind of you.”
Horst’s muscles froze
the welcoming smile on his face. She was one of them! A possessed. Below the
healthy deeply tanned skin lay a wizened sickly child, the dark dress hid a
stained adult’s T-shirt. The two images overlapped each other, jumping in and
out of focus. They were enormously difficult to distinguish, obscured by a
covering veil which she drew over his mind as well as his eyes. Reality was
repugnant, he didn’t want to see, didn’t want truth. A headache ignited three
centimetres behind his temple.
“All are welcome here,
Freya,” he said with immense effort. “You must have had a terrible time these
last weeks.”
“I did, it was
horrible. Mummy and Daddy wouldn’t speak to me. I hid in the jungle for ages
and ages. There were berries and things to eat. But they were always cold. And
I sometimes heard a sayce. It was really scary.”
“Well, there are no
sayce around here, and we have plenty of hot food.” He walked along the side of
the bed towards the dresser below the window, every footfall magnified to a
strident thump in the still room. The noise of the children outside had
perished. There was just the two of them now.
“Father?” she called.
“What do you want
here?” he whispered tightly, his back towards her. He was afraid to pull the
curtains open, afraid there might be nothing outside.
“It is a kindness.”
Her voice was deepening, becoming a morbid atonality. “There is no place for
you on this world any more. Not as you are. You must change, become as us. The
children will come to you one at a time when you call. They trust you.”
“A trust that will
never be betrayed.” He turned round, Bible in hand. The leather-bound book his
mother had given him when he became a novice; it even had a little inscription
she had written in the cover, the black ink fading to a watery blue down the
decades.
Freya gave him a
slightly surprised look, then sneered. “Oh, poor Father! Do you need your
crutch so badly? Or do you hide from true life behind your belief?”
“Holy Father, Lord of
Heaven and the mortal world, in humility and obedience, I do ask Your aid in
this act of sanctification, through Jesus Christ who walked among us to know
our failings, grant me Your blessing in my task,” Horst incanted. It was so
long ago since he had read the litany in the Unified prayer-book; and never
before had he spoken the words, not in an age of science and universal
knowledge, living in an arcology of crumbling concrete and gleaming composite.
Even the Church questioned their need: they were a relic of the days when faith
and paganism were still as one. But now they shone like the sun in his mind.
Freya’s contempt
descended into shock. “What?” She flung her legs off the bed.
“My Lord God, look
upon Your servant Freya Chester, fallen to this unclean spirit, and permit her
cleansing; in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.” Horst made
the sign of the cross above the furious little girl.
“Stop it, you old
fool. You think I fear that, your blind faith?” Her control over her form was
slipping. The healthy clean image flickered on and off like a faulty light,
exposing the frail malnourished child underneath.
“I beseech You to
grant me Your strength, O Lord; so that her soul may be saved from damnation.”
The Bible burst into
flames. Horst groaned as the heat gnawed at his hand. He dropped it to the
floor where it sputtered close to the leg of the bed. His hand was agony, as
though it was dipped in boiling oil.
Freya’s face was
screwed up in determination, great rubberlike folds of skin distorting her
pretty features almost beyond recognition. “Fuck you, priest.” The obscenity
seemed ludicrous coming from a child. “I’ll burn your mind out of your skull.
I’ll cook your brain in its own blood.” Her possessed shape shimmered again.
The lame Freya below was choking.
Horst clutched at his
crucifix with his good hand. “In the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, I order
you, servant of Lucifer, to be gone from this girl. Return to the formless
nothing where you belong.”
Freya let out a
piercing shriek. “How did you know!”
“Begone from this
world. There is no place in the sight of God for those who would dwell in
Evil.”
“How, priest?” Her
head turned from side to side, neck muscles straining as though she was
fighting some invisible force. “Tell me . . .”
Heat was building
along Horst’s spine. He was sweating profusely, frightened she really would
burn him. It was like the worst case of sunburn he had ever known, as though
his skin was splitting open. His clothes would catch fire soon, he was sure.
He thrust the crucifix
towards the girl. “Freya Chester, come forth, come into the light and the glory
of our Lord.”
And Freya Chester was
solidly before him, thin sunken face racked by pain, spittle on her chin. Her
mouth was working, struggling around complex words. Terror pounced from her
black eyes.
“Come, Freya!” Horst
shouted jubilantly. “Come forth, there is nothing to fear. The Lord awaits.”
“Father.” Her voice
was tragically frail. She coughed, spewing out a meagre spray of saliva and
stomach juices. “Father, help.”
“In God we trust, to
deliver us from evil. We seek Your justice, knowing we are not worthy. We drink
of Your blood, and eat of Your flesh so we may share in Your glory. Yet we are
but the dust from which You made us. Guide us from our errors, Lord, for in
ignorance and sin we know not what we do. And we ask for Your holy protection.”
For one last supremely
lucid moment the demon possessor returned. Freya glared at him with a ferocity
which withered his resolution by its sheer malice.
“I won’t forget you,” she
ground out between her curled lips. “Never in all eternity will I forget you,
priest.”
Unseen hands scrabbled
at his throat, tiny fingers, like an infant’s. Blood emerged from the grazes
sharp nails left around his Adam’s apple. He held the crucifix on high, defiant
that Christ’s symbol would triumph.
Freya let out a last
bellow of rage. Then the demon spirit was gone in a blast of noxious arctic air
which blew Horst backwards. Neatly stacked piles of food packets went tumbling
over, the bedlinen took flight, loose articles stampeded off the dresser and
table. There was a bang like a castle door slamming in the face of an invading
army.
Freya, the real Freya,
all crusty sores, ragged clothes, and bony famined figure, was stretched out on
the bed, emitting quiet gurgles from her chapped mouth. She started to cry.
Horst clambered to his
feet, hanging on to the edge of the bed for support. He drew a gasping breath,
his body aching inside and out, as though he had swum an ocean.
Jay and a troop of
frantic children rushed in, shouting in a confused babble.
“It’s all right,” he
told them, dabbing at the scratch marks on his throat. “Everything’s all right
now.”
When Jay awoke the
next morning she was surprised to see she had overslept. She hardly ever did
that, the few minutes alone to herself at the start of each morning were among
the most precious of the day. But it had to be dawn. A pale tinge of hoary
light was creeping into the cabin’s main room around the reed blinds. The other
children were all still sound asleep. She quickly pulled on her shorts, boots,
and an adult-sized shirt she had altered to something approximating her own
size, and slipped quietly out of the door. Thirty seconds later she ran back in
shouting for Father Horst at the top of her voice.
Far above the lonely
savannah cabin, the long vivid contrails of thirteen starship fusion drives
formed a cosmic mandala across the black pre-dawn sky.
Chapter 06
Lewis Sinclair had
been born in 2059. He lived in Messopia, one of the first purpose-built
industrial/accommodation/leisure complexes to be constructed on Spain’s
Mediterranean coast; a cheerless mathematical warren of concrete, glass, and
plastic which covered five square kilometres and sheltered ninety thousand
people against the ferocious armada storms which were beginning to plague
Earth. It was a heavily subsidized experiment by the European Federal
Parliament, by that time desperate to tackle the cancerous underclass problem
thrown up by the continent’s eighty-five million unemployed. Messopia was a
qualified success; its medium-scale engineering industries provided only a
minimal return for investors, but it provided a foretaste of the huge arcologies
which in the centuries to come would house, protect, and employ Earth’s
dangerously expanded population.
His path through life
was never going to be anything other than troublesome; born to low-income
parents, who were only in the new microcosm city because of the parliamentary
law requiring a socially balanced population. There was no real niche for him
in an enterprise geared so resolutely towards the middle-class job/family/home
ethic. He played truant from school, turned to crime, drugs, violence. A textbook
delinquent, one of thousands who ran through Messopia’s architecturally
bankrupt corridors and malls.
It could have been
different, if the education system had caught him early enough, if he had had
the strength to hold out against peer pressure, if Messopia’s technocrat
designers had been less contemptuous of the social sciences. The opportunities
existed. Lewis Sinclair lived in an age of quite profound technological and
economic progress, and never really knew it, let alone shared in it. The first
batches of asteroid-mined metal were starting to supplement depleted planetary
reserves; biotechnology was finally living up to its initial promise; crude
examples of the affinity bond were being demonstrated; more and more
non-polluting fusion plants were coming on-stream as the supplies of He3
mined from Jupiter’s atmosphere increased. But none of it reached down to his
level of society. He died in 2076, seventeen years old; one year after the
bitek habitat Eden was germinated in orbit around Jupiter, and one year before
the New Kong asteroid settlement began its FTL stardrive research project. His
death was as wasteful as his life, a fight with power-blade knives in a
piss-puddled subterranean warehouse, him and his opponent both high on
synthetic crack. The fight was over a thirteen-year-old girl they both wanted
to pimp.
He lost, the power
blade chopping through his ribs to slice his stomach into two unequal portions.
And Lewis Sinclair
made the same discovery as every human eventually made. Death was not the end
of being. In the centuries that followed, spent as a virtually powerless astral
entity suspended in dimensional emptiness, perceiving and envying mortals in
their rich physical existence, he simply wished it were so.
But now Lewis Sinclair
had returned. He wore a body again, weeping for joy at such simple magnificence
as raindrops falling on his upturned face. He wasn’t going to go back into the
deprivation which lay after physical life, not ever. And he had the power to
see that it was so; him and all the others, acting in combination, they were
supreme badasses.
There was more to him
than before, more than the strength which flesh and blood provided. Part of his
soul was still back there in the terrible empty gulf; he hadn’t emerged fully
into life, not yet. He was trapped like a butterfly unable to complete the
transformation from dirt-bound pupa to wing-free ephemeral. Often he felt as
though the body he had possessed was simply a biological sensor mechanism, a
mole’s head peeking out from the earth, feeding sensations back to his
feeling-starved soul via an incorporeal umbilical cord. Strange energistic
vortices swirled around the dimensional twist where the two continua intermingled,
kinking reality. The bizarre effect was usable, bending to his will. He could
alter physical structures, sculpt energy, even prise open further links back
into the extrinsic universe. His mastery of this power was increasing
gradually, but its wild fluxes and resonances caused havoc in cybernetic
machinery and electronic processor blocks around him.
So he watched through
the spaceplane’s narrow curving windscreen as the Yaku (now operating
under a forged registration) dwindled against the sharp-etched stars, and felt
his new muscles relaxing below the seat webbing. The spaceplane systems were an
order of magnitude simpler than the Yaku’s, and critical malfunctions
were highly unlikely now. Starflight was a disturbing business, so very
technical. His dependency on the machines which his very presence disrupted was
unnerving. With some luck he would never have to venture across the
interstellar gulf again. He and his five colleagues riding down to the surface
would be sufficient to conquer this unsuspecting world, turning it into a haven
for other souls. Together they would make it their own.
“Retro burn in five
seconds,” Walter Harman said.
“OK,” Lewis said. He
concentrated hard, feeling round a chorus of distant voices with the peculiar
cell cluster in this body’s brain. We’re coming down now, he told Pernik
Island.
I look forward to
your arrival, the island
personality replied.
The affinity voice
sounded clear and loud in his mind. Bitek functioned almost flawlessly despite
the energistic turmoil boiling around his cells. It was one reason for
selecting this particular planet.
The manoeuvring
rockets at the rear of the little spaceplane fired briefly, pushing him down
into the angle of the seat. The conditioning grille above his head was emitting
an annoyingly loud whine as the fan motor spun out of control. His fingers
tightened their grip on the armrests.
Walter Harman claimed
to have been a spaceplane pilot back in the 2280s, serving in the Kulu Navy. As
only three of them had even been in space before, his right to pilot the
spaceplane went unchallenged. The body he used belonged to one of Yaku’s
crew, possessed within minutes of Lewis boarding the starship. It was equipped
with neural nanonics, which unlike bitek proved almost useless in the constant
exposure to the hostile energistic environment a possession generated, so
Walter Harman had activated the spaceplane’s manual-control system, an
ergonomic joystick which deployed from the console in front of the pilot’s
seat. A projection pillar showed trajectory graphics and systems information,
updating constantly as he muttered instructions to the flight computer.
The spaceplane rolled,
and Lewis saw the mass of the planet slide round the windscreen. They were over
the terminator now, heading into the penumbra.
Night was always their
best time, putting mortal humans at a disadvantage, adding to their own
potency. Something about the darkness embraced their nature.
The spaceplane shook
gently as the upper atmosphere began to strike the heatshield belly. Walter
Harman pitched them up at a slight angle, and swung the wings out a few
degrees, beginning the long aerobrake glide downwards.
They were still in the
darkness when they dropped below subsonic. Lewis could see a hemispherical
bauble of light glinting on the horizon ahead.
“Your approach is on
the beam,” the island personality informed them over the microwave channel.
“Please land on pad eighteen.” A purple and yellow flight vector diagram
appeared on the console’s holoscreen.
“Acknowledged,
Pernik,” Walter Harman said. A three-dimensional simulacrum of the island
materialized inside Lewis’s skull, an image far sharper than the porno
holographs he used to peddle back in Messopia. He automatically knew which pad
eighteen was. A burst of doubt and anxiety blossomed in his mind, which he did
his best to prevent from leaking back down the affinity bond to the island
personality. This Edenist consensual set-up was so smooth. He worried that they
might be taking on more than they could reasonably expect to accomplish.
The island personality
had accepted his explanation that he was representing his merchant family
enterprise from Jospool. Not every Edenist used the voidhawks to carry freight,
there simply weren’t enough to go round.
Lewis studied the
mental simulacrum. Pad eighteen was close to the rim and the floating quays,
there would be machinery there. It would be easy.
Pernik’s coating of
moss made the two-kilometre disk a black hole in the faintly phosphorescent
ocean. Pale yellow radiance shone from a few windows in the accommodation
towers, and floodlights illuminated all the quays. It was 4 a.m. local time,
most of the inhabitants were asleep.
Walter Harman set the
spaceplane down on pad eighteen with only a minor wobble.
Welcome to Pernik, the personality said formally.
Thank you, Lewis replied.
Eysk is
approaching. His family runs one of our premier fishing enterprises. He should
be able to fill your requirements.
Excellent, Lewis said. My thanks again for receiving me
so promptly. I have spent weeks on that Adamist starship; it was becoming
somewhat claustrophobic.
I understand.
Lewis wasn’t sure, but
he thought there was a mild dose of puzzlement in the personality’s tone. Too
late now, though, they were down. Excitement was spilling into his blood. His
part of the scheme was by far the most important.
The airlock opened
with a couple of jerky motions as the actuators suffered power surges. Lewis
went down the aluminium stairs.
Eysk was walking
across the polyp apron towards pad eighteen. A ridge of electrophorescent cells
circling the pad were casting an austere light over the spaceplane. Lewis could
see very little of the island beyond; there was one accommodation tower forming
a slender black rectangle against the night sky, and the sound of waves
sloshing against the rim came from the other side of the spaceplane.
“Keep him busy,” Lewis
ordered Walter Harman as the pilot followed him down the stairs.
“No problem, I’ve got
a thousand dumb questions lined up. Atlantis hadn’t been discovered when I was
alive.”
Lewis reached the
landing pad and tensed—this was it, make or break time. He had altered his
facial features considerably during the starflight; that old journalist back on
Lalonde had given him a nasty moment. He waited for the approaching Edenist to
shout an alarm to the island.
Eysk gave a slight bow
in greeting, and directed an identity trait at Lewis. He waited politely for
Lewis to return the punctilio.
Lewis didn’t have one.
He hadn’t known. His only source of data on Edenist customs was far beyond his
grasp.
Deep down at the
centre of his brain there was a presence, the soul which used to own the body
he now possessed. A prisoner held fast by the manacle bonds of Lewis’s thoughts.
All of the possessors
had a similar prisoner, visualized as a tiny homunculus contained within a
sphere of cephalic glass. They pleaded and they begged to be let out, to come
back; annoying background voices, a gnat’s buzz across consciousness. The possessed
could use them, torment them with glimpses of reality in return for
information, learning how to blend in with the modern, starkly alien society
into which they had come forth.
But the centre of
Lewis’s mind contained only a heavy darkness. He hadn’t told the others that,
they were all so boastful of how they controlled their captives, so he just
brazened it out. The soul he had usurped as he came to this body neither
entreated nor threatened. Lewis knew it was there, he could sense the surface
thoughts, cold and hard, formidable with resolution. Waiting. The entity
frightened him, he had come to possess the body the same way he had walked
Messopia’s corridors, The King of Strut—thinking he could handle it. Now the
first fractures of insecurity in his hyped-up confidence were multiplying. The
usurped soul’s personality was far stronger than him; he could never have
withstood such dread isolation, not simply beyond sensation, but knowing
sensation was possible. What kind of person could?
Are you all right? Eysk asked kindly.
I’m sorry. I think
it may have been something I ate. And the ride down was a god-fucking bitch.
Eysk’s eyebrow rose. Indeed?
Yeah, feel like I’m
gonna puke. Be all right in a minute.
I do hope so.
“This is Walter
Harman,” Lewis said out loud, knowing he was making a colossal balls-up of
things. “A pilot, so he claims. After that flight, think I’m going to ask the
captain for a dekko at his licence.” He laughed at his witticism.
Walter Harman smiled
broadly, and put out his hand. “Pleasure to meet you. This is one hell of a
planet. I’ve never been here before.”
Eysk seemed taken
aback. “Your enthusiasm is most gratifying. I hope you enjoy your stay.”
“Thanks. Say, I tasted
some gollatail a year back, have you got any round here?”
I’m just going for
a walk, get some air, Lewis
said. Down in his memories were a thousand hangovers; he gathered together the
phantom sensation of nausea and cranial malaise, then broadcast them into the
affinity band. It ought to clear my head.
Eysk flinched at the
emetic deluge. Quite.
“I’d like to try some
again, maybe take back a stock of my own,” Walter Harman prompted. “Old Lewis
here can tell you what our ship’s rations are like.”
“Yes,” Eysk said. “I
believe we have some.” His gaze never left Lewis’s back.
“Great, that’s just
great.”
Lewis stepped over the
half-metre ridge of electrophorescent cells around the pad, and headed towards
the island’s rim. There was one of the floating quays ahead, a twenty-metre
crane to one side for lifting smaller boats out of the water.
Sorry about this, Lewis told the island personality. A flight
has never had this effect before.
Do you require a
medical nanonic package?
Let’s leave it a
minute and see. Sea wind always was the best cure for headaches.
As you wish.
Lewis could hear
Walter Harman chattering away inanely behind him. He reached the metal railing
that guarded the rim, and stood beside the crane. It was a spindly column and
boom arrangement made from monobonded carbon struts, lightweight and strong.
But heavy enough for his purpose. He closed his eyes, focusing his attention on
the structure, feeling its texture, the rough grain of carbon crystals held
together with hard plies of binding molecules. Atoms glowed scarlet and yellow,
their electrons flashing in tight fast orbits.
Miscreant energistic
pulses raced up and down the struts, sparking between molecules. He felt the
others in the spaceplane cabin lending their strength, concentrating on a point
just below the boom pivot. The carbon’s crystalline lattice began to break
down. Spears of St Elmo’s fire flickered around the pivot.
A tortured creaking
sound washed across the rim of the island. Eysk looked round in confusion,
peering against pad eighteen’s glare.
Lewis, move now
please, the island personality
said. Unidentified static discharge on the crane. It is weakening the
structure.
Where? He played it dumb, looking round, looking up.
Lewis, move.
The compulsion almost
forced his legs into action. He fought it with bursts of mystification, then
panic. Remembering the power blade as it descended, the sight of blood and
chips of bone spewing out of the wound. It hadn’t happened to him, it was some
horror holo he was watching on the screen. Distant. Remote.
Lewis!
Carbon shattered with
a sudden thunderclap. The boom jerked, then began to fall, curving down in that
unreal slow motion he’d seen once before. And nothing had to be faked any more.
Fear staked him to the ground. A yell started to emerge from his lips—
—Mistake. Your
greatest and your last, Lewis. When this body dies my soul will be free. And
then I can return to possess the living. And when that happens I will have the
same power as you. After that we shall meet as equals, I promise you—
—as the edge of the
boom smashed into his torso. There was no pain, shock saw to that. Lewis was
aware of the boom finishing its work, crushing him against the polyp. Body
ruined.
His head hit the
ground with a brutish smack, and he gazed up mutely at the stars. They started
to fade.
Transfer, Pernik ordered. The mental command was thick
with sympathy and sorrow.
His eyes closed.
Pernik awaited. Lewis
saw it through a long dark tunnel, a vast bitek construct glowing with the
gentle emerald aura of life. Colourful phantom shapes slithered below its
translucent surface, tens of thousands of personalities, at once separate and
in concord: the multiplicity. He felt himself drifting towards it along the
affinity bond, his energistic nexus abandoning the mangled body to infiltrate
the naked colossus. Behind him the dark soul rose as smoothly as a shark
seeking wounded prey to re-inherit the dying body. Lewis’s tightly whorled
thoughts quaked in fright as he reached the island’s vast neural strata. He
penetrated the surface, and diffused himself throughout the network, instantly
surrounded by a babble of sights and sounds. The multiplicity murmuring amongst
itself, autonomic subroutines emitting pulses of strictly functional
information.
His dismay and
disorientation was immediately apparent. Ethereal tentacles of comfort reached
out to reassure him.
Don’t worry, Lewis.
You are safe now . . .
—
What are you?
The multiplicity
recoiled from him, a tide of thoughts in swift retreat, leaving him high and
dry. Splendidly alone. Emergency autonomic routines to isolate him came
on-line, erecting axon blockades around the swarm of neural cells in which he
resided.
Lewis laughed at them.
Already his thoughts were spread through more cells than the body which he’d
abandoned had contained. The energistic flux resulting from such possession was
tremendous. He thought of fire, and began to extend himself, burning through
the multiplicity’s simplistic protection, seeping through the neural strata
like a wave of searing lava, obliterating anything in his path. Cell after cell
fell to his domination. The multiplicity shrieked, trying to resist him.
Nothing could. He was bigger than them, bigger than worlds. Omnipotent. The
cries began to die away as he engulfed them, receding as though they were
falling down some shaft that pierced clean to the planet’s core. Squeezing.
Compressing their fluttering panicked thoughts together. The polyp itself was
next, contaminated by swaths of energy seething out of the transdimensional
twist. Organs followed, even the thermal potential cables dangling far below
the surface. He possessed every living cell of Pernik. At the heart of his
triumphant mind the multiplicity lay silent, stifled.
He waited for a
second, savouring the nirvana-high of absolute mastery. Then the terror began.
Eysk had started to
run towards the rim as the crane creaked and groaned. Pernik showed him the
boom starting to topple down. He knew he was too late, that there was nothing
he could do to save the strangely idiosyncratic Edenist from Jospool. The boom
picked up speed, slamming into the apparently dumbfounded Lewis. Eysk closed
his eyes, mortified by the splash of gore.
Calm yourself, the personality said. His head survived the
impact. I have his thoughts.
Thank goodness.
Whatever caused the crane to fail like that? I’ve never seen such lightning on
Atlantis before.
It . . .
I . . .
Pernik?
The mental wail which
came down the affinity link seemed capable of bursting Eysk’s skull apart. He
dropped to his knees, clamping his hands to his head, vision washed out by a blinding
red light. Steel claws were burrowing up out of the affinity link, ripping
through the delicate membranes inside his brain, shiny silver smeared with
blood and viscid cranial fluid.
“Poor Eysk,” a far-off
chorus spoke directly into his mind—so very different to affinity, so very
insidious. “Let us help you.” The promise of pain’s alleviation hummed in the
air all around.
Even numbed and
bruised he recognized the gentle offer for the Trojan it was. He blinked tears
from his eyes, closing his mind to affinity. And he was abruptly alone, denied
even an echo of the emotional fellowship he had shared for his entire life. The
grotesque mirage of the claw vanished. Eysk let out a hot breath of relief. The
polyp below his trembling hands was glowing a sickly pink—that was real.
“What—”
Hairy cloven feet
shuffled into view. He gasped and looked up. The hominid creature with a
black-leather wolf’s head howled victoriously and reached down for him.
Laton opened his eyes.
His crushed, faltering body was suffused with pain. It wasn’t relevant, so he
ignored it. There wasn’t going to be much time before oxygen starvation started
to debilitate his reasoning. Physical shock was already making concentration
difficult. He quickly loaded a sequence of localized limiter routines into the
neuron cells buried beneath the polyp on which he was pinned by the twisted
crane boom. Developed for his Jantrit campaign, their sophistication was orders
of magnitude above the usual diversionary orders juvenile Edenists employed to
avoid parental supervision. Firstly he regularized the image which the
surrounding sensitive cells were supplying to the neural strata, freezing the
picture of his body.
At that point his
heart gave its last beat. He could sense the desperate attempts by the
multiplicity to ward off Lewis’s subsumption of the island. Laton was banking
everything on the primitive street boy using brute force to take over. Sure
enough Lewis’s eerily potent, but crude, thought currents flowed through the
neural strata below, flushing every other routine before him; though even his
augmented power failed to root out Laton’s subversive routines. They were
symbiotic rather than parasitic, working within the controlling personality not
against it. It would take a highly experienced Edenist bitek neuropathologist
to even realize they were there, let alone expunge them.
Laton’s lips gave a
final quirk of contempt. He cleared a storage section in the neuron cells, and
transferred his personality into it. His final act before consciousness and
memory sank below the polyp was to trigger the proteanic virus infecting every
cell in his body.
Mosul dreamed. He was
lying in bed in his accommodation tower flat, with Clio beside him. Mosul woke.
He looked down fondly at the sleeping girl; she was in her early twenties with
long dark hair and a pretty flattish face. The sheet had slipped from her
shoulders, revealing a pert rounded breast. He bent over to kiss the nipple.
She stirred, smiling dreamily as his tongue traced a delicate circle. A warm
overspill of gently erotic images came foaming out of her drowsy mind.
Mosul grinned in
anticipation, and woke. He frowned down in puzzlement at the sleeping girl
beside him. The bedroom was illuminated by a sourceless rosy glow. It shaded
Clio’s silky skin a dark burgundy colour. He shook the sleep from his head.
They had been making love for hours last night, he was entitled to some
lassitude after that.
She responded eagerly
to his kisses, throwing aside the sheet so he could feast on the sight of her.
Her skin hardened and wrinkled below his touch. When he looked up in alarm she
had become a cackling white-haired crone.
The pink light shifted
into bright scarlet, as though the room was bleeding. He could see the polyp
walls palpitating. In the distance a giant heartbeat thudded.
Mosul woke. The room
was illuminated by a sourceless rosy glow. He was sweating, it was intolerably
hot.
Pernik, I’m having
a nightmare . . . I think. Am I awake now?
Yes, Mosul.
Thank goodness. Why
is it so hot?
Yes, you are having
a nightmare. My nightmare.
Pernik!
Mosul woke, jerking up
from the bed. The bedroom walls were glowing red; no longer safe hard polyp but
a wet meat traced with a filigree of purple-black veins. They oscillated like
jelly. The heartbeat sounded again, louder than before. A damp acrid smell
tainted the air.
Pernik! Help me.
No, Mosul.
What are you doing?
Clio rolled over and
laughed at him. Her eyes were featureless balls of jaundiced yellow. “We’re
coming for you, Mosul, you and all your kind. Smug arrogant bastards that you
are.”
She elbowed him in the
groin. Mosul shouted at the vicious pain, and tumbled off the raised sponge
cushion which formed his bed. Sour yellow vomit trickled out of his mouth as he
writhed about on the slippery floor.
Mosul woke. It was
real this time, he was sure of that. Everything was dangerously clear to his
eyes. He was lying on the floor, all tangled up in the sheets. The bedroom
glowed red, its walls raw stinking meat.
Clio was locked in her
own looped nightmare, hands raking the top of the bed, staring sightlessly at
the ceiling. Unformed screams stalled in her throat, as though she was choking.
Mosul tried to get up, but his feet slithered all over the slimed quaking
floor. He directed an order at the door muscle membrane. Too late he saw its
shape had changed from a vertical oval to a horizontal slash. A giant mouth. It
parted, giving him a brief glimpse of stained teeth the size of his feet, then
thick yellow vomit discharged into the bedroom. The torrent of obscenely fetid
liquid hit him straight on, lifting him up and throwing him against the back
wall. He didn’t dare cry out, it would be in his mouth. His arms thrashed
about, but it was like paddling in glue. There seemed no end to the cascade, it
had risen above his knees. Clio was floundering against the wall a couple of
metres away, her body spinning in the hard current. He couldn’t reach her. The
vomit’s heat was powerful enough to enervate his muscles, and the stomach acid
it contained was corroding his skin. It had risen up to his chest. He struggled
to stay upright. Clio had disappeared below the surface, not even waking from
her nightmare. And still more poured in.
As far as Lewis
Sinclair was aware, Laton’s corpse lay perfectly still under the crumpled crane
boom. Not that he bothered to check. Pernik Island was big, much larger than
his imagination had ever conceived it, and for someone with his background
difficult to comprehend. Every second yelled for his attention as he sent out
phobic fantasies through his affinity bonds with the slumbering populace,
invading their dreams, breaking their minds wide open with insane fear so more
souls could come through and begin their reign of possession. He ignored the
bitek’s tedious minutiae—autonomic organ functions, the monitoring routines
which the old multiplicity employed, enacting muscle membrane functions. All he
cared about was eliminating the remaining Edenists; that task received his
total devotion.
The island’s cells
glimmered a faint pink as a result of the energistic arrogation, even the
shaggy coat of moss shone as though imbued with firefly luminescence. Pernik
twinkled like a fabulous inflamed ruby in the funereal gloom of Atlantis’s
moonless night, sending radiant fingers probing down through the water to
beckon curious fish. An observer flying overhead would have noticed flashes of
blue light pulsing at random from the accommodation tower windows, as though
stray lightning bolts were being flung around the interior.
Long chill screams
reverberated around the borders of the park, emerging from various archways at
the base of the towers. By the time they reached the rim they had blended into
an almost musical madrigal, changes in pitch matching the poignant lilt of the
waves washing against the polyp.
Housechimps scampered
about, yammering frantically at each other. Their control routines had been
wiped clean by Lewis’s relentless purge of the multiplicity and all its subsidiaries,
and long-suppressed simian tribal traits were surfacing. Fast, violent fights
broke out among them as they instinctively fled into the thicker spinneys
growing in the park.
The remaining
sub-sentient servitor creatures, all eighteen separate species necessary to
complement the island’s static organs, either froze motionless or performed
their last assigned task over and over again.
Unnoticed amid the
bedlam and horror, Laton’s corpse was quietly dissolving into protoplasmic
soup.
Edenist biotechnicians
examining the wreckage of Jantrit had called the process Laton used to doctor
the habitat’s neural strata a proteanic virus. In fact, it was far more complex
than that. Affinity-programmable organic molecules was a term one researcher
used.
Deeply disturbed by
the technology and its implications, the Jovian consensus released little
further information. Research continued, a classified high-priority project,
which concentrated on developing methods to warn existing habitats of the
sub-nanonic weapon being deployed against them, and a means of making future
habitats (and people) immune. Progress over the intervening forty years was
slow but satisfactory.
Of course, unknown to
the Edenists, at the same time Laton was equally busy on Lalonde refining his
process, and meeting with considerable success.
In its passive state,
the updated proteanic virus masqueraded as inert organelles within his body
cells—no matter what their nature, from liver to blood corpuscles, muscles to
hair. When his last affinity command activated them, each organelle released a
batch of plasmids (small, artificially synthesized DNA loops) and a
considerable quantity of transcription factors, proteins capable of switching
genes on or off. Once the plasmids had been inserted into the cell’s DNA,
mitosis began, forcing the cells to reproduce by division. Transcription
factors switched off the human DNA completely, as well as an entire series of
the new plasmids, leaving them to be carried passively while just one type of
plasmid was activated to designate the function of the new cell. It was a
drastic mutation. Hundreds of thousands of Laton’s cells were already dying,
millions more were killed by the induced mitosis; but over half fissioned
successfully, turning into specialist diploid gametes.
They spilled out of
the arms, legs, and collar of his one-piece ship-suit in a magenta sludge,
draining away from stubborn clusters of dead cells that retained their original
pattern—kernels of lumpy organs, slender ribs, a rubbery dendritic knot of
veins. As they spread across the polyp they started to permeate the surface,
slipping through microscopic gaps in the grainy texture, seeping down towards
the neural stratum four metres below. Pernik’s nutrient capillaries and axon
conduits speeded their passage.
Four hours later, when
dawn was breaking over the condemned island, the majority of the gametes had
reached the neural stratum. Stage two of the proteanic virus was different. A
gamete would penetrate a neural cell’s membrane and release the mission-specific
plasmid Laton had selected (he had four hundred to choose from). The plasmid
was accompanied by a transcription factor which would activate it.
Mitosis produced a
neuron cell almost identical to the original it replaced. Once begun, the reproduction
cycle was unstoppable; new cells started to supplant old at an ever-increasing
rate. A chain reaction of subtle modification began to ripple out from the rim
of the island. It went on for a considerable time.
Admiral Kolhammer was
almost correct about Time Universe beating the Edenists to inform the
Confederation about Laton. Several dozen star systems heard the news from the
company first. Governments were put in an embarrassing position of knowing less
than Time Universe until the voidhawks carrying diplomatic fleks from Admiral
Aleksandrovich and the Confederation Assembly President arrived, clarifying the
situation.
Naturally enough,
public perception was focused almost exclusively on Laton: the threat from the
past risen like the devil’s own phoenix. They wanted to know what was being
done to track him down and exterminate him. They were quite vociferous about
it.
Presidents, kings, and
dictators alike had to release statements assuring their anxious citizens that
every resource was being deployed to locate him.
Considerably less
attention was drawn to the apparent persona sequestration of Lalonde’s
population. Graeme Nicholson hadn’t placed much emphasis on the effect, keeping
it at the rumour level. It wasn’t until much later that news company science
editors began to puzzle about the cost-effectiveness of sequestrating an entire
backward colony world, and question exactly what had happened in the Quallheim
Counties. Laton’s presence blinded them much as it did everyone else. He was on
Lalonde, therefore Lalonde’s uprising problem was instigated by him. QED.
Privately, governments
were extremely worried by the possibility of an undetectable energy virus that
could strike at people without warning. Dr Gilmore’s brief preliminary report
on Jacqueline Couteur was not released for general public access.
Naval reserve officers
were called in, warships were placed on combat alert and brought up to full
flight-readiness status. Laton gave governments the excuse to instigate
rigorous screening procedures for visiting starships. Customs and Immigration
officers were told to be especially vigilant for any electronic warfare
nanonics.
There was also an
unprecedented degree of cooperation between star systems’ national groupings to
ensure that the warning reached everybody and was taken seriously. Within a day
of a flek courier voidhawk arriving, even the smallest, most distant asteroid
settlement was informed and urged to take precautions.
Within five days of
Admiral Lalwani dispatching the voidhawks, the entire Confederation had been
told, with just a few notable exceptions. Most prominent of these were
starships in transit.
Oenone raced in towards Atlantis at three gees. There
were only sixty cases of Norfolk Tears left clamped into its lower hull cargo
bay. Since leaving Norfolk, Syrinx had flown to Auckland, a
four-hundred-light-year trip. Norfolk Tears increased in price in direct
proportion to the distance from Norfolk, and Auckland was one of the richer
planets in its sector of the Confederation. She had sold sixty per cent of her
cargo to a planetary retailer, and another thirty per cent to a family merchant
enterprise in one of the system’s Edenist habitats. It was the first shipment
the Auckland system had seen for fifteen months, and the price it raised had
been appropriately phenomenal. They had already paid off the Jovian Bank loan
and made a respectable profit. Now she was back to honour her deal with Eysk’s
family.
She looked through
Oenone’s sensor blisters at the planet as they descended into equatorial orbit.
Cool blues and sharp whites jumbled together in random splash patterns.
Memories played below her surface thoughts, kindled by the sight of the
infinite ocean. Mosul’s smiling face.
We’re not going to
stay very long, are we? Oenone
asked plaintively.
Why? she teased. Don’t you like talking to the
islands? They make a change from habitats.
You know why.
You stayed in
Norfolk orbit for over a week.
I had lots of
voidhawks to talk to. There are only fifteen here.
Don’t worry. We
won’t stay long. Just enough time to unload the Norfolk Tears, and for me to
see Mosul.
I like him.
Thank you for the
vote of confidence. While we’re here, would you ask the islands to see if
anyone has a cargo they need shipping outsystem.
I’ll start now.
Can you give me a
link through to Mosul first, please.
It is midnight on
Pernik. The personality says Mosul is unobtainable at the moment.
Oh dear. I wonder
what her name is?
Syrinx.
Yes?
Pernik is wrong.
What do you mean?
Mosul is available?
No, I mean the
personality is different, altered. There is no joy in its thoughts.
Syrinx opened her eyes
and stared round the contoured walls of her cabin. Familiar trinkets she had
picked up on her voyages were lined up in glass-fronted alcoves. Her eyes found
the fifteen-centimetre chunk of whalebone carved into a squatting Eskimo which
Mosul had given her. But Oenone’s unease was too unsettling for the
crude statue to register the way it usually did, bringing forth a warm
recollection intrinsic to both of them.
Perhaps there has
been an accident on one of the fishing boats, she suggested.
Then the grief
should be shared, as is proper.
Yes.
Pernik hides behind
a facade of correctness.
Is Eysk available?
One moment.
Syrinx felt the
voidhawk’s mind reach out, then Eysk was merging his thoughts with her. Still
the same old kindhearted family elder, with that deeper layer of toughness that
made him such a shrewd businessman.
Syrinx, he exclaimed happily, we were wondering
where you had got to.
Did you think I’d
skipped out on you?
Me? He projected mock horror. Not at all. The
arrest warrant we had drawn up was a mere precaution.
She laughed. I’ve
brought your cases of Norfolk Tears.
How many?
Sixty.
Ah well, my family
will be through that lot before the week’s out. Are you coming down tonight?
Yes, if it’s not
too late.
Not at all. I’ll
have some servitors lined up to unload your flyer by the time you get down.
Fine. Is everything
all right on the island?
There was a moment’s
hesitation, a thought-flash of bemused incomprehension. Yes. Thank you for
asking.
Is Mosul there?
Sex, that’s all you
young people think of.
We learn by
example. Is he there?
Yes. But I don’t
think Clio will welcome an interruption right now.
Is she very pretty?
Yes. He generated an image of a girl’s grinning
face, half hidden by long dark hair. She’s bright, too. They are on the
point of formalizing the arrangement.
I’m happy for him,
for both of them.
Thank you. Don’t
tell Mosul I said so, but she’ll make a splendid addition to the family.
That’s nice. I’ll
see you in a couple of hours.
I’ll look forward
to it. Just remember, Mosul learnt everything he knows from me.
As if I could
forget. She broke the contact.
Well? Oenone asked.
I don’t know.
Nothing I could put my finger on, but he was definitely stilted.
Shall I ask the
other islands?
Goodness, no. I’ll
find out what’s troubling them once I’m down. Mosul will tell me, he owes me
that much.
Hooked into the
flyer’s sensors, Syrinx couldn’t be sure, but Pernik appeared aged somehow.
Admittedly it was darkest night, but the towers had a shabby look, almost
mouldered. They put her in mind of Earth’s Empire State Building, now carefully
preserved in its own dome at the centre of the New York arcology. Structurally
sound, but unable to throw off the greying weight of centuries.
Thirty-two years old,
and you see everything in such jaded terms, she told herself wearily. Pity that
Mosul had formed a permanent attachment, though. He would have made a good
father.
She clucked her tongue
in self-admonition. But then her mother had conceived two children by the time
she was thirty.
There’s always
Ruben, Oenone suggested.
It wouldn’t be fair
to him, not even to ask. He’d feel obligated to say yes.
I would like you to
have a child. You are feeling incomplete. It upsets you. I don’t like that.
I am not feeling
incomplete!
You haven’t even
prepared any zygotes for my children yet. You should think about these things.
Oh goodness. You’re
starting to sound like Mother.
I don’t know how to
lie.
Rubbish!
Not to you. And it
was you who was thinking of Mosul in that light.
Yes. Syrinx stopped trying to argue, it was stupidly
blinkered. What would I do without you?
Oenone wrapped her thoughts with a loving embrace, and
for a moment Syrinx imagined the flyer’s ion field had leaked inside the cabin,
filling it with golden haze.
They landed on one of
the pads in the commercial section. The electrophorescent-cell ridge around the
metal grid shone with a strong pink radiance. Few of the accommodation tower
windows were lit.
It looks like
they’re in mourning, Syrinx
said to Oxley in singular engagement mode as she walked down the aluminium
stair. They had flown down alone so that the little flyer could carry more
cargo, but it was still going to take three trips to bring all sixty cases
down.
Yes. He glanced about, frowning. There aren’t
many fishing boats in dock, either.
Eysk and Mosul walked
out of the shadows beyond the ridge.
Syrinx forgot
everything else as Mosul sent out a burst of rapturous greeting, mingled with
mischievously erotic subliminals.
She put her arms
around him and enjoyed a long kiss.
I’d like to meet
her, she told him. Lucky
thing that she is.
You shall.
They stood about on
the pad, chatting idly, as the island’s lizard-skinned housechimps unloaded the
first batch of cases under Oxley’s careful direction and stacked them on a processor-controlled
flat-top trolley. When all eighteen cases were on, the drone trundled off
towards one of the low warehouse domes ringing the park.
Do you want me to
bring the rest down tonight? Oxley
asked.
Please, Eysk said. I have already organized sales
with other families.
The pilot nodded,
winked at Syrinx, who was still standing with Mosul’s arm around her shoulder,
and went back into the flyer. Sitting in the command seat he linked his mind
with the controlling processor array.
Something was affecting
the coherent magnetic-field generation. It took a long time to form, and he had
to bring compensator programs on-line. By the time he finally lifted from the
pad the fusion generator was operating alarmingly close to maximum capacity.
He almost turned back
there and then. But once he rose above a hundred metres the field stabilized
rapidly. He had to cut the power levels back. Diagnostic programs reported the
systems were all functioning flawlessly.
With a quick curse
directed at all Kulu-produced machinery, he ordered the flight computer to
design an orbital-injection trajectory that would bring him to a rendezvous
with Oenone.
See you in three
hours, Syrinx called as the
sparkling artificial comet performed a tight curve around the accommodation
towers before soaring up into the night sky.
Three hours! Oxley let his groan filter back down the
affinity link.
You’re
professionals. You can handle it.
He put the flyer into
a steep climb. One thing about an oceanic world, there was no worry about
supersonic-boom footprints stomping all over civic areas. He was doing Mach two
by the time he was fifteen kilometres away.
Pernik vanished from
his affinity perception. Ordinarily a contact would simply fade with distance
until it was no more. But this was different, like steel shutters slamming into
place. Oxley was over a hundred and fifty years old, in his time he’d visited
almost ninety per cent of the Confederation, and he had never known an Edenist
habitat to react in such a manner. It was alien to the whole creed of
consensual unity.
He switched in the aft
sensors. A luminous red pearl haunted the horizon, sending shimmer-spears of
light dancing across the black water.
“What is
. . .” The words dried up at the back of his throat.
Pernik? he demanded. Pernik, what is going on? What
is that light?
The silence was total.
There wasn’t the slightest trace of the personality’s thoughts left anywhere in
the affinity band.
Syrinx?
Nothing.
Oenone, something’s
happening on Pernik, can you reach Syrinx?
She is there, the worried voidhawk answered. But I cannot
converse with her. Something is interfering.
Oh, heavens. He banked the flyer round, heading back for the
island.
Affinity broadened out
from the single tenuous thread to the orbiting voidhawk, offering him the
support of innumerable minds combining into a homogenized entity, buoying him
up on a tide of intellect. He wasn’t alone, and he wasn’t anxious any more.
Doubts and personal fears bled away, exchanged for confidence and
determination, a much-needed reinforcement of his embattled psyche. For a
moment, flying over the gargantuan ocean in a tiny machine, he had been
horribly lonely; now his kind had joined him, from the eager honoured
enthusiasms of sixteen-year-olds up to the glacial thoughts of the islands
themselves. He felt like a child again, comforted by the loving arms of an
adult, wiser and stronger. It was a reconfirmation of Edenism which left him
profoundly grateful for the mere privilege of belonging.
This is Thalia
Island, Oxley, we are aware of Pernik’s withdrawal from affinity and we are
summoning a planetary consensus to deal with the problem.
That red lighting
effect has me worried, he
replied. The flyer had dropped below subsonic again. Pernik gleamed a sickly
vermilion eight kilometres away.
Around the planet,
consensus finalized, bringing together every sentient entity in an affinity
union orchestrated by the islands. Information, such as it had, was reviewed,
opinions formed, discussed, discarded, or elaborated. Two seconds after
considering the problem the consensus said: We believe it to be Laton. A
ship of the same class as the Yaku arrived last night and sent a
spaceplane down to the island. From that time onward Pernik’s communication has
declined by sixty per cent.
Laton? The appalled question came from Oenone and
its crew.
Yes. The Atlantean consensus summarized the
information that had been delivered by a voidhawk two days earlier. As we
have no orbital stations our checks on arriving ships were naturally less than
ideal, depending solely on civil traffic control satellite-platform sensors.
The ship has of course departed, but the spaceplane remained. Pernik and its
population must have been sequestrated by the energy virus.
Oh no, Oxley cried brokenly. Not him. Not again.
Ahead of him, Pernik
issued a brilliant golden light, as though sunrise had come to the ocean. The
flyer gave a violent lurch to starboard, and began to lose height.
Syrinx watched the
little flyer disappear into the east. The night air was cooler than she
remembered from her last visit, bringing up goosebumps below her ship-tunic.
Mosul, who was dressed in a baggy sleeveless sweatshirt and shorts, seemed
completely unaffected. She eyed him with a degree of annoyance. Macho outdoors
type.
This Clio was a lucky
woman.
Come along, Eysk said. The family is dying to meet you
again. You can tell the youngsters what Norfolk was like.
I’d love to.
Mosul’s arm tightened
that bit extra round her shoulder as they headed for the nearest tower. Almost
proprietary, she thought.
Mosul, she asked on singular engagement, what’s
wrong down here? You all seem so tense. It was a struggle to convey the
emotional weight she wanted.
Nothing is wrong. He smiled as they passed under the archway at
the foot of the tower.
She stared at him,
dumbfounded. He had answered on the general affinity band, an extraordinary breach
of protocol.
Mosul caught her
expression, and sent a wordless query.
This is
. . . she began.
Then her thoughts flared in alarm. Oenone, she couldn’t perceive Oenone!
“Mosul! It’s gone. No, wait. I can feel it, just. Mosul, something is trying to
block affinity.”
“Are they?” His smile
hardened into something which made her jerk away in consternation. “Don’t
worry, little Syrinx. Delicate, beautiful little Syrinx, so far from home. All
alone. But we treasure you for the gift you bring. We are going to welcome you
into a brotherhood infinitely superior to Edenism.”
She spun round, ready
to run. But there were five men standing behind her. One of them—she gasped—his
head had grown until it was twice the size it should be. His features were a
gross caricature, cheeks deep and lined, eyes wide and avian; his nose was
huge, coming to a knife edge that hung below his black lips, both ears were
pointed, rising above the top of his skull.
“What are you?” she
hissed.
“Don’t mind old Kincaid,”
Mosul said. “Our resident troll.”
It was getting
lighter, the kind of liquid redness creeping across the island’s polyp which
she associated with Duchess-night on Norfolk. Her legs began to shake. It was
shameful, but she was so alone. Never before had she been denied the community
of thoughts that was the wonder of Edenism. Oenone! The desperate
shout crashed around the confines of her own skull. Oenone, my love.
Help me!
There was an answer.
Not coherent, nothing she could perceive, decipher. But somewhere on the other
side of the blood-veiled sky the voidhawk cried in equal anguish.
“Come, Syrinx,” Mosul
said. He held out his hand. “Come with us.”
It wasn’t Mosul. She
knew that now.
“Never.”
“So brave,” he said
pityingly. “So foolish.”
She was physically
strong, her genes gave her that much. But there were seven of them. They half
carried, half pushed her onwards.
The walls became
strange. No longer polyp but stone. Big cubes hewn from some woodland granite
quarry; and old, the age she thought she had seen on the approach flight. Water
leaked from the lime-encrusted mortar, sliming the stone.
They descended a
spiral stair which grew narrower until only one of them could march beside her.
Syrinx’s ship-tunic sleeve was soon streaked with water and coffee-coloured
fungus. She knew it wasn’t real, that it couldn’t be happening. There was no
“down” in an Atlantean island. Only the sea. But her feet slipped on the worn
steps, and her calves ached.
There was no red glow
in the bowels of the island. Flaming torches in black iron brands lighted their
way. Their acrid smoke made her eyes water.
The stairway came out
onto a short corridor. A sturdy oak door was flung open, and Syrinx shoved
through. Inside was a medieval torture chamber.
A wooden rack took up
the centre of the room; iron chains wound round wheels at each end, manacles
open and waiting. A brazier in one corner was sending out waves of heat from
its radiant coals. Long slender metal instruments were plunged into it, metal
sharing the furnace glow.
The torturer himself
was a huge fat man in a leather jerkin. Rolls of hairy flesh spilled over his
waistband. He stood beside the brazier, cursing the slender young woman who was
bent over a pair of bellows.
“This is Clio,”
Mosul’s stolen body said. “You did say you wanted to meet her.”
The woman turned, and
laughed at Syrinx.
“What is the point?”
Syrinx asked weakly. Her voice was very close to cracking.
“This is in your
honour,” the torturer said. His voice was a deep bass, but soft, almost
purring. “You, we shall have to be very careful with. For you come bearing a
great gift. I don’t want to damage it.”
“What gift?”
“The living starship.
These other mechanical devices for sailing the night gulf are difficult for us
to employ. But your craft has elegance and grace. Once we have you, we have it.
We can bring our crusade to new worlds with ease after that.”
FLEE! Flee, Oenone.
Flee this dreadful world, my love. And never come back.
“Oh, Syrinx.” Mosul’s
handsome face wore the old sympathetic expression she remembered from such a
time long ago now. “We have taken affinity from you. We have sent Oxley away.
We have taken everybody from you. You are alone but for us. And believe me, we
know what being alone does to an Edenist.”
“Fool,” she sneered.
“That wasn’t affinity, it is love which binds us.”
“And we shall love the
Oenone too,” a musical chorus spoke to her.
She refused to show
any hint of surprise. “Oenone will never love you.”
“In time all things
become possible,” the witching chorus sang. “For are we not come?”
“Never,” she said.
The corpulent paws of
Kincaid the troll tightened around her arms.
Syrinx closed her eyes
as she was forced towards the rack. This is not happening therefore I can feel
no pain. This is not happening therefore I can feel no pain. Believe it!
Hands tore at the
collar of her ship-tunic, ripping the fabric. Hot rancid air prickled her skin.
This is NOT happening
therefore I can feel no pain. Not not not—
Ruben sat at his
console station in Oenone’s bridge along with the rest of the crew. There were
only two empty seats. Empty and accusing.
I should have gone
down with her, Ruben thought. Maybe if I could have provided everything she
needed from life she wouldn’t have gone running to Mosul in the first place.
We all share guilt,
Ruben, the Atlantean consensus
said. And ours is by far the larger failing for letting Laton come to this
world. Your only crime is to love her.
And fail her.
No. We are all
responsible for ourselves. She knows that as well as you do. All individuals
can ever do is share happiness wherever they can find it.
We’re all ships
that pass in the night?
Ultimately, yes.
Consensus was so
large, so replete with wisdom, he found it easy to believe. An essential
component of the quiddity.
She is in trouble
down there, he said. Frightened,
alone. Edenists shouldn’t be alone.
I am with her, Oenone said. She can feel me even though we cannot converse.
We are doing what
we can, the consensus said. But
this is not a world equipped for warfare.
The part of Ruben
which had joined with the consensus was suddenly aware of Pernik igniting to
solar splendour—and he was sitting strapped into a metal flea that spun and
tossed erratically as it fell from the sky.
SYRINX! Oenone cried. Syrinx. Syrinx. Syrinx. Syrinx. Syrinx.
The voidhawk’s
affinity voice was a thunderclap roar howling through the minds of its crew.
Ruben thought he would surely be deafened. Serina sat with her mouth gaping
wide, hands clamped over her ears, tears streaming down her face.
Oenone, restrain yourself, the consensus demanded.
But the voidhawk was
beyond reason. It could feel its captain’s pain, her hopelessness as the
white-hot metal seared into her flesh with brutal intricate skill while in her
heart she thought of nothing but their love. Lost in helpless rage its
distortion effect twisted and churned like a frenzied captured beast pummelling
at its cage bars.
Gravity rammed Ruben
down into his seat, then swung severely. His arms outside the webbing were
sucked up towards the ceiling, their weight quadrupling. Oenone was
tumbling madly, its energy patterning cells sending out vast random surges of
power.
Tula was yelling at
the voidhawk to stop. Loose pieces of junk were hurtling round the bridge—cups
and plastic meal trays, a jacket, cutlery, several circuit wafers. Gravity was
fluctuating worse than a roller-coaster ride. One moment they appeared to be
hanging upside-down, the next they were at right angles, and always weighing
too much. A spinning circuit wafer sliced past Edwin, nicking his cheek. Blood
squirted out.
Ruben could just make
out the calls of the other voidhawks in orbit above Atlantis, trying to calm
their rampant cousin. They all started to alter course for a rendezvous.
Together their distortion fields could probably nullify Oenone’s
supercharged flailings.
Then the most violent
convulsion of all kicked the crew toroid. Ruben actually heard the walls give a
warning creak. One of the consoles buckled, big skinlike creases appearing in
its composite sides as it concertinaed down towards the decking. Coolant fluid
and sparks burst out of the cracks. He must have blacked out for a second.
Gravity was at a
forty-degree angle to the horizontal when he came to, and holding steady.
I’m coming. I’m
coming. I’m coming, Oenone was braying.
Horrified, Ruben
linked into the voidhawk’s sensor blisters. They were heading down towards
Atlantis at two and a half gees. Reaction to the berserker power thundering
through the energy patterning cells made the muscles in his arms and legs bunch
like hot ropes.
Fast-moving specks
were rising above the hazy blue-white horizon, skimming over the atomic fog of
the thermosphere like flat stones flung across a placid sea. The other
voidhawks: their calls redoubled in urgency. But Oenone was immune to
them, to the Atlantean consensus’ imperious orders. Rushing to help its
beloved.
They’re too far away,
Ruben realized in dismay, they won’t reach us in time.
The consensus relaxed
its contact with Oxley, allowing him complete independence to pilot the
floundering flyer, letting his instinct and skill attempt to right the craft
unencumbered. He shot order after order into the bitek processors, receiving a
stream of systems information in return. The coherent magnetic generators were
failing, databuses were glitched, the fusion generator was powering down,
electron-matrix crystal power reserves were dropping. Whatever electronic
warfare techniques Pernik had, they were the best he had ever encountered, and
they were trying to kill him.
He concentrated on the
few control channels which remained operational, reducing the spin and
flattening out the dive. The faltering magnetic fields squeezed and pushed at
glowing ion streams, countering the corkscrew trajectory. Black ocean and
lustrous island chased each other round the sensor images at a decreasing rate.
There was no panic. He
treated it as though it was just another simulation run. An exercise in logic
and competence set by the CAB to try and trip him.
At the back of his
mind he was aware of further pandemonium breaking out amid the consensus. A
ghost image lying across the flyer’s sensor input visualization showed him Oenone
plummeting towards the planet.
With only a kilometre
of altitude left the flyer lost its spin. The nose was dangerously low. He
poured the final power reserves into raising it, using the craft’s ellipsoid
surface as a blunt wing, gaining a degree of lift in an attempt to glide-curve
away from the island. Distance was his only chance of salvation now. Streaks of
reflected starlight blurred on the sable water below, growing closer. There was
no sign of the electronic warfare assault abating.
Pernik’s resplendent
silhouette winked out. Silence detonated into the affinity consensus, absorbing
the entire planet’s mental voice.
Into the emptiness
came a single devastating identity trait.
Your attention,
please, Laton said. We
don’t have much time. Oenone, resume your orbit now.
The flyer’s crashed
systems abruptly sprang back into zealous life. And a shock-numbed Oxley was
pressed deep into his seat as it vaulted back into the sky.
Lewis Sinclair watched
keenly as the torturer manipulated Syrinx’s mangled leg with a pair of ruddy
glowing tongs and a mallet. She wasn’t screaming so loudly now. The fight was
going out of her. But not the spirit, he suspected. She was one tough lady. He
had seen the type before back in Messopia; cops mainly, the special forces mob,
hard-eyed and dedicated. A pusher Lewis worked for had captured one once, and
it didn’t matter what was done to the man, they couldn’t get him to tell them
anything.
Lewis didn’t think the
possessed were going to gain control of the voidhawk through Syrinx. But he
didn’t say anything, let them sweat it. It wasn’t so much his problem,
possessing the island gave him a measure of security a mere human body could
never offer. The range of physical sensations and experiences available to him
was truly astonishing.
The sensitive cells
woven through the polyp were fantastically receptive; people with their mundane
eyes and ears and nose were almost insensate by comparison. His consciousness
roved at random through the huge structure, tasting and sampling. He was
getting the hang of splitting himself into multiples, supervising a dozen
actions at once.
Syrinx groaned again
as the souls from beyond sang into her mind with their strange icy promises.
And Lewis saw a girl standing at the back of the dungeon. The quake her
presence sent through his psyche perceptibly rocked the entire island, as
though it had ridden over a tidal wave. It was her! The girl from Messopia,
Thérèse, the one he’d fought and died over.
Thérèse was tall for
thirteen, skinny, with breasts that had been pushed into maturity by a course
of tailored growth hormones. Long raven hair, brown eyes, and a pretty,
juvenile face with just the right amount of cuteness; everybody’s girl next
door. She was wearing black leather shorts to show off her tight little arse,
and her breasts were almost falling out of a scarlet halter top. Her pose was
indolent, chewing at her gum, one hand on her hip.
Where the hell did
she come from? Lewis asked.
What? the possessed Eysk asked.
Her. Thérèse.
There, behind you.
Eysk turned round,
then frowned angrily at the ceiling. Very funny. Now fuck off.
But—
Thérèse gave a bored
sigh and sauntered out of the dungeon.
Can’t you see her?
None of them answered
him. He knew she was real, he could hear her clicking walk, feel the
weight of her black stilettos on his polyp, olfactory cells picked up the
sugary whiff of gum on her exhaled breath. She walked away from the dungeon,
down a long corridor. For some reason it was difficult to keep his perception
focused on her. She was only walking, but she seemed to be moving so fast. He
barely noticed as the polyp of the corridor gave way to concrete. The light
became a harsh electric yellow coming from bulbs on the ceiling, each one
cupped by a protective wire cage. She hurried on ahead of him, feet sending out
that regular click click click as her stilettos rapped the ground. His
filthy jeans restricted his movements, clinging to his legs as he trailed after
her. The air was cooler here, he could see his breath emerging as white
streamers.
Thérèse slipped
through a big set of grey-painted metal doors ahead. Lewis followed her into
the empty subterranean warehouse in Messopia five hundred and fifty years ago.
He gagged. It was a square chamber, sixty metres to a side, twenty metres high,
rough poured concrete ribbed with steel beams coated in red-oxide paint.
Striplights cast a feeble moon-white glow from on high. As before, leaking
sewage pipes dripped rank liquids onto the floor.
She stood in the
middle of the floor, looking at him expectantly.
He glanced down,
seeing his body for the first time. “Oh no,” he said in a desperate voice.
“This isn’t happening.”
Loud, positive
footsteps sounded from the far end of the warehouse. Lewis didn’t wait to see
who was emerging from the gloom, he spun round. There was no door any more,
just a concrete wall. “Jesus Almighty. Fuck!”
“Hello, Lewis.”
His body was compelled
to turn, leg muscles working like dead meat fired by a cattle prod. He bit hard
on his trembling lip.
Thérèse had gone. The
person walking towards him was the body he had possessed on Lalonde.
“You’re dead,” Lewis
whispered through a fear-knotted throat.
Laton merely smiled
his superior smile. “Of all the people resident in this universe today, Lewis,
you should know there is no such thing as death.”
“I’m in charge here,”
Lewis yelled. “I am Pernik.” He tried to fling the white fire, to conjure up
energistic devastation, to flay the zombie to its stinking corrupt bones and
beyond.
Laton halted five
metres away. “You were Pernik. I told you once that we would meet again as
equals. I lied. You cannot even begin to conceive the processes involved in
your manifestation within this universe. You are a Neanderthal out of time,
Lewis. You believed brute force was the key to conquest. Yet you failed to even
think about the source of your energistic power. I know, I’ve been analysing
your tiresomely sluggish thoughts ever since you possessed my body.”
“What have you done to
me?”
“Done? Why, Lewis, I
have made you a part of me. Possession of the possessor. It is possible given
the right circumstances. In this case I simply corrupted Pernik’s neural
stratum with my biological weapon. The neuron cells and nerve paths only
conduct my thought impulses now. You can kill the cells, but you can’t subvert
them. It’s a question of coding, you see. I know the codes, you don’t. And
please don’t ask me for them, Lewis, it’s nothing as simple as a number. You
now operate only as a subsidiary part of me, you only think because I allow you
to. That is how I summoned you here.”
“I think because I am!
I have been me for centuries, you bastard.”
“And were you to go
back there to the beyond, you would be you again. Free and independent. Do you
want to go, Lewis? That is your escape from my bondage. In this universe you
require a physical, living biological matrix in which to function. You may
depart now if you wish.”
A weight pulled at
Lewis’s belt. When he looked down he saw it was the power-blade knife hanging
in its sheath. “No.” He shook his head feebly, quailing at the prospect. “No, I
won’t. That’s what you want. Without me Pernik would be free again. I’m going
to stop that, I’m going to beat you.”
“Don’t flatter
yourself, Lewis. I will never allow you to resume your barbaric act of sodomy.
You think of yourself as strong, as purposeful. You are entirely incorrect. You
and the other returners have a nebulous plan to re-establish yourselves
permanently in this physical universe. You do so because of your own quite
pathetic psychological weaknesses.”
Lewis snarled at his
tall tormentor. “So fucking smart, aren’t you. Let’s see what you’re like after
a hundred fucking years of nothing; no food, no breathing, no touch, just
fucking nothing. You’ll be begging to join us, shithead.”
“Really?” Laton’s
smile no longer contained even a vestige of humour. “Think what you are, Lewis.
Think what all the returners are. Then ask yourself, where is the rest of the
human race? The hundreds of billions who have died since the day our ancestors
first struck two flints together, from the time we watched the glaciers
retreating as we battled with mammoths.”
“They’re with me,
billions of them. They’re waiting for their chance. And when they get into this
universe they’re gonna come gunning for you, shithead.”
“But they’re not with
you in the beyond, Lewis, there are nothing like enough souls to account for
everyone. You cannot lie to me, you are part of me. I know. They’re not there.
Ask yourself who and why, Lewis.”
“Fuck you.” Lewis drew
the knife from its scabbard. He thumbed the switch in a smooth motion and the
silver blade emitted a dangerous buzz.
“Lewis, kindly behave
yourself; this is my perceptual reality, after all.”
Lewis watched the
solid blade curve round towards his fingers. He dropped the knife with a yell.
It vanished before it reached the floor, making as little fuss as a snowflake
landing on water. “What do you want with me?” He raised his clenched fists,
knowing that it was all futile. He wanted to pound his knuckles into the
concrete.
Laton took another few
paces towards him. And Lewis came to realize just how imposing the big Edenist
was. It was all he could do not to back away.
“I want to make
amends,” Laton said. “At least part way. I doubt I will ever be fully forgiven
in this universe, not for my crime. And it was a crime, I admit that now. You
see, from you I have learnt how wrong I was before. Immortality is a notion we
all grasp at because we can sense that there is continuity beyond death. It is
an imperfect realization due to the weakness of the fusion between this
continuum and the state of emptiness which follows. So much of our
misunderstanding of life is rooted in this, so many wasted opportunities, so
much religious claptrap born. I was wholly wrong to try and achieve a physical
life extension, when corporeal life is but the start of existence. I was no
better than a monkey trying to grasp a hologram banana.”
“You’re mad!” Lewis
shouted recklessly. “You’re fucking mad!”
Laton became pitying.
“Not mad, but very human. Even in this hiatus state I have emotions. And I have
weaknesses. One of them is the desire for revenge. But then you know all about
that, don’t you, Lewis? Revenge is a prime motivator; glands or no glands,
chemical fury or otherwise. You burnt for it in the empty beyond, revenge on
the living for the crime of living.
“Well, now I shall
have my revenge for the agonies and degradations you so joyfully submitted my
kind to. My kind being the Edenists. For I am one. At the end. Flawed, but
proud of them, their silly pride and honour. They are a basically peaceful
people, those of Pernik more than most, and you delighted in shattering their
sanity. You also destroyed my children, and you revelled in it, Lewis.”
“I still do! I hope it
fucking hurt you watching! I hope the memory makes you scream at nights. I want
you in pain, you shit, I want you weeping. If I’m part of your memories then
you won’t ever be able to forget, I won’t let you.”
“Oh, Lewis, haven’t
you learnt anything yet?” Laton drew his own knife from a scabbard he brought
into existence. Its wickedly thrumming power-blade was half a metre long. “I’m
going to free Syrinx and warn the Atlantean consensus as to the exact nature of
the threat they face. However, the remaining possessed do present a slight
problem. So I need you to overcome them, Lewis. I shall consume you,
completely.”
“Never! I won’t help.”
Laton took a pace
forwards. “It isn’t a question of choice. Not on your part.”
Lewis tried to run.
Even though he knew it was impossible. The concrete closed in, shrinking the
warehouse to the size of a tennis court, a room, a cube five metres across.
“I require control of
the energistic spillover, Lewis. The power which comes from colliding continua.
For that I must have the you which is you. I must complete my possession.”
“No!” Lewis raised his
arms as the blade came whistling down. Once again there was the dreadful
grinding sound as bone was pierced and fragmented. A flash of intolerable pain
followed by the devastating numbness. His blood spilled onto the floor in great
spurts from his elbow stump.
“Goodbye, Lewis. It
may be some time before we encounter one another again. But none the less I
wish you luck in your search for me.”
Lewis had collapsed
twitching into a corner, soles of his boots slipping on his own blood.
“Bastard,” he spat through white lips. “Just do it. Get it over with and laugh,
you shithead prick sucker.”
“Sorry, Lewis. But
like I told you, I shall consume you in your entirety. It’s almost a vampiric
process, really—though I expect that particular irony is sadly lost on you. And
in order for the transfer to work you must remain conscious for the entire
feast.” Laton gave him a lopsided, half-apologetic smile.
The true meaning of
what the Edenist was saying finally sank in. Lewis started to scream. He was
still screaming when Laton picked up his severed arm and bit into it.
Pernik’s illumination
returned to normality with eye-jarring suddenness. The accommodation towers
blazed with diamond-blue light from every window, winding pathways through the
park were set out by orange fairy lanterns, circular landing pads glowed hotly
around the entire rim, the floating quays were like fluorescent roots radiating
out into the opaque glassy water.
Oxley thought it
looked quite magnificent. So cruelly treacherous, that a creation of such
beauty could play host to the most heinous evil.
Land immediately
please, Oxley, Laton said. I
don’t have much time. They are resisting me.
Land? Oxley felt his throat snarl up as outrage vied
with a shaky form of laugh. Show me where you are, and I’ll come to you,
Laton. I’ll be doing around Mach twenty when we embrace. Show yourself!
Don’t be a fool. I
am Pernik now.
Where’s Syrinx?
She lives. Oenone
will confirm that. But you must pick her up now, she requires urgent
medical attention.
Oenone? He sent the querying thought lancing upwards, while at the back of his
mind he was aware of Laton delivering a vast quantity of information to the
Atlantean consensus.
The voidhawk
registered as a subdued jumble of thoughts. It had stopped its crazed descent;
now it was rising laboriously up out of the mesosphere, its distortion effect
generating barely a tenth of a gee.
Oenone, is she alive?
Yes.
The emotional
discharge in the voidhawk’s thought brought tears to his eyes.
Oxley, Ruben called, if there’s any chance
. . . please.
OK. He studied the island. Pinpricks of light were
blooming and dying right across it, stars with a lifetime measurable in
fractions of a second. It looked quite magical, though he didn’t like to dwell
too hard upon what their cause would be.
Consensus, should I
go in?
Yes. No other
spaceplanes can reach Pernik in time. Trust Laton.
That was it, the
universe had finally gone totally insane. Oh, shit. OK, I’m taking the flyer
down.
Fires had taken hold
in the central park when Oxley piloted the flyer down onto one of the pads. He
could see a spaceplane further along the row, wings retracted, lying on its
side with its undercarriage struts sticking up in the air and its fuselage
cracked open around the midsection. Bodies were sprawled on the polyp around
the base of the nearest accommodation tower; most of them looked as though they
had been caught in a firestorm, skin blackened, faces unrecognizable, clothes
still smoking.
An explosion sounded
in the distance, and a ball of orange flame rolled out of a window on the other
side of the park.
They are learning, Laton said impassively. Grouped together
they can ward off my energistic assaults. It won’t do them any good in the long
run, of course.
Oxley’s nerves were
raw edged. He still thought this was some giant trap. The steel-clad jaws would
snap shut any second; conversation might just be the trigger. Where’s
Syrinx?
Coming. Open the
flyer airlock.
He felt the consensus
balance his insecurities with an injection of urbane courage. Somehow he was
giving the order to cut the ion field and open the airlock.
Faint shouts and the
drawn out screeching of metal under tremendous stress penetrated the cabin.
Oxley sniffed the air. Mingled with the brine was a frowsty putrescence which
furred the roof of his mouth. With his hand clamped firmly over his nose he
made his way aft.
Someone was walking
towards the flyer. A giant, three metres tall, hairless, naked skin a frail
cream colour, virtually devoid of facial features. It was holding a figure in
its outstretched arms.
“Syrinx,” he gasped.
He could feel Oenone pushing behind his eyes, desperate to see.
Three-quarters of her
body was engulfed by green medical nanonic packages. But even that thick
covering couldn’t disguise the terrible damage inflicted on her limbs and
torso.
The nanonic
packages do not function well in this environment, Laton said as the giant mounted the flyer’s
airstairs. Once you are airborne their efficiency will recover.
Who did this?
I do not know their
names. But I assure you the bodies they possessed have been rendered
nonfunctional.
Oxley backed into the
cabin, too shaken to offer further comment. Laton must have loaded an order
into the flight-control processors, because the front passenger seat hinged
open to form a flat couch. It was the one designed for transporting casualty
cases. Basic medical monitor and support equipment slid out from recesses in
the cabin wall above it.
The giant laid Syrinx
down gently, then stood, its head touching the cabin ceiling. Oxley wanted to
rush over to her, but all he could do was stare dumbly at the hulking titan.
Its blank face crawled as though the skin was boiling. Laton looked down at
him.
“Go to the Sol
system,” the simulacrum said. “There are superior medical facilities available
there in any case. But the Jovian consensus must be informed of the true nature
of the threat these returning souls pose to the Confederation; indeed to this
whole section of the galaxy. That is your priority now.”
Oxley managed to jerk
a nod. “What about you?”
“I will hold the
possessed off until you leave Pernik. Then I will begin the great journey.” The
big lips pressed together in compassion. “If it is of any comfort, you may tell
our kind I am now truly sorry for Jantrit. I was utterly and completely wrong.”
“Yes.”
“I do not ask
forgiveness, for it would not be in Edenism’s power to grant. But tell them
also that I came good in the end.” The face managed a small, clumsy smile.
“That ought to set the cat among the pigeons.”
The giant turned and
clumped out of the cabin. When it reached the top of the airlock stairs it lost
all cohesion. A huge gout of milky white liquid sloshed down onto the metal
grid of the landing pad, splattering the flyer’s landing gear struts.
The flyer was five
hundred kilometres from Pernik and travelling at Mach fifteen up through the
ionosphere when the end came.
Laton waited until the
diminutive craft was beyond any conceivable blast range, then used his all-pervasive
control to release every erg of chemical energy stored in the island’s cells
simultaneously. It produced an explosion to rival an antimatter planetbuster
strike. Several of the tsunami which raced out from the epicentre were powerful
enough to traverse the world.
Chapter 07
It was a quiet evening
in Harkey’s Bar. Terrance Smith’s bold little fleet had departed the previous
day, taking with it a good many regulars. The band audibly lacked enthusiasm,
and only five couples were dancing on the floor. Gideon Kavanagh sat at one
table; the medical nanonic package preparing his stump for a clone graft was
deftly covered by a loose-fitting purple jacket. His companion was a slim
twenty-five-year-old girl in a red cocktail dress who giggled a lot. A group of
bored waitresses stood at one end of the bar, talking among themselves.
Meyer didn’t mind the
apathetic atmosphere for once. There were some nights when he really didn’t
feel like maintaining the expected image of combination raconteur, bon viveur,
ace pilot, and sex demon—the qualities that independent starship captains were
supposed to possess in abundance. He was too old to be keeping up that kind of
nonsense.
Leave it to the young
ones like Joshua, he thought. Although with Joshua it was hardly an act.
Nor was it always
an artificial pose for you, Udat
said.
Meyer watched one of
the young waitresses swish past the end of the booth, an oriental with blonde
hair whose long black skirt was split up to her hips. He didn’t even feel
remotely randy, just appreciative of the view. Those days seem to be long
gone, he told the blackhawk with an irony that wasn’t entirely insincere.
Cherri Barnes was
sitting in the booth with him; the two of them sharing a chilled bottle of
imported white Valencay wine. Now there was a woman he felt perfectly
comfortable with. Smart, attractive, someone who didn’t feel compelled to talk
into any silences, a good crew member too; and they’d been to bed on several
occasions over the years. No incompatibility there.
Her company
lightens you, Udat proclaimed. That makes me happy.
Oh, well, as long
as you’re happy . . .
We need a flight.
You are growing restless. I am eager to leave.
We could have gone
to Lalonde.
I think not. Such
missions do not sit well with you any more.
You’re right.
Though Christ knows I would have liked a crack at that bastard Laton. But I
suppose that’s something else best left to Joshua and his ilk. Though what he
wanted to go for after the money he pulled in on the Norfolk run beats me.
Perhaps he feels he
has something to prove.
No. Not Joshua.
There’s something odd going on there. And knowing Joshua, money is at the root
of it. But no doubt we’ll hear about it in due course. In the meantime the
Lalonde mission has left a pleasing shortage of starships docked here. Finding
a charter should be relatively easy.
There were those
Time Universe charters available. Claudia Dohan specifically wanted blackhawks
to deliver the fleks of Graeme Nicholson’s sensevise. Time was of the essence,
she said.
Those charters were
all rush and effort.
It would have been
a challenge.
If I’d wanted my
mother as a permanent companion rather than a blackhawk I would never have left
home.
I am sorry. I have
upset you.
No. It’s this Laton
business. It has me worried. Fancy him turning up again after all this time.
The navy will find
him.
Yeah. Sure.
“What are you two
talking about?” Cherri asked.
“Huh? Oh, sorry,” he
grinned sheepishly. “It’s Laton, if you must know. Just thinking of him running
round free again . . .”
“You and fifty billion
others.” She picked up one of the menu sheets. “Come on, let’s order. I’m
starving.”
They chose a chicken
dish with side salad, along with a second bottle of wine.
“The trouble is, where
can you travel to that’s guaranteed safe?” Meyer said after the waitress departed.
“Until the Confederation Navy finds him, the interstellar cargo market is going
to be very jumpy. Our insurance rates are going to go through the roof.”
“So shift to
data-courier work. That way we don’t have to physically dock with any stations.
Alternatively, we just fetch and carry cargo between Edenist habitats.”
He shifted his
wineglass about on the table, uncomfortable with the idea. “That’s too much
like giving in, letting him win.”
“Well, make up your
mind.”
He managed a desultory
smile. “I dunno.”
“Captain Meyer?”
He glanced up. A
smallish black woman was standing at the end of the booth’s table, dressed in a
conservative grey suit; her skin was black enough to make Cherri seem white. He
guessed she was in her early sixties. “That’s me.”
“You are the owner of
the Udat?”
“Yes.” If it had been
anywhere else but Tranquillity, Meyer would have pegged her as a tax inspector.
“I am Dr Alkad Mzu,”
she said. “I wonder if I could sit with you for a moment? I would like to
discuss some business.”
“Be my guest.”
He signalled to a
waitress for another wineglass, and poured out the last of the bottle when it
arrived.
“I require some
transportation outsystem,” Alkad said.
“Just for yourself? No
cargo?”
“That is correct. Is
it a problem?”
“Not for me. But the Udat
doesn’t come cheap. In fact, I don’t think we’ve ever carried just one
passenger before.”
We haven’t, Udat said.
Meyer quashed a
childish grin. “Where do you want to travel? I can probably give you a quote
straight away.”
“New California.” She
sipped her wine, peering at him over the rim of the glass.
Out of the corner of
his eye, Meyer could see Cherri frowning. There were regular commercial flights
to the New Californian system from Tranquillity three or four times a week, and
more non-scheduled charter flights on top of that. The Laton scare hadn’t
stopped any departures yet. He was suddenly very curious about Alkad Mzu.
OK, let’s see how
badly she wants to get there. “That would be at least three hundred thousand
fuseodollars,” he told her.
“I expected it to be
about that,” she replied. “Once we arrive, I may wish to pick up some cargo to
carry on to a further destination. Could you supply me with the Udat’s
performance and handling parameters, please?”
“Yes, of course.” He
was only slightly mollified. Taking a cargo on somewhere was a viable excuse
for an exclusive charter. But why not travel to New California on a regular
civil flight, then hire a starship after she arrived? The only reason he could
think of was that she specifically wanted a blackhawk. That wasn’t good, not
good at all. “But Udat is only available for civil flights,” he stressed
the word lightly.
“Naturally,” Alkad Mzu
said.
“That’s all right
then.” He opened a channel to her neural nanonics and datavised the blackhawk’s
handling capacity over.
“What sort of cargo
would we pick up?” Cherri asked. “I’m the Udat’s cargo officer, I may be
able to advise on suitability.”
“Medical equipment,”
Alkad said. “I have some type-definition files.” She datavised them to Meyer.
The list expanded in
his mind, resembling a three-dimensional simulacrum of magnified chip
circuitry, with every junction labelled. There seemed to be an awful lot of it.
“Fine,” he said, slightly at a loss. “We’ll review it later.” Have to run it
through an analysis program, he thought.
“Thank you,” Alkad
said. “The journey from New California will be approximately two hundred
light-years, if you’d care to work out a quote based on the cargo’s mass and
environmental requirements. I will be asking other captains for quotes.”
“We’ll be tough to
beat,” he said smoothly.
“Is there any reason
why we can’t know where we’re going?” Cherri asked.
“My colleagues and I
are still in the preliminary planning stage of the mission. I’d prefer not to
say anything more at this time. But I shall certainly inform you of our
destination before we leave Tranquillity.” Alkad stood up. “Thank you for your
time, Captain. I hope we see each other again. Please datavise your full quote
to me at any time.”
“She hardly touched
her wine,” Cherri said as the doctor departed.
“Yes,” Meyer said
distantly. Five other people were leaving the bar. None of them space industry
types. Merchants? But they didn’t look rich enough.
“Are we putting in a
formal bid?”
“Good question.”
I would like to
visit New California, Udat said hopefully.
We’ve been before.
You just want to fly.
I do. It is boring
sitting on this ledge. Udat
relayed an image of whirling
stars as seen from Tranquillity’s docking-ledge, speeded up, always tracing the
same circles. The edge of the habitat’s spaceport disk started to grey, then
crumbled and broke apart with age.
Meyer grinned. What
an imagination you have. I’ll get us a charter soon. That’s a promise.
Good!
“I think we need to
know a little bit more about this Mzu woman,” he said out loud. “No way is she
on the level.”
“Oh, really?” Cherri
cooed; she cocked her head on one side. “You noticed that, did you?”
Ione let go of the
image. Her apartment rematerialized around her. Augustine was walking determinedly
across the dining-room table towards the remains of the salad she had pushed
away, moving at a good fifty centimetres a minute. At the back of her mind she
was aware of Alkad Mzu standing in the vestibule of the thirty-first floor of
the StMartha starscraper waiting for a lift. There were seven Intelligence
agency operatives hanging around in the park-level foyer above her, alerted by
their colleagues in Harkey’s Bar. Two of them—a female operative from New
Britain, and the second-in-command of the Kulu team—resolutely refused to make
eye contact. Strange really. For the last three weeks they had spent most of
their off-duty hours in bed together screwing each other into delirious
exhaustion.
In my history
courses I recall an incident in the twentieth century when the American CIA
tried to get rid of a Caribbean island’s Communist president by giving him an
exploding cigar, Ione said.
Yes? Tranquillity asked loyally.
Six hundred years
of progress—human style.
Would you like me
to inform Meyer that Alkad Mzu will not be granted an exit visa?
Informing him I’ll
blow him and the Udat out of existence if he leaves with her would be
more to the point. But no, we won’t do anything yet. How many captains has she
contacted now?
Sixty-three in the
last twenty months.
And every contact
follows the same pattern, she
mused. A request for a charter fee quote to carry her to a star system, then
picking up a cargo to take onwards. But never the same star system; and it was
Joshua who was asked to quote for Garissa. Ione tried not to consider the
implications of that. It had to be coincidence.
I am sure it is, Tranquillity said.
I was leaking.
Sorry.
There was never any
follow-up to her meeting with Joshua.
No. But what is she
doing, I wonder?
I have two possible
explanations. First, she is aware of the agency observers—and it would be hard
to believe she is not—and she is simply having fun at their expense.
Fun? You call that
fun? Threatening to recover the Alchemist?
Her home planet has
been annihilated. If the humour is somewhat rough, that is to be expected.
Of course. Go on.
Secondly, she is
attempting to produce a range of escape options which exceed the observers’
ability to keep track of. Sixty-three is an excessive number of captains to
contact even for a warped game.
But she must know
it isn’t possible to confuse you.
Yes.
Strange woman.
A very intelligent
woman.
Ione reached over to
her discarded plate, and began shredding one of the lettuce leaves. Augustine
crooned adoringly as he finally reached the pile of shreds, and started to
munch at them.
Is it possible for
her to circumvent your observation? Apparently Edenists can induce localized
blindspots in their habitats’ perception.
I would say it is
extremely unlikely. No Edenist has ever succeeded in evading me, and there were
many attempts in your grandfather’s day.
Really? She perked up.
Yes, by their
Intelligence agency operatives. All failed. And I acquired some valuable
information on the nature of localized circumvention patterns they employed.
Fortunately I do not use quite the same thought routines as Edenist habitats,
so I am relatively insusceptible. And Alkad Mzu does not have affinity.
Are we sure? She
was missing for some time between Garissa’s destruction and turning up here,
four years. She could have had neuron symbionts implanted.
She did not. A
complete medical body scan is required for health-insurance coverage for all
Laymil project staff when they start work. She has neural nanonics, but no
affinity symbionts. Nor any other implants, for that matter.
Oh. I’m still
unhappy over these continual encounters with starship captains. Perhaps if I
had a private word with her . . . explain how upsetting it is.
That might work.
Did Father ever
meet her?
No.
I’ll think about
what to say then, I don’t want to come over all heavy handed. Perhaps I could
invite her for a meal, keep it informal.
Certainly. She
always maintains her social propriety.
Good. In the
meantime, I’d like you to double the number of serjeants we keep in her
immediate vicinity. With Laton running loose in the Confederation, we really
don’t want to add to Admiral Aleksandrovich’s troubles right now.
Meyer and Cherri
Barnes took a lift up from Harkey’s Bar to the StMartha’s foyer. He walked with
her down a flight of stairs to the starscraper’s tube station, and datavised
for a carriage.
“Are we going back to
the hotel or Udat?” Cherri asked.
“My hotel flat has a
double bed.”
She grinned, and
tucked his arm round hers. “Mine too.”
The carriage arrived,
and he datavised the control processor to take them to the hotel. There was a
slight surge of acceleration as it got under way. Meyer sank deeper into his
cushioning; Cherri still hadn’t let go of him.
His neural nanonics
informed him a file stored in one of the memory cells was altering. Viral
safeguard programs automatically isolated the cell. According to the menu, the
file was the cargo list Alkad Mzu had datavised to him.
The viral safeguard
programs reported the change had finished; tracer programs probed the file’s
new format. It wasn’t hostile. The file had contained a time-delay code which
simply re-arranged the order of the existing information into something
entirely different. A hidden message.
Meyer accessed the
contents.
“Holy shit,” he
muttered fifteen seconds later.
Now that would be a
real challenge, Udat said excitedly.
Ombey was the newest
of Kulu’s eight principality star systems. A Royal Kulu Navy scoutship
discovered the one terracompatible planet in 2457, orbiting a hundred and
forty-two million kilometres from its G2 star. After an ecological
certification team cleared its biosphere as non-harmful, it was declared a Kulu
protectorate and opened for immigration by King Lukas in 2470. Unlike other
frontier worlds, such as Lalonde, which formed development companies and
struggled to raise investment, Ombey was funded entirely by the Kulu Royal
Treasury and the Crown-owned Kulu Corporation. Even at the beginning it
couldn’t be described as a stage one colony. It couldn’t even be said to have
gone through a purely agrarian phase. A stony iron asteroid, Guyana, was
manoeuvred into orbit before the first settler arrived, and navy engineers
immediately set about converting it into a base. Kulu’s larger astroengineering
companies brought industry stations to the system to gain a slice of the
military contracts involved, and to take advantage of the huge start-up tax
incentives on offer. The Kulu Corporation began a settlement on an asteroid
orbiting the gas giant Nonoiut, which assembled a cloudscoop to mine He3.
As always within the Kingdom, the Edenists were excluded from germinating a
habitat and building an adjunct cloudscoop, a prohibition rationalized by the
Saldanas on religious grounds.
By the time the first
wave of farmers arrived, the already substantial government presence produced a
large ready-made consumer base for their crops. Healthcare, communications, law
enforcement, and didactic education courses, although not quite up to the level
of the Kingdom’s more developed planets, were provided from day one. Forty
hectares of land were given to each family, along with a generous low-interest
loan for housing and agricultural machinery, with the promise of more land for
their children. Basic planetary industrialization was given a high priority,
and entire factories were imported to provide essentials for the engineering
and construction business. Again, government infrastructure contracts provided
a massive initial subsidy. The company and civil workers arriving during the
second ten-year period was equal to the number of farmers.
In 2500 its population
rose above the ten million mark, and it officially lost its protectorate status
to become a principality, governed by one of the King’s siblings.
Ombey was a
meticulously planned endeavour, only possible to a culture as wealthy as the
Kulu Kingdom. The Saldanas considered the investment costs more than
worthwhile. Although the Principality didn’t start to show a return for over
ninety years, it allowed them to expand their family dynasty as well as their
influence, both physical (economic and military) and political, inside the
Confederation. It made their position even more secure, although by that time a
republican revolution was virtually impossible. And it was all done without
conflict or opposition with neighbouring star systems.
By 2611 there were
twelve settled asteroids in orbit and two more on their way. Planetary
population was a fraction under two hundred million, and the twelve settled
asteroids in the system’s dense inner belt were home to another two million
people. Subsidies and loans from Kulu had long since ended, self-sufficiency
both industrially and economically had been reached in 2545, exports were
accelerating. Ombey was a thriving decent place to live, bristling with
justified optimism.
Captain Farrah
Montgomery had expected the flight from Lalonde to take four days. By the time
the Ekwan finally jumped into the Ombey system, emerging two hundred
thousand kilometres above the planet’s surface, they had been in transit for
eight. The big colonist-carrier had endured a multitude of irritating systems
failures right from the very first minute of getting underway. Mechanical
components had broken down, electrical circuits suffered a rash of surges and
drop-outs. Her crew had been harried into short-tempered despair as they
attempted patchwork repairs. Most worrying, the main fusion tubes produced
erratic thrust levels, adding to the difficulty of reaching plotted jump
coordinates, and increasing the flight duration drastically.
Fuel levels, while not
yet critical, were uncomfortably low.
Sensors slid out of
their jump recesses, and Captain Montgomery performed a preliminary visual
orientation sweep. Ombey’s solitary moon, Jethro, was rising above the horizon,
a large grey-yellow globe peppered with small deep craters, and streaked with
long white rays. They were above the planet’s night side; the Blackdust desert
continent straddling the equator was a huge ebony patch amid oceans that
reflected jaundiced moonlight. On the eastern side of the planet the coastline
of the Espartan continent was picked out by the purple-white lights of towns and
cities; there were fewer urban sprawls in the interior, declining to zero at
the central mountain range.
After Captain
Montgomery had cleared their arrival with civil flight control, Ralph Hiltch
contacted the navy base on Guyana, and requested docking permission along with
a code four status alert. Ekwan closed on the asteroid at one and a
quarter gravities, holding reasonably steady. The base admiral, Pascoe Farquar,
after receiving Ralph’s request, backed by Sir Asquith, authorized the alert.
Nonessential personnel were cleared from the habitation cavern the navy used.
Commercial traffic was turned away. Xenobiology, nanonic, and weapons
specialists began to assemble an isolation confinement area for Gerald Skibbow.
The Ekwan docked
at Guyana’s non-rotating spaceport amid a tight security cordon. Royal Marines
and port personnel worked a straight five-hour shift to bring the Ekwan’s
three thousand grumbling, bewildered colonists out of zero-tau and assign them
quarters in the navy barracks. Ralph Hiltch and Sir Asquith spent most of that
time in conference with Pascoe Farquar and his staff. After he accessed
sensorium recordings Dean Folan made during the jungle mission, as well as the
garbled reports of Darcy and Lori claiming Laton was on Lalonde, the admiral
decided to raise the alert status to code three.
Ralph Hiltch watched
the last of the fifty armour-suited marines floating into the Ekwan’s
large zero-tau compartment. They were all muscle boosted and qualified in free
fall combat routines; eight of them carried medium-calibre automatic recoilless
projectile carbines. The sergeants followed Cathal Fitzgerald’s directions and
started positioning them in three concentric circles surrounding Gerald Skibbow’s
zero-tau pod, with five on the decks either side in case he broke through the
metal grids. Extra lights had been attached to the nearby support girders,
beams focused on the one pod in the compartment which was still encased by an
absorptive blackness, casting a weird jumble of multiple shadows outside the
encircling ring of marines.
Ralph’s neural
nanonics were relaying the scene to the admiral and the waiting specialists. It
made him slightly self-conscious as he anchored himself to a girder to address
the marine squad.
“This might look
excessive for one man,” he said to the marines, “but don’t drop your guard for
an instant. We’re not entirely sure he is human, certainly he has some lethal
energy-projecting abilities that come outside anything we’ve encountered
before. If it’s any comfort, free fall does seem to unnerve him slightly. Your
job is just to escort him down to the isolation area that’s been prepared. Once
he’s there, the technical people will take over. They think the cell they’ve
prepared will be able to confine him. But getting him there could get very
messy.”
He backed away from
the pod, noting the half-apprehensive faces of the first rank of marines.
God, they look young.
I hope to hell they took my warning seriously.
He checked his own skull-helmet,
and took a deep breath. “OK, Cathal, switch it off.”
The blackness vanished
from the pod revealing the smooth cylindrical composite sarcophagus. Ralph
strained to hear the manic battering which Skibbow had been giving the pod
before the zero-tau silenced him. The compartment was quiet apart from the
occasional scuffling of the marines as they craned for a glimpse.
“Open the lid.”
It began to slide
back. Ralph braced himself for Skibbow to burst out of the opening like a
runaway combat wasp with a forty-gee drive. He heard a wretched whimpering
sound. Cathal gave him a puzzled glance.
God, did we get the
right pod?
“All right, stay
back,” Ralph said. “You two,” he indicated the marines with the carbines,
“cover me.” He pulled himself cautiously across the grid towards the pod, still
expecting Skibbow to spring up. The whimpering grew louder, interspersed with
low groans.
Very, very carefully,
Ralph eased himself up the side of the pod, and peeked in. Ready to duck down
fast.
Gerald Skibbow was floating
listlessly inside the curving cream-white composite coffin. His whole body was
trembling. He clutched his shattered hand to his chest. Both eyes were red
rimmed, blood was still oozing from his mashed nose. The smell of jungle mud
and urine clogged in Ralph’s nose.
Gerald continued his
weak gurglings, bubbles of saliva forming at the corner of his mouth. When
Ralph manoeuvred himself right over the pod there was no reaction from the
unfocused eyes.
“Shit.”
“What’s happened?”
Admiral Farquar datavised.
“I don’t know, sir.
It’s Skibbow all right. But it looks like he’s gone into some kind of shock.”
He waved a hand in front of the colonist’s filthy, bloody face. “He’s virtually
catatonic.”
“Is he still
dangerous, do you think?”
“I don’t see how he
could be, unless he recovers.”
“All right, Hiltch.
Have the marines take him down to the isolation area as quickly as possible.
I’ll have an emergency medical team there by the time you arrive.”
“Yes, sir.” Ralph
pushed himself away, allowing three marines to pull the still unresisting
Skibbow from the zero-tau pod. His neural nanonics informed him the asteroid
was being stood down to code six status.
I don’t understand, he
thought bleakly, we brought a walking nuke on board, and wind up with a
pants-wetting vegetable. Something wiped that sequestration from him. What?
The marine squad
departed the compartment noisily, joking and catcalling. Relieved they hadn’t
been needed after all. With one hand holding idly on a girder, Ralph hung
between the two decking grids long after the last of them left, staring at the
zero-tau pod.
Three hours after
Guyana’s alert status was reduced to code six, life inside had almost returned
to normal. Civilians with jobs in the military-run cavern were allowed to
resume their duties. Restrictions on communication and travel were lifted from
the other two caverns. Spaceships were permitted to dock and depart, although
the spaceport where the Ekwan was berthed was still off-limits to
anything but navy ships.
Three and a half hours
after the marines delivered a virtually comatose Gerald Skibbow to the
isolation cell, Captain Farrah Montgomery walked into the small office Time
Universe maintained on Guyana and handed over Graeme Nicholson’s flek.
It was an hour after
the maids had served Cricklade’s breakfast, and Duke was already rising across a
sky that was ribbed with slender bands of flimsy cloud. Duchess-night had seen
the first sprinkling of rain since the midsummer conjunction. The fields and
forests glimmered and shone under their glace coating of water. Aboriginal
flowers, reduced to wizened brown coronets after discharging their seeds,
turned to a pulpy mess and started to rot away. Best of all, the dust had gone
from the air. Cricklade’s estate labourers had started their morning in a
cheerful mood at the omen. Rain this early meant the second crop of cereals
should produce a good heavy harvest.
Louise Kavanagh didn’t
care about the rain, nor the prospect of an impending agricultural bounty. Not
even Genevieve’s playful enthusiasm could summon her for their usual stroll in
the paddock. Instead, she sat on the toilet in her private bathroom with her
panties round her ankles and her head in her hands. Her long hair hung lankly,
tasselled ends brushing her shiny blue shoes. It was stupid to have hair so
long, she thought, stupid, snobbish, impractical, a waste of time, and
insulting.
Why should I have to
be preened and groomed like I’m a pedigree show horse? It’s a wicked, filthy
tradition treating women like that. Just so that I look the classic-beauty part
for some ghastly clot-head young “gentleman’. What do looks matter, and
especially looks that come from a pseudo-mythical past on another planet? I
already have my man.
She clenched her
stomach muscles again, squeezing her guts hard as she held her breath. Her
nails dug into her palms painfully with the effort. Her head started to shake,
skin reddening.
It didn’t make the
slightest difference. She let the air out of her straining lungs in a fraught
sob.
Angry now, she
squeezed again. Let out her breath.
Squeezed.
Nothing.
She wanted to cry. Her
shoulders were shivering, she even had the hot blotches round her eyes, but
there were no tears left. She was all cried out.
Her period was at
least five days overdue. And she was so regular.
She was pregnant with
Joshua’s baby. It was wonderful. It was horrible. It was . . . a
wretched great mess.
“Please, Jesus,” she
whispered. “What we did wasn’t really a sin. It wasn’t. I love him so. I really
do. Don’t let this happen to me. Please.”
There was nothing in
the world she wanted more than to have Joshua’s baby. But not now.
Joshua himself still seemed like a gorgeous fantasy she had made up to amuse
herself during the long hot months of Norfolk’s quiescent summer. Too perfect
to be real, the kind of man who melted her inside even as he set her on fire with
passion. A passion she didn’t quite know she had before. Previous daydreams of
romance had all sort of blurred into vague unknowns after her tall, handsome
champion kissed her. But lying in bed at night the memory of Joshua’s cunning
hands exploring her naked body brought some most unladylike flushes below the
sheets. There hadn’t been a day gone by when she didn’t visit their little
glade in Wardley Wood, and the smell of dry hay always kindled a secret glow of
arousal as she thought of their last time together in the stable.
“Please, my Lord
Jesus.”
Last year one of the
girls at the convent school, a year older than Louise, had moved away from the
district rather abruptly. She was from one of Stoke County’s more important
families, her father was a landowner who had sat on the local council for over
a decade. Gone to stay with a wealthy sheep-farming relative on the isle of
Cumbria, the Mother Superior had told the other pupils, where she will learn
the practical aspects of house management which will adequately prepare her for
the role of marriage. But everyone knew the real reason. One of the Romany
lads, in Stoke for the rose crop, had tumbled her in his caravan. The girl’s
family had been more or less shunned by decent folk after that, and her father
had to resign his council seat, saying it was due to ill health.
Not that anyone would
dare do that to any branch of the Kavanagh family. But the whispers would start
if she took a sudden holiday; the tarnish of shame would never be lifted from
Cricklade. And Mummy would cry because her daughter had let her down
frightfully badly. And Daddy would . . . Louise didn’t like to think
what her father would do.
No! she told herself
firmly. Stop thinking like that. Nothing terrible is going to happen.
“You know I’m coming
back,” Joshua had told her as they lay entwined by the side of the sun-blessed
stream. And he said he loved her.
He would return. He promised.
Everything would be
all right after that. Joshua was the one person in the galaxy who could face up
to her father unafraid. Yes, everything would be fine just as soon as he
arrived.
Louise brushed
her—fearsomely annoying—hair from her face, and slowly stood up. When she
looked in the mirror she was an utter ruin. She started to tidy herself up,
pulling up her panties, splashing cold water on her face. Her light
flower-pattern dress with its long skirt was badly creased. Why couldn’t she
wear trousers, or even shorts? She could just imagine Nanny’s reaction to that
innocent suggestion. Legs on public display? Good grief! But it would be so
much more practical in this weather. Lots of the women working in the groves
did; girls her age, too. She started to plait her hair. That would be something
else which changed after she was married.
Married. She grinned
falteringly at her reflection. Joshua was going to be in for a monumental shock
when he returned and she told him the stupendous news. But, ultimately, he
would be happy and rejoice with her. How could he not? And they would be
married at the end of summer (which was as quick as decency versus a swelling
belly could allow), when the Earth flowers were at their peak and the granaries
were full from the second harvest. Her bulge probably wouldn’t show, not with
an adequately designed dress. Genevieve would adore being chief bridesmaid.
There would be huge marquees on the lawns for the reception. Family members she
hadn’t seen for years. It would be the biggest celebration in Stoke County for
decades, everyone would be happy and they would dance under the neon-red night
sky.
People might guess
because of the speed. But Joshua was going to be her father’s business partner
in this exciting mayope venture. He was rich, of good blood (presumably—how
else would he inherit a starship?), a fine manager able to take on Cricklade.
An eminently suitable (if unusual) match for the Cricklade heir. Their marriage
wouldn’t be that extraordinary. Her reputation would remain intact. And the
Kavanaghs’ respectability would remain unblemished.
After the wedding they
could travel Norfolk’s islands for their honeymoon. Or maybe even to another
planet in his starship. What was important was that she wouldn’t have the baby
here, with everyone noting the date of birth.
Real life could match
up to her most fantastical daydreams. With a fabulous husband, and a beautiful
baby.
If Joshua
. . .
Always, if Joshua
. . .
Why did it have to be
like that?
The lone Romany
caravan stood beside a tall Norfolk-aboriginal pine in a meadow which until
recently had been a site for more than thirty similar caravans. Rings of flat
reddish stones confined piles of ash, cold now. Grass along the bank of the
little stream was trampled down where horses and goats had drunk and people had
scooped water into pails. Several piles of raw earth marked the latrines, their
conical sides scored with fresh runnels, evidence of last Duchess-night’s rain.
The caravan, a hybrid
of traditional design riding modern lightweight wheels, had seen more
prosperous times. Its jaunty and elaborate paintwork was fading, but the wood
was sound. Three goats were tethered to its rear axle. Two horses waited
outside, one a mud-spotted piebald shire-horse with a wild shaggy mane which
was used to pull the caravan, the other a black riding stallion, its coat sleek
and glossy, the expensive leather saddle on its back polished to a gleam.
Grant Kavanagh stood
inside the caravan, stooping so he didn’t knock his head on the curving
ceiling. It was dark and faintly dusty, smelling of dried herbs. He enjoyed
that, it brought back sharp memories of his teenage years. Even now, the sight
of the Romany caravans winding their way through Cricklade’s wolds as midsummer
approached always made him feel incredibly randy.
The girl pulled back
the heavy curtains hanging on a cord across the middle of the caravan. Her name
was Carmitha, twenty years old, with a big broad-shouldered body, which, Grant
knew with depressing instinct, would be horribly overweight in another six or
seven years. Rich black hair hanging below her shoulders harmonized with dark,
smooth skin. She had changed into a flimsy white skirt and loose-fitting top.
“That looks
fantastic,” he said.
“Why, thank you, kind
sir.” She curtsied, and giggled effusively.
Grant drew her closer
and started to kiss her. His hands fumbled with the buttons down the front of
her blouse.
She pushed him away
gently, and removed his hands, kissing the knuckles lightly. “Let me do that
for you,” she said coquettishly. Her fingers moved down to the top button in a
slow, taunting caress. He looked in delight as her body was exposed. He pulled
her down onto the bed, immensely gratified by her ardour.
The caravan squeaked
as it started rocking. A hurricane lantern hanging from a brass chain on the
ceiling clanged loudly as it swayed gently to and fro. He barely heard it above
Carmitha’s exuberant whoops of joy.
After a time which was
nowhere near long enough, he came in drastic shudders, his spine singing
raptures. Carmitha quickly squealed, claiming multiple orgasms were nearly
making her swoon.
He collapsed onto the
bed, prickly blankets scratching his back. Dust mingled with sweat and trickled
among the curly hair on his chest.
By God but summer
conjunction makes life worth living, he thought. A time when he could prove
himself again and again. The Tear crop had been one of the best ever; the
estate had made its usual financial killing. He had tumbled nearly a dozen
young girls from the grove teams. The meteorological reports were predicting a
humid month ahead, which meant a good second harvest. Young Joshua’s audacious
mayope proposal could only add to the family’s wealth and influence.
The only blot on the
horizon was the reports coming out of Boston on the disturbances. It looked
like the Democratic Land Union was stirring up trouble again.
The Union was a motley
collection of reformists and political agitators, a semi-subversive group who
wanted to see land distributed “fairly” among the People, the foreign earnings
from the sale of Norfolk Tears invested with social relevance, and full
democracy and civil rights awarded to the population. And free beer on Friday
nights, too, no doubt, Grant thought caustically. The whole blessing of a
Confederation of eight hundred plus planets was that it gave people a massive
variety of social systems to choose from. What the Democratic Land Union
activists failed to appreciate was that they were free to leave for their
damned Communistic workers’ paradise as soon as the workshy little buggers
earned enough cash to pay their passage. But oh no, they wanted to liberate
Norfolk, no matter how much damage and heartache they caused in the process of
peddling their politics of envy.
A chapter of the
Democratic Land Union had tried to spread its sedition in Stoke County about
ten years ago. Grant had helped the county’s chief constable round them up. The
leaders had been deported to a Confederation penal planet. Some of the nastier
elements—the ones found with home-made weapons—had been handed over to a squad
of special operations constables from the capital, Norwich. The rest, the
pitiful street trash who handed out leaflets and drank themselves into a coma
on the Union-supplied beer, had been given fifteen years’ hard labour in the
polar work gangs.
There hadn’t been
sight or sign of them on Kesteven ever since. Some people, he thought sagely,
just never learn. If it works, don’t try and fix it. And Norfolk worked.
He kissed the crown of
Carmitha’s head. “When do you leave?”
“Tomorrow. Most of my
family has already left. There is fruit-picking work in Hurst County. It pays
well.”
“And after that?”
“We’ll winter over in
Holbeach. There are many deep caves in the cliffs above the town. And some of
us get jobs in the harbour market gutting fish.”
“Sounds like a good
life. Don’t you ever want to settle down?”
She shrugged, thick
hair sloshing about. “Be like you, tied to your cold stone palace? No thanks.
There might not be much to see in this world, but I want to see it all.”
“Better make the most
of the time we’ve got, then.”
She crawled on top of
him, calloused hands closing round his limp penis.
There was a pathetic
scratching knock on the caravan’s rear door. “Sir? Are you there, sir?” William
Elphinstone asked. The voice was as quavery as the knock.
Grant chopped back on
an exasperated groan. No, I’m not in here, that’s why my bloody horse is
outside. “What do you want?”
“Sorry to bother you,
sir, but there’s an urgent phone call for you at the house. Mr. Butterworth
said it was important, it’s from Boston.”
Grant frowned.
Butterworth wasn’t going to send anyone after him unless it was genuinely
important. The estate manager knew full well what he was up to at a slack time
like this. He was also wily enough not to come looking himself.
I wonder what young
Elphinstone has done to annoy him, Grant thought irreverently.
“Wait there,” he
shouted. “I’ll be with you in a minute.” He deliberately took his time
dressing. No damn way was he going to come dashing out of the caravan tucking
his shirt into his trousers and give the lad something to tell all the other
junior estate managers.
He straightened his
tweed riding jacket, smoothed down his muttonchops with his hands, and settled
his cap. “How do I look?”
“Masterful,” Carmitha
said from the bed.
There was no
detectable irony. Grant fished around in his pocket and found two silver
guineas. He dropped the gratuity into a big china bowl sitting on a shelf
beside the door as he went out.
Louise watched her
father and William Elphinstone ride up to the front door. Grooms appeared, and
took charge of the horses. From the way the animals were sweating it had been a
hard ride. Her father hurried into the house.
Poor old Daddy, always
busy.
She strolled over to
where William was talking to the grooms, both boys younger than her. He saw her
coming and dismissed them. Louise stroked the black stallion’s flank as the big
animal was led past her.
“Whatever is all the
fuss about?” she asked.
“Some call from
Boston. Mr. Butterworth thought it important enough to send me out looking for
your father.”
“Oh.” Louise started
to move away. Rather annoyingly, William walked in step with her. She wasn’t in
the mood for company.
“I’ve been asked to
the Newcombes’ bash on Saturday evening,” he said. “I thought it might be
rather fun. They’re not quite our people, but they set a decent table. There
will be dancing afterwards.”
“That’s nice.” Louise
always hated it when William tried to put on graces. “Our people” indeed! She
went to school with Mary Newcombe.
“I hoped you would
come with me.”
She looked at him in
surprise. Eagerness and anxiety squabbled over his face. “Oh, William, that’s
jolly nice of you to ask. Thank you. But I really can’t. Sorry.”
“Really can’t?”
“Well, no. The
Galfords are coming to dinner on Saturday. I simply must be there.”
“I thought that
perhaps now he’s left, you might find more time for my company.”
“Now who’s left?” she
asked sharply.
“Your friend, the
gallant starship captain.”
“William, you really
are talking the most appalling tosh. Now I’ve said I can’t attend the
Newcombes’ party with you. Kindly leave the subject.”
He stopped and took
hold of her arm. She was too surprised to say anything. People simply did not
take such liberties.
“You always found
plenty of time for him,” he said in a flat tone.
“William, desist this
instant.”
“Every day, it was.
The two of you galloping off to Wardley Wood.”
Louise felt the blood
rising to her cheeks. What did he know? “Remove your hand from me. Now!”
“You didn’t mind his
hands.”
“William!”
He gave her a
humourless smile and let go. “I’m not jealous. Don’t get me wrong.”
“There is nothing to
be jealous of. Joshua Calvert was a guest and friend of my father’s. That is
the end of the matter.”
“Some fiancés would
think otherwise.”
“Who?” she squawked.
“Fiancés, my dearest
Louise. You must be aware there is some considerable speculation upon whom you
are to marry. All I’m saying is that there are some Kesteven families of good
breeding, and eligible sons, who would take exception to your . . .
shall we call it, indiscretion.”
She slapped him. The
sound rang across the lawn as her palm struck his cheek. “How dare you!”
He dabbed at his cheek
with the fingers of his right hand, a look of distaste on his face. The imprint
of her palm was clearly etched in pink. “What an impetuous creature you are,
Louise. I had no idea.”
“Get out of my sight.”
“Of course, if that’s
what you wish. But you might like to consider that should word get out, your
currently enviable position may well become less than secure. I don’t want to
see that happen, Louise, I really don’t. You see, I am genuinely very fond of
you. Fond enough to make allowances.”
She seemed utterly
incapable of movement, condemned to stand there in front of him, gaping in
astonishment. “You . . .” It came out in a crushed gasp. For a
distressing instant she thought she was going to faint.
William knelt in front
of her.
No, she thought, oh no
no no, this can’t be happening. Joshua bloody Calvert, where are you?
“Marry me, Louise. I
can obtain your father’s approval, have no fear of that. Marry me, and we can
have a wonderful future together here at Cricklade.” He held his hand out, face
soft with expectancy.
She drew herself up
into the most regal pose she could manage. And very clearly, very calmly said:
“I would sooner shovel bullock manure for a living.” One of Joshua’s better
expressions, though admittedly not verbatim.
William paled.
She turned on a heel
and walked away. Her back held straight.
“This is not the last
time we shall pursue this topic,” he called after her. “Believe me, dearest
Louise, I will not be defeated in my suit for you.”
Grant Kavanagh sat
himself down behind the desk in his study and picked up the phone. His
secretary had put a call through to Trevor Clarke, Kesteven’s lord lieutenant.
Grant didn’t like the implications of that one jot.
“I need you to bring
Stoke’s militia to Boston,” Trevor Clarke said as soon as they had exchanged
greetings. “A full turnout, please, Grant.”
“That might be
difficult,” Grant said. “This is still a busy time here. The rosegroves need
pruning, and there’s the second grain crop to drill. We can hardly take able
men from the land.”
“Can’t be helped. I’m
calling in all the county militias.”
“All of them?”
“ ’Fraid so, old chap.
We’ve blacked it from the news, you understand, but the situation in Boston,
frankly, doesn’t look good.”
“What situation?
You’re not seriously telling me that bloody Union rabble worries you?”
“Grant
. . .” Trevor Clarke’s voice dropped an octave. “Listen, this is
totally confidential, but there are already five districts in Boston that have
been completely taken over by this mob, rendered ungovernable. We have a state
of open insurrection here. If we send the police in to re-establish order they don’t
come out again. The city is under martial law, insofar as we can enforce it.
I’m worried, Grant.”
“Dear Christ! The
Democratic Land Union has done this?”
“We’re not sure.
Whoever these insurrectionists are, they seem to be armed with energy weapons.
That means offplanet complicity. But it’s hard to believe the Union could ever
organize something like that. You know what they’re like, hotheads smashing up
tractors and ploughs. Energy weapons break every letter in our constitution;
they are everything this society was set up to avoid.”
“An outside force?”
Grant Kavanagh could hardly believe what he was hearing.
“It may be. I have
asked the Chancellor’s office in Norwich to request the Confederation Navy
squadron extends its duty tour. Fortunately the personnel are all still here
having their shore leave. The squadron commander is recalling them back up to
orbit now.”
“What good is that?”
“The navy starships
can make damn sure nothing else is delivered to the insurrectionists from outsystem.
And as a last resort they can provide our ground forces with strike power.”
Grant sat perfectly
still. Ground forces. Strike power. It was unreal. Through the windows he could
see Cricklade’s peaceful wolds, rich and verdant. And here he was calmly
talking about virtual civil war. “But God’s teeth, man, this is a city we’re
talking about. You can’t use starship weapons against Boston. There are a
hundred and twenty thousand people living there.”
“I know,” Trevor
Clarke said mordantly. “One of the militia’s major assignments will be to help
evacuate the civilians. You will be minimizing casualties, Grant.”
“Have you told the
Chancellor what you’re planning? Because if you haven’t, I damn well will.”
There was a silence
which lasted for several seconds. “Grant,” Trevor Clarke said gently, “it was
the Chancellor’s office that recommended this action to me. It must be done
while the insurrectionists are concentrated in one place, before they have a
chance to spread their damnable revolution. So many people are joining them. I
. . . I never thought there was so much dissatisfaction on the
planet. It has to be stopped, and stopped in a way that forbids repetition.”
“Oh, my God,” Grant
Kavanagh said brokenly. “All right, Trevor, I understand. I’ll call in the
militia captains this afternoon. The regiment will be ready for you by
tomorrow.”
“Good man, Grant. I
knew I could rely on you. There will be a train to collect you from
Colsterworth Station. We’ll billet you in an industrial warehouse outside town.
And don’t worry, man, the starships are only a last resort. I expect we’ll only
need one small demonstration and they’ll cave in.”
“Yes. I’m sure you’re
right.” Grant returned the pearl-handled phone to its cradle, a morbid
premonition telling him it could never be that simple.
The train had six
passenger carriages, room enough for all of the Stoke county militia’s seven
hundred men. It took them twenty-five minutes to embark. The station was a
scene of pure chaos; half of the town’s streets were clogged with carts,
carriages, buses, and farm-ranger vehicles. Families took a long time saying
goodbye. Men were shifty and irritable in their grey uniforms. Complaints about
ill-fitting boots rippled up and down the platform.
Louise and Marjorie
were pressed against the wall of the station with a pile of kitbags on one
side, and olive-green metal ammunition boxes on the other. Some of the boxes
had date stamps over ten years old. Three hard-faced men were guarding the
ammunition, stumpy black guns cradled in their arms. Louise was beginning to
regret coming, Genevieve hadn’t been allowed.
Mr Butterworth, in his
sergeant-major’s uniform, marched up and down the platform, ordering people
about. The train was gradually filled; work teams began to load the kitbags and
ammunition into the first carriage’s mail compartment.
William Elphinstone
came down the platform, looking very smart in his lieutenant’s uniform. He
stopped in front of them. “Mrs Kavanagh,” he said crisply. “Louise. It looks
like we’re off in five minutes.”
“Well, you mind you
take great care, William,” Marjorie said.
“Thank you. I will.”
Louise let her gaze
wander away with deliberate slowness. William looked slightly put out, but
decided this wasn’t the time to make an issue of it. He nodded to Marjorie and
marched off.
She turned to her
daughter. “Louise, that was extremely rude.”
“Yes, Mother,” Louise
said unrepentantly. How typical of William to volunteer even though it wasn’t
his militia, she thought. He only did it to be covered in glory, so he would
seem even more acceptable to Daddy. And he would never be in the front line
sharing the risk with the poor common troops, not him. Joshua would.
Marjorie gave her
daughter a close look at the unexpected tone, seeing the sulky stubborn
expression on her usually placid face. So Louise doesn’t like William
Elphinstone. Can’t say I blame her. But to be so public was totally out of
character. Louise’s decorum was always meticulously formal and correct,
gratingly so. Suddenly, despite all the worry of Boston, she felt delighted.
Her daughter wasn’t the meek-minded little mouse any more. She wanted to cheer
out loud. And I wonder what started this episode of independent thinking,
though I’ve a pretty shrewd idea. Joshua Calvert, if you laid one finger on her
. . .
Grant Kavanagh strode
vigorously along the side of the train, making sure his troops were settled and
everything was in place. His wife and daughter were waiting dutifully at the
end of the platform. Both of them quite divine, Marjorie especially.
Why do I bother with
those little Romany tarts?
Louise’s face was all
melancholic. Frightened, but trying not to show it. Trying to be brave like a
good Kavanagh. What a wonderful daughter. Growing up a treat. Even though she
had been a bit moody these last few days. Probably missing Joshua, he thought
jovially. But that was just another reminder that he really would have to start
thinking seriously about a decent bloodmatch for her. Not yet though, not this
year. Cricklade Manor would still echo with her laughter over Christmas,
warming his heart.
He hugged her, and her
arms wrapped round his waist. “Don’t go, Daddy,” she whispered.
“I have to. It won’t
be for long.”
She sniffed hard, and
nodded. “I understand.”
He kissed Marjorie,
ignoring the whistles and cheers which rang out from the carriages at the rear
of the train.
“Now don’t you try and
prove anything,” she said in that weary half-censorious way which meant she was
scared to the core. So he said, “Of course I won’t, I’ll just sit in the
command tent and let the youngsters get on with it.”
Marjorie put her arm
around Louise as they waved the train out of the station. The platform was a
solid mass of women with handkerchiefs flapping from frantic wrists. She wanted
to laugh at how silly they must all look to the men on the train. But she
didn’t because she was a Kavanagh, and must set an example. Besides, she might
have started crying at the futility and stupidity of it all.
In the clear sky
above, silver lights flashed and twisted as the navy squadron changed formation
and orbital inclination so that Boston was always in range to one of their
number.
Dariat was nerving
himself up to commit suicide. It wasn’t easy. Suicide was the culmination of
failure, of despair. Since the return of the dead from the realm of emptiness,
his life had become inspiring.
He watched the couple
make their cautious way down the starscraper’s fetid stairwell. Kiera Salter
had done well seducing the boy, but then what fifteen-year-old male could
possibly resist Marie Skibbow’s body? Kiera didn’t even have to enhance the
physique she had possessed. She just put on a mauve tank top and a short
sky-blue skirt and let nature wreak havoc on the boy’s hormone balance—as she
had done with Anders Bospoort.
The monitoring
sub-routine assigned to observe Horgan flowed through the neural cells behind
the stairwell’s polyp walls, spreading out through the surrounding sectors to
interface with the starscraper’s existing routines. An invisible,
all-encompassing guardian angel. It was checking for threats, the possibility
of danger. Horgan was another of Rubra’s myriad descendants. Cosseted,
privileged, and cherished; his mind silently, stealthily guided into the correct
academic spheres of interest, and bequeathed a breathtaking arrogance for one
so young. He had all the hallmarks of conceit endemic to Rubra’s tragic
protégés. Horgan was proud and lonely and foul tempered. A lanky youth with
dark Asian skin, and giveaway indigo eyes, if his chromosomes had granted him
the muscle weight to back up his narcissistic personality he would have been
involved in as many fights as the young Dariat.
Naturally he admitted
no surprise when Kiera/Marie confided her attraction to him. A girl like that
was his due.
Kiera and Horgan
stepped out of the stairwell onto the eighty-fifth-floor vestibule.
Dariat felt the
monitoring routine flood into the apartment’s stratum of neural cells and
interrogate the autonomic routines within, reviewing local memories. This was
the crux. It had taken him two days to modify the apartment’s routines. None of
his usual evasions had ever had to withstand examination by such a large
personality sub-routine before, it was virtually sentient in its own right.
There was no alarm, no
bugle for help to Rubra’s principal consciousness. The monitor routine saw only
an empty apartment waiting for Horgan.
“They are coming,”
Dariat told the others in Anders Bospoort’s bedroom. All three possessed were
with him. Ross Nash who rode in Bospoort’s own body, a Canadian from the early
twentieth century. Enid Ponter, from the Australian-ethnic planet Geraldton,
dead for two centuries, who occupied Alicia Cochrane’s mortal form. And Klaus
Schiller, possessing Manza Balyuzi’s body, a German who muttered incessantly
about his Führer, and seemingly angered at having to take on an Asian
appearance. The body was now markedly different to the image contained in his
passport flek the day he disembarked from the Yaku. His skin was blanching;
jet-black hair streaked with expanding tufts of fine blond strands; the gentle
facial features shifting to rugged bluntness, eyes azure blue. He had even
grown a couple of centimetres taller.
“And Rubra?” Enid
Ponter asked. “Does he know?”
“My disruption
routines have worked. The monitor can’t see us.”
Ross Nash looked
slowly round the bedroom, almost as though he was sniffing a trace of some
exotic scent in the air. “I sense it. Behind the walls, there is a coldness of
heart.”
“Anstid,” Dariat said.
“That’s what you sense. Rubra is just an aspect of him, a servant.”
Ross Nash made no
attempt to hide his disgust.
None of them really
trusted him, Dariat knew. They were strong enemies who had agreed a precarious
truce because of the damage they could each inflict on the other. Such a
stand-off could never last long. Human doubts and insecurities gnawed at such
restraints, chafing at reasonableness. And the stakes on both sides were high,
accelerating the devout need to see treachery in every hesitant breath and wary
footstep.
But he would prove his
worthiness as few had done before. Entrusting them with not merely his life,
but his death as well. It was all so absurdly logical.
He needed their
awesome powers of manifestation, and at the same time retain his affinity.
Their power came from death, therefore he must die and possess a body with the
affinity gene. So simple when you say it quick. And completely mad. But then
what he had seen these last few days defied sanity.
Horgan and Kiera
entered the apartment. They were kissing even as the door closed.
Dariat concentrated
hard, his affinity strumming the new neural routines alive with a delicate
harmony of deceit. The image of the twined figures was incorporated into one of
them. An illusive fallacy; generated by a misappropriated section of the
habitat’s neural cells massing ten times that of the human brain. Small in
relation to the total mass of the neural strata, but enough to make the
illusion perfect, giving the phantom Horgan and Kiera weight and texture and
colour and smell. Even body heat. The sensitive cells registered that as they
started to tug each other’s clothes off with the typical impatience of
teenagers in lust.
Most difficult of all
for Dariat to mimic was the constant flow of emotion and feeling Horgan emitted
unconsciously into the affinity band. But he managed it, by dint of careful
memory and composition. The monitor routine looked on with tranquil
disinterest.
There was a split in
Dariat’s mind, like alternative quantum-cosmology histories, two realities
diverging. In one, Horgan and Kiera raced for the bedroom, laughing, clothes
flying. In the other . . .
Horgan’s eyes blinked
open in surprise. The kiss had delivered every promise her body made. He was
primed for the greatest erotic encounter of his life. But now she was sneering
contemptuously. And four other people were coming into the lounge from one of
the bedrooms. Two of the men were huge, in opposite directions.
Horgan barely paid
them any attention. He had heard of deals like this, whispered terrors amongst
the kids in the day clubs. Snuffsense. The bitch had set him up as the meat
they would rape to death. He turned, his leg muscles already taut.
Something—strange,
like a hard ball of liquid—hit him on the back of the head. He was falling, and
in the distance a choir of infernal angels was singing.
Dariat stood aside as
Ross Nash hauled the semiconscious Horgan into the bedroom. He tried not to
stare at the boy’s feet, they were floating ten centimetres in the air.
“Are you ready?” Kiera
asked, her tone dripping with disdain.
He walked past her
into the bedroom. “Do we get to screw afterwards?”
Dariat had favoured an
old-fashioned capsule you swallowed rather than a transfusion pad or medical
package. It was black—naturally—two centimetres long. He had acquired it from
his regular narkhal supplier. A neurotoxin, guaranteed painless, she promised.
As if he could complain if it wasn’t.
He grinned at that.
And swallowed, almost while his conscious mind was diverted. If it did hurt she
was due for some very pointed lessons on consumer rights from an unexpected
direction.
“Get on with it,” he
told the figures grouped round the bed. Tall and reedy, they were now,
mud-brown effigies a sculptor had captured through a blurred lens. They bent
over the spread-eagled boy and sent cold fire writhing up and down his spine.
The poison was fast
acting. Guaranteed. Dariat was losing all feeling in his limbs. Sight greyed
out. His hearing faded, which was a relief. It meant he didn’t have to listen
to all that screaming. “Anastasia,” he muttered. How easy it would be to join
her now. She only had a thirty-year head start, and what was that compared to
infinity? He could find her.
Death.
And beyond.
A violent jerk of both
body and mind. The universe blew away in all directions at once, horrifying in
its immensity. Silence shrouded him; a silence he considered only possible in
the extremity of intergalactic space. Silence without heat or cold, without
touch or taste. Silence singing with thoughts.
He didn’t look around.
There was nothing to look with, nowhere to look, not in this, the sixth realm.
But he knew, was aware of, what shared this state with him, the spirits
Anastasia had told him about as they sat in her tepee so long ago.
Nebulous minds wept
tears of emotion, their sorrow and lamentation splashing against him. And whole
spectra of hatreds; jealousy and envy, but mostly self-loathing. They were
spirits, all of them, lost beyond redemption.
Outside of this was
colour, all around, but never present. Untouchable and taunting. A universe he
was pleased to call real. The realm of the living. A wondrous, beautiful place,
a corporeality crying out for belonging.
He wanted to beat
against it, to demand entry. He had no hands, and there was no wall. He wanted
to call to the living to rescue him. He had no voice.
“Help me!” his mind
shrieked.
The lost spirits
laughed cruelly. Their numbers pressed against him, vast beyond legion. He had
no single defined location, he found, no kernel with a protective shell. He was
everywhere at once, conjunctive with them. Helpless against their invasion.
Lust and avarice sent them prising and clawing at his memories, suckling the
sweet draught of sensations he contained. A poor substitute for intrinsicality,
but still fresh, still juicy with detail. The only sustenance this arcane
continuum boasted.
“Anastasia, help me.”
They adored his most
shameful secrets, for they carried the strongest passion—stolen glances at
women through the habitat sensitive cells, masturbating, the hopeless yearning
for Anastasia, impossible promises made in the depth of night, hangovers,
gluttony, glee as the club smashed against Mersin Columba’s head, Anastasia’s
vital body hot against him, limbs locking together. They drank it all, deriding
him even as they idolized him for the glimpse of life he brought.
Time. Dariat could
sense it going by outside. Seconds, mere seconds had elapsed. Here, though, it
had little relevance. Time was the length of every memory, governed by
perception. Here it was defied as his rape went on and on. A rape which wasn’t
going to end. Not ever. There were too many of them for it to end.
He would have to abide
by it, he realized in dread. And join in. Already he craved the knowledge of
warmth, of touch, of smell. Memories of such treasures were all around. He had
only to reach out—
The bedroom was
damp and cold, its furniture cheap. But he couldn’t afford anything more. Not
now. The dismissal papers were still in his jacket pocket. The last pay packet
was in there with it, but slim now. It had been fatter this afternoon. Before
he went to the bar, doing what any man would.
Debbi was rising
from the bed, blinking drowsily up at him. Voice like a fucking cat,
complaining complaining complaining. Where had he been with his no-good
friends? Did he know what time it was? How much had he drunk? Like she always
did.
So he told the
bitch to shut up, because for once he was utterly pissed off with all the grief
she gave him. And when she didn’t quieten down he hit her. Even that didn’t do
it. She was shrieking real loud now, waking up the whole goddamn neighbourhood.
So he hit her again, harder this time.
—to devour the pitiful
echoes of sensation.
“Holy Anstid, help me
your eternal servant. For pity’s sake. Help!”
Laughter, only
laughter. So he raged back and lost himself from the mockery in—
The sun glinting
off the Inca temple that rose unchallenged into the sky. It was greater than
any cathedral he had ever seen. But its builders were now a nation quelled
before Spain’s might. And the wealth inside the broken city was beyond that of
kings. A life of glory awaited its conquerors.
His armour acted
like a furnace in the heat. And the gash on his leg was host to strange brown
pustular styes, spores of accursed jungle. Already he was frightened he
wouldn’t live to see Spain’s shores again.
—which wasn’t an
answer. Calamity and pain were thin substitutes for the explosion of experience
which lay in the vaguely perceived extrinsic universe.
Ten seconds. That was
all the time that had passed there since he died. And how long had some of the
spirits been here? How could they stand it—
Centuries which
ache like a lover’s heart laid still. To leech and leech what is new to find
only that which is stale. Yet even such an insipid taste surpasses the hell
which lies further from the taunting glimmer of the lost home of our flesh.
Madness and dragons lie in wait for those that venture away from what we
discern. Safer to stay. Safer to suffer the known rather than the unknown.
—Dariat could
distinguish bursts of Horgan’s pain, flashing into the nothingness of the sixth
realm like flames licking through black timber. They came from where the
spirits were clustered thickest, as though they were dogs fighting for scraps
of the rarest steak.
Colours were stronger
there, oozing through cracks that curved across dimensions. And the lost
spirits howled in a unison of hatred, tempting and taunting Horgan to accede,
to surrender. Maidens promised oceans of pleasure while malefactors threatened
eternities of torment.
The cracks from which
the rich slivers of pain emerged were growing wider as Kiera, Ross, Enid, and
Klaus exerted their power.
“Mine,” Dariat
proclaimed in defiance. “He is mine. Prepared for me. He belongs to me.”
“No, mine.”
“Mine.”
“Mine.”
“Mine,” rose the cry.
“Kiera, Ross, help me.
Let me come back.” He knew he could not stay here. Cool quiet darkness called,
away from the universe of birth. Where Anastasia had gone, where they would
meet again. To linger here with only the memories of yesterday’s dreams as a
reason was insanity. Anastasia was brave enough to venture forth. He could
follow in her wake, unworthy though he was.
“Stop it, I beg,”
Horgan called. “Rescue me.”
The uniformity in
which Dariat was suspended began to warp. A tight narrow funnel resembling a
cyclone vortex that led down into the fathomless unknowable heart of a gas
giant. Spirits were compelled towards it, into it. Dariat was one of them,
pressed ever tighter against—
A poorly cobbled
street with cottages on either side. It was raining hard. His bare feet were
numb with cold. Wood smoke hung in the air, wisps from the chimneys swirled low
by the wind. Water was soaking his ragged coat and making his cough worse. His
thin chest vibrated as the air bucked in his throat. Ma had taken to giving him
sad smiles whenever he told her how bad it felt inside.
Beside him his
little sister was sniffling. Her face was barely visible below her woollen
bonnet and above her coat collar. He held her hand in his as she tottered along
unquestioningly. She looked so frail, worse than him. And winter was only just
beginning. There never seemed to be enough broth; and the portions they had
were made mostly from vegetables. It didn’t fill the belly. Yet there was meat
in the butchers.
Townsfolk walked
along with them as the church bell pealed incessantly, summoning them. His
sister’s wooden clogs made dull rapping sounds against the cobbles. They were
full with water, swelling her small white feet, and making the sores worse.
Da earned a good
wage labouring in the squire’s fields. But there was never extra money to spend
on food.
The worn penny
piece with Queen Victoria’s face was clutched in his free hand. Destined for
the smiling, warmly dressed pastor.
It just didn’t seem
right.
“Please,” Horgan
called, weaker now, thoughts bruised by the pain.
Dariat slid in towards
the boy. “I’ll help, I’ll help,” he lied. Light trickled through from the far
end of the tunnel, flickering and shifting, glowing like sunlight shining
through stained glass into a dusty church. But the other spirits were promising
the boy salvation as well—
Cold claimed the
whole world. There was no such thing as warmth, not even inside his stiff,
stinking furs. In the distance the ice wall glared a dazzling silver-white as
the sun beat upon it. The others of the tribe were spread out across the grassy
plain, sloshing their way through ice-mushed puddles. And glimpsed up ahead
through the tall, swaying spires of grass was the mammoth.
“Come then, Dariat,”
Ross Nash called.
Dariat saw his
thoughts take form, become harder, as groping fingers of energy reached for
him. He was strengthened from the touch, given weight, given volume; hurtling
past the other spirits, victory rapturous in his mind. They howled and cursed
as he was sucked down and down. Faster—in.
Even midnight-blackness
was a sight to rejoice.
Eyelids blinked away
tears of joy. Pain was glorious because it was real. He moaned at the wounds
scored across his thin body, and felt a strange sensation of dry fluid bathe
his skin. It flowed where his mind directed. So he put forth his will and
watched the lacerations close. Yes!
Oh, my darling
Anastasia, you were right all along. And always I doubted, at the core, in my
secret spirit. What have I done?
Kiera smiled
scornfully down at him. “Now you will forget your feeble quest for revenge
against Rubra, and work with us to capture Magellanic Itg’s blackhawks with
your affinity so we may spread ourselves across the stars. Because to lose now
will mean returning to the incarceration of the beyond. You were there for
fifteen seconds, Dariat. Next time it will be for ever.”
Ione didn’t sleep. Her
body was drowsy, and her eyelids were heavy enough to remain closed. But her
mind floated at random through the habitat’s perception images. She reacquainted
herself with favourite slices of landscape, checking on the residents as they
slumbered or partied or worked their way through the small hours. Young
children were already stirring, yawning staff arrived at the restaurants which
served breakfast. Starships came and (a lower number than normal) went from the
spaceport outside. A couple of oddball scavenger craft were rising slowly out
of the Ruin Ring along Hohmann transfer orbits which would bring them to an
eventual rendezvous with the habitat. Mirchusko was ninety per cent full, its
ochre-on-saffron storm-bands bold against the starfield. Five of its seven
major moons were visible, various lacklustre crescents strung out across the
ring plane.
Far inside the
gossamer ribbon of the Ruin Ring two dozen blackhawks were rushing towards the
gas giant’s equator on a mating flight. Three eggs had already been ejected
into Mirchusko’s thick inner rings. She listened to their awed, inquisitive
exchanges with the blackhawks who had helped stabilize them; whilst racing on
ahead their dying parent radiated sublime gratification.
Life goes on, Ione
thought, even in dire times like these.
A sub-routine
pervading the lakeside house warned her Dominique was approaching the bedroom.
She dismissed the habitat perception and opened her eyes. Clement was lying on
the furred air mattress beside her, mouth open, eyes tight shut, snoring
softly.
Ione recalled the
night fondly. He was a good lover, enthusiastic, knowledgeable, slightly
selfish—but that was most likely due to his age. And for all the enjoyment, he
wasn’t Joshua.
The muscle membrane
door opened to allow Dominique in. She was dressed in a short royal-purple
robe, carrying a tray. “So how was my little brother?” She leered down at the
two naked bodies.
Ione laughed. “Growing
up big and strong.”
“Really? You should
abolish incest, I could find out for myself then.”
“Ask the bishop. I
only do civil and financial laws. Morals are all down to him.”
“Breakfast?” Dominique
asked, perching on the end of the bed. “I’ve got juice, toast, coffee, and
quantat slices.”
“Sounds fine.” Ione
nudged Clement awake, and ordered the window to clear. The glass lost its deep
hazel tint to reveal the placid lake at the foot of the cliff. Tranquillity’s
axial light-tube was just starting to fluoresce its way up through the orange
spectrum.
“Any word in about
Laton?” Dominique asked. She sat cross-legged facing Ione and Clement, pouring
juice and handing round toast.
“Nothing to add to
what the navy voidhawk brought yesterday,” Ione said. It was one of the reasons
she had turned to Clement, for the comfort of physical contact, the need to be
wanted. She had accessed the Confederation Navy’s classified report on the
energy virus with growing concern.
As soon as
Tranquillity reported the contents of Graeme Nicholson’s flek she had placed an
order for another ten strategic-defence platforms from the industrial stations
orbiting outside the spaceport, supplementing the thirty-five which already
protected the habitat. The companies were glad of the work, starship component
manufacturing was slowing along with the declining number of flights. It didn’t
take a military genius to work out that Laton was going to try and spread his
revolution; and Tranquillity was almost on a direct line between Lalonde and
Earth, the core of the Confederation. The first pair of new platforms were
nearly ready to deploy, with the rest being completed over another six days.
And she was already wondering if she should order more.
Within an hour of the
navy voidhawk delivering the warning flek from Trafalgar, she had hired twelve
blackhawks to act as close-range patrol vessels, and equipped them with
nuclear-armed combat wasps from Tranquillity’s reserve stocks. She was thankful
there were enough of the bitek craft available to charter. But then since her
grandfather opened the habitat as a base for mating flights the blackhawks and
their captains had been pretty loyal to Tranquillity and the Lord of Ruin.
What with the extra
defences and the patrols, the habitat was developing a siege mentality in the
wake of Terrance Smith’s departure.
But were her
precautions enough?
“How is the alert
hitting the Vasilkovsky Line?” Ione asked.
Dominique took a drink
of juice. “Hard. We’ve got twenty-five ships idle in Tranquillity’s dock right
now. No merchant is going to risk sending cargo until they know for sure Laton
isn’t at the destination. Three of our captains arrived yesterday, all from
different star systems. They all said the same thing. Planetary governments are
virtually quarantining incoming starships, asteroid governments too. Give it
another week, and interstellar trade will have shut down altogether.”
“They’ll find the Yaku
by then,” Clement said, tearing a corner off his toast. “Hell, they’ve
probably found it already. The navy voidhawk said it was a Confederationwide
alert. No ship is ever more than ten days from a star system. I bet a navy
squadron is blowing it to smithereens right now.”
“That’s what gets me
the most,” Ione said. “No knowing, having to wait for days for any news.”
Dominique leant
forwards and squeezed her knee. “Don’t worry. The 7th Fleet squadron will stop
him from becoming involved. They’ll all be back here in a week with their tails
between their legs complaining they didn’t get a chance to play soldier.”
Ione looked up into
deep, surprisingly understanding eyes. “Yeah.”
“He’ll be all right.
He’s the only man I know who could lie his way out of a supernova explosion.
Some leftover megalomaniac isn’t going to be a problem.”
“Thanks.”
“Who?” Clement asked
around a full mouth, looking from one girl to another.
Ione bit into a slice
of her orange-coloured quantat. It had the texture of a melon, but tasted like
spicy grapefruit. Dominique was grinning roguishly at her over a coffeecup.
“Girls’ talk,”
Dominique said. “You wouldn’t understand.”
Clement threw a
quantat rind at her. “It’s Joshua. You’ve both got the hots for him.”
“He’s a friend,” Ione
said. “And he’s in way over his silly little head, and we’re worried about
him.”
“Don’t be,” Clement
said briskly. “Joshua showed me round the Lady Macbeth. She’s got more
combat potential than a front-line frigate, and Smith armed her with combat
wasps before they left. Anyone damn stupid enough to go up against that
starship is dead meat.”
Ione gave him a kiss.
“Thank you, too.”
“Any time.”
They ate the rest of
their breakfast in companionable peace. Ione was debating what to do for the
rest of the day when Tranquillity called. That was the thing with being the
absolute ruler of a bitek habitat, she reflected, you don’t really have to do
anything, thoughts were acted on instantly. But there was the human side to
consider. The Chamber of Trade was nervous, the Financial and Commerce Council
more so, ordinary people didn’t know what was going on. Everybody wanted
reassurance, and they expected her to provide it. She had done two interviews
with news companies yesterday, and there were three delegations who wanted
personal audiences.
Parker Higgens is
requesting an immediate interview, Tranquillity told her as she was finishing her coffee. I recommend
you grant it.
Oh, you do, do you?
Well, I think there are more important things for me to attend to right now.
I believe this to
be more important than the Laton crisis.
What? It was the ambiguity which made her sit up
straighter on the furry bed. Tranquillity was emitting a strong impression of
discomfort, as if it was unsure of a subject. Unusual enough to intrigue her.
There has been some
remarkable progress with the Laymil sensorium recordings in the last seventy
hours. I did not wish to trouble you with the project while you were involved
with upgrading my defence and soothing the residents. That may have been my
mistake. Last night some of the researchers made an extremely important find.
Which is? she asked avidly.
They believe they
have located the Laymil home planet.
The path leading from
the tube station to the octagonal Electronics Division building was littered
with ripe bronze berries fallen from the tall chuantawa trees. They crunched
softly as Ione’s shoes helped flatten them further into the stone slabs.
Project staff emerging
from the stations gave her the faintly guilty glance of all workers arriving
early and finding the boss already in.
Oski Katsura greeted
her at the entrance, dressed in her usual white lab smock, one of the few
people in the habitat who never seemed perturbed by Ione’s escort of serjeants.
“We haven’t made an announcement yet,” she said as they went inside. “Some of
the implications are only just sinking in.”
The hall where the
Laymil stack was kept had changed considerably since Ione’s first visit. Most
of the experimental electronic equipment had been cleared out. Processor blocks
and AV projectors were lined up along the benches, forming individual research
stations, each with a rack of fleks. Workshop cubicles behind the glass wall
had been converted into offices. The impression was one of academic endeavour
rather than out and out scientific pioneering.
“We use this mainly as
a sorting centre now,” Oski Katsura said. “As soon as they have been decrypted,
the sensorium memories are individually reviewed by a panel of experts drawn
from every discipline we have here at the project. They provide a rough initial
classification, cataloguing incidents and events depicted, and decide if there
is anything which will interest their profession. After that the relevant
memory is datavised to an investigatory and assessment committee which each
division has formed. As you can imagine, most of it has been sent to the
Cultural and Psychology divisions. But even seeing their electronics used in
the intended context of mundane day-to-day operation has been immensely useful
to us here. And the same goes for most of the physical disciplines—engineering,
fusion, structures. There’s something in most memories for all of us. I’m
afraid a final and exhaustive analysis is going to take a couple of decades at
least. All we are doing for now is providing a preliminary interpretation.”
Ione nodded silent
approval. Tranquillity’s background memories were revealing how hard the review
teams were working.
There were only five
other people in the hall, as well as Lieria. They had all been working through
the night, and now they were clustered round a tray from the canteen, drinking
tea and eating croissants. Parker Higgens rose as soon as she came in. His grey
suit jacket was hanging off the back of one of the chairs, revealing a crumpled
blue shirt. All-night sessions were obviously something the old director was
finding increasingly difficult to manage. But he proffered a tired smile as he
introduced her to the other four. Malandra Sarker and Qingyn Lin were Laymil
spaceship experts, she a biotechnology systems specialist, while his field was the
mechanical and electrical units the xenocs employed in their craft. Ione shook
hands while Tranquillity silently supplied profile summaries of the two.
Malandra Sarker struck her as being young for the job at twenty-eight, but she
had her doctorate from the capital university on Quang Tri, and references
which were impeccable.
Ione knew Kempster
Getchell, the Astronomy Division’s chief; they had met during the first round
of briefings, and on several formal social occasions since then. He was in his
late sixties, and from a family which lacked any substantial geneering. But
despite entropy’s offensive, leaving him with greying, thinning hair, and a
stoop to his shoulders, he projected a lively puckish attitude, the complete
opposite to Parker Higgens. Astronomy was one of the smallest divisions in the
Laymil project, concerned mainly with identifying stars which had
Laymil-compatible spectra, and searching through radio astronomy records to see
if any abnormality had ever been found to indicate a civilization. Despite
frequent requests, no Lord of Ruin had ever agreed to fund the division’s own
radio-telescope array. They had to make do with library records from
universities across the Confederation.
Kempster Getchell’s
assistant was Renato Vella, a swarthy thirty-five-year-old from Valencia, on a
four-year sabbatical from one of its universities. He acted both excited and
awed when Ione greeted him. She wasn’t quite sure if it was her presence or
their discovery which instigated his jitters.
“The Laymil home
planet?” Ione asked Parker Higgens, permitting a note of scepticism to sound.
“Yes, ma’am,” the
director said. The joy that should have been present at making the announcement
was missing, he seemed more apprehensive than triumphant.
“Where is it?” she asked.
Parker Higgens traded
a pleading glance with Kempster Getchell, then sighed. “It used to be here, in
this solar system.”
Ione counted to three.
“Used to be?”
“Yes.”
Tranquillity? What
is going on?
Although it is an
extraordinary claim, the evidence does appear to be slanted in their favour.
Allow them to complete their explanation.
All right. “Go on.”
“It was a recording
that was translated two days ago,” Malandra Sarker said. “We found we had got
the memory of a Laymil spaceship crew-member. Naturally we were delighted, it
would give us a definite blueprint for one of their ships, inside and out, as
well as the operating procedures. Up until now all we’ve had is fragments of
what we thought were spaceship parts. Well we found out what a Laymil ship looks
like all right.” She datavised one of the nearby processor blocks; its AV
pillar shone an image into Ione’s eyes.
The Laymil ship had
three distinct sections. At the front were four white-silver metal ovoids; the
large central unit was thirty metres long, with the three twenty-metre units
clustered around it—obviously life-support cabins. The midsection was drum
shaped, its sides made up from interlaced stone-red pipes packed so tightly
there was no chink between them, an almost intestinal configuration. Five black
heat-radiation tubes protruded at right angles from its base, spaced equally
around the rim. At the rear was a narrow sixty-metre-long tapering fusion tube,
with slim silver rings running along its length at five-metre intervals. Right
at the tip, around the plasma exhaust nozzle, was a silver foil parasol.
“Is it organic?” Ione
asked.
“We think about eighty
per cent,” Qingyn Lin said. “It matches what we know of their use of
biotechnology.”
Ione turned away from
the projection.
“It is a passenger
ship,” Malandra Sarker said. “From what we can make out, the Laymil didn’t have
commercial cargo ships, although there are some tankers and specialist
industrial craft.”
“This would seem to be
correct,” Lieria said, speaking through the small white vocalizer block held in
one of her tractamorphic arms. “The Laymil at this cultural stage did not have
economic commerce. Technical templates and DNA were exchanged between clan
units, but no physical or biotechnology artefacts were traded for financial reward.”
“The thing is,”
Malandra Sarker said, sinking down into a chair, “it was leaving a parking
orbit around their home planet to fly to Mirchusko’s spaceholms.”
“We always wondered
why the ship fuel tanks we found were so large,” Qingyn Lin said. “There was
far too much deuterium and He3 stored for simple inter-habitat
voyages, even if they made fifteen trips in a row without refuelling. Now we
know. They were interplanetary spaceships.”
Ione gave Kempster
Getchell a questioning look. “A planet? Here?”
A wayward smile formed
on his lips, he appeared indecently happy about the revelation. “It does look
that way. We checked the star and planet positions gathered from the
spacecraft’s sensor array most thoroughly. The system we saw is definitely this
one. The Laymil home planet used to orbit approximately one hundred and
thirty-five million kilometres from the star. That does put it rather neatly
between the orbits of Jyresol and Boherol.” He pouted sadly. “And here I’ve
spent thirty years of my life looking at stars with spectra similar to this
one. All the time it was right under my nose. God, what a waste. Still, I’m
back on the cutting edge of astrophysics now, and no mistake. Trying to work
out how you make a planet disappear . . . ho, boy.”
“All right,” Ione said
with forced calm. “So where is it now? Was it destroyed? There isn’t an
asteroid belt between Jyresol and Boherol. There isn’t even a dust belt as far
as I know.”
“There is no record of
any extensive survey being made of this system’s interplanetary medium,”
Kempster said. “I checked our library. But even assuming the planet had
literally been reduced to dust, the solar wind would have blown the majority of
particles beyond the Oort cloud within a few centuries.”
“Would a survey now
help?” she asked.
“It might be able to
confirm the dust hypothesis, if the density is still higher than is usual. But
it would depend on when the planet was destroyed.”
“It was here two
thousand six hundred years ago,” Renato Vella said. “We know that from
analysing the position of the other planets at the time the memory was
recorded. But if we are to look for proof of the dust I believe we would be
better off taking surface samples from Boherol and the gas giant moons.”
“Good idea, well done,
lad,” Kempster said, patting his younger assistant on the shoulder. “If this
wave of dust was expelled outwards then it should have left traces on all the
airless bodies in the system. Similar to the way sediment layers in planetary
core samples show various geological epochs. If we could find it, we would get
a good indication of when it actually happened as well.”
“I don’t think it was
reduced to dust,” Renato Vella said.
“Why not?” Ione asked.
“It was a valid idea,”
he said readily. “There aren’t many other ways you can make something that mass
disappear without trace. But it’s a very theoretical solution. In practical
terms the energy necessary to dismantle an entire planet to such an extent is
orders of magnitude above anything the Confederation could muster. You have to
remember that even our outlawed antimatter planetbuster bombs don’t harm or
ablate the mass of a terracompatible-sized planet, they just wreck and pollute
the biosphere. In any case an explosion—multiple explosions even—wouldn’t do
the trick, they would just reduce it to asteroidal fragments. To turn it into
dust or preferably vapour you would need some form of atomic disrupter weapon,
probably powered by the star—I can’t think what else would produce enough
energy. That or a method of initiating a fission chain reaction in stable
atoms.”
“Perfect mass-energy
conversion,” Kempster muttered, his eyebrows beetled in concentration. “Now
there’s an idea.”
“And why wasn’t the
same method used against the Laymil habitats?” Renato Vella said, warming to
his theme. “If you have a weapon which can destroy a planet so thoroughly as to
eradicate all traces of it, why leave the remnants of the habitats for us to
find?”
“Yes, yes, why
indeed?” Kempster said. “Good point, lad, well done. Good thinking.”
His assistant beamed.
“We still think the
habitats destroyed themselves,” Parker Higgens said. “It fits what we know,
even now.” He looked at Ione, visibly distressed. “I think the memory may show
the start of the planet’s destruction. There is clearly some kind of conflict
being enacted on the surface as the ship leaves orbit.”
“Surely that was an
inter-clan dispute, wasn’t it?” Qingyn Lin asked dubiously. “That’s what it
sounded like to me.”
“You are all mistaken
in thinking of this problem purely in terms of the physical,” Lieria said.
“Consider what we now know. The planet is confirmed to have been in existence
at the same time the habitats were broken. The Laymil entity whose memory we
have accessed is concerned about the transformation in the life-harmony gestalt
which is being propagated across an entire continent. A drastic metaphysical
change which threatens nothing less than the entire Laymil racial orientation.
Director Parker Higgens is correct, these events cannot be discounted as
coincidence.”
Ione glanced round the
group. None of them looked as though they wished to contradict the Kiint. “I
think I’d better review this memory myself.” She sat in the chair next to
Malandra Sarker. Show me.
As before, the Laymil
body hardened around her own, an exoskeleton which did not—could never—fit. The
recording quality was much higher than before. Oski Katsura and her team had
been working long hours on the processors and programs required to interpret
the stored information. There were hardly any of the black specks which
indicated fragmentary data drop-outs. Ione relaxed deeper into the chair as the
sensorium buoyed her along.
The Laymil was a
shipmaster, clan-bred for a life traversing the barren distance between the
spaceholm constellation and Unimeron, the prime lifehost. It hung at the hub of
the ship’s central life-support ovoid as the drive was readied for flight.
There was nothing like the human arrangement of decks and machinery, present
even in voidhawks. The protective metal shell contained a biological nest-womb,
a woody growth honeycombed with chambers and voyage-duration pouches for
travellers, creating an exotic organic grotto. Chambers were clustered together
without logic, like elongated bubbles in a dense foam; the walls had the
texture of tough rubber, pocked with hundreds of small holes to restrain hoofs,
and emitting a fresh green radiance. Organs to maintain the atmosphere and
recycle food were encased in the thicker partitions.
The all-pervasive
greenness was subtly odd to Ione’s human brain. Tubular buttress struts curved
through the chamber around the Laymil body, flaring out where they merged with
a wall. Its three hoofs were pushed into holes, buttocks resting on a grooved
mushroom-stool; its hands were closed on knobby protrusions. A teat stalactite
hung centimetres from the feeding mouth. The position was rock solid and
immensely comfortable, the nest-womb had grown into a flawlessly compatible
layout with the shipmaster’s body. All three heads slid around in slow weaving
motions, observing small opaque composite instrument panels that swelled out of
the wall. Ione found it hard to tell where the plastic began and the cells
ended; the cellular/mechanical fusion was seamless, as though the womb-nest was
actually growing machinery. Panel-mounted lenses projected strange graphics
into the Laymil’s eyes, in a fashion similar to human AV projectors.
As the heads moved
they provided snatched glimpses into other chambers through narrow passageways.
She saw one of the Laymil passengers cocooned in its voyage-duration pouch. It
was swaddled in translucent glittery membranes that held it fast against the
wall, and a waxy hose supplying a nutrient fluid had been inserted into its
mouth, with a similar hose inserted into its anus, maintaining the digestive
cycle. A mild form of hibernation.
The Laymil
shipmaster’s thoughts were oddly twinned, as though the recording was of two
separate thought patterns. On a subsidiary level it was aware of the ship’s
biological and mechanical systems. It controlled them with a processor’s precision,
preparing the fusion tube for ignition, maintaining attitude through small
reaction thrusters, computing a course vector, surveying the four nest-wombs.
There was a similarity here to the automatic functions a human’s neural
nanonics would perform; but as far as she could ascertain the shipmaster
possessed no implants. This was the way its brain was structured to work. The
ship’s biotechnology was sub-sentient, so, in effect, the shipmaster was the
flight computer.
On an ascendant level
its mind was observing the planet below through the ship’s sensor faculty.
Unimeron was remarkably similar to a terracompatible world, with broad blue
oceans and vast white cloud swirls, the poles home to smallish ice-caps. The
visual difference was provided by the continents; they were a near-uniform
green, even the mountain ranges had been consumed by the vegetation layer. No
piece of land was wasted.
Vast blue-green cobweb
structures hung in orbit, slightly below the ship’s thousand-kilometre
altitude. These were the skyhavens, most two hundred kilometres in diameter,
some greater, rotating once every five or more hours, not for artificial
gravity but simply to maintain shape. They were alive, conscious with vibrant
mentalities, greater than that of a spaceholm even. A combination of spaceport
and magnetosphere energy node, with manufacturing modules clumped around the
hub like small bulbous tangerine barnacles. But the physical facets were just
supplementary to their intellectual function. They formed an important aspect
of the planet’s life-harmony, smoothing and weaving the separate continental
essence thoughts into a single unified planetwide gestalt. Mental communication
satellites, though they contributed to the gestalt as well, sang to distant
stars. That voice was beyond Ione completely, both its message and its purpose,
registering as just a vague cadence on the threshold of perception. She felt a
little darker for its absence, the Laymil shipmaster considered it magnificent.
The skyhavens were
packed close together, with small variants in altitude, allowing them to slide
along their various orbital inclinations without ever colliding. No segment of
the planet’s sky was ever left open. It was an amazing display of navigational
exactitude. From a distance it looked as though someone had cast a net around
Unimeron. She tried to gauge the effort involved in their growth, a
planet-girdling structure, and failed. Even for a species with such obvious
biotechnology and engineering supremacy the skyhavens were an awesome achievement.
“Departure
initiation forthcoming,” the
shipmaster called.
“Venture boldness
reward,” the skyhaven essence
replied. “Anticipate hope.”
Unimeron’s terminator
was visible now, blackness biting into the planet. Nightside continents were
studded with bright green lightpoints, smaller than human cities, and very
regular. One southern continent, curving awkwardly around the planet’s mass
away from the ship’s sensors, had delicate streamers of phosphorescent red mist
meandering along its coastal zones with exploratory tendrils creeping further
inland. The edges were visibly palpitating like the fringes of a terrestrial
jellyfish as they curled and flowed around surface features, yet all the while
retaining a remarkable degree of integrity. There was none of the braiding or
churning of ordinary clouds. Ione considered the effect quite delightful, the
mist looked alive, as though the air currents were infected with biofluorescent
spoors.
But the Laymil
shipmaster was physically repelled by the sight. “Galheith clan essence
asperity woe.” His heads bobbed around in agitation, letting out low hoots
of distress. “Woe. Folly acknowledgement request.”
“No relention,” the skyhaven essence answered sadly.
As their orbits took
them over the continent, the skyhavens would hum in dismay. The life-harmony of
Unimeron was being disrupted, with the skyhavens refusing to disseminate the
Galheith clan essence into the gestalt. It was too radical, too antagonistic.
Too different. Alien and antithetical to the harmony ethos that had gone
before.
A tiny flare of sharp
blue-white light sprang out of the red mist, dying down quickly.
“Reality
dysfunction,” the shipmaster
called in alarm.
“Confirm.”
“Horror woe.
Galheith research death essence tragedy.”
“Concord.”
“Impetuosity woe
release. Reality dysfunction exponential. Prime lifehost engulfed fear.”
“Reality
dysfunction counter. Spaceholm constellation prime essence continuation hope.”
“Confirm. Hope
carriage.” The shipmaster
quickly reviewed the other Laymil hibernating in the nest-wombs; both mental
traits converging for the evaluation. “Essencemasters condition
satisfactory. Hope reality dysfunction defeat. Hope Galheith atonement.”
“Hope joined.
Rejoice unity commitment.”
Where the flare of
light had sprung, the jungle was now alight. Ione realized the glimmer of
orange must be a firestorm easily over ten kilometres wide.
The spaceship was
crossing the terminator. Skyhavens ahead glowed a fragile platinum as the Van
Allen radiation belt particles gusted across their web strands.
“Departure
initiation,” the shipmaster
announced. Ionized fuel was fired into the fusion drive’s magnetic pinch. A jet
of plasma slowly built up. Information streamed into the Laymil’s brain,
equations were performed, instructions were pushed into the nest-womb’s neurons
and the coincident hardware’s circuits. There was never any doubt, any
self-questioning. The terms did not apply.
Unimeron began to
shrink behind the ship. The shipmaster focused his attention on the spaceholm
constellation, and the frail song of welcome it emitted, so much quieter than
the prime lifehost’s joyous spirit.
And the memory
expired.
Ione blinked free of
the stubbornly persistent, green-polluted images. Emotions and sensations were
harder to discard.
“What is a reality
dysfunction?” she asked. “The shipmaster seemed frightened half to death by
it.”
“We don’t know,”
Parker Higgens said. “There has never been any reference to it in any of the
other memories.”
“Ione Saldana, I
believe the term reality dysfunction refers to a massive malevolent violation
within the Laymil life-harmony essence,” Lieria said. “The nature of the
Galheith clan was being radically altered by it. However, the impression
conveyed by the memory is that it is more than a mental reorientation, it also
incorporated a distortion within the local physical matrix. Example: the energy
flare.”
“It was a weapon?” She
shot a tense glance at the two astronomers.
Kempster scratched at
his shadow of stubble. “That flare definitely started a fire, so I would have
to say yes. But one forest fire is a little different from something which can
cause a planet to vanish.”
“If it went on to
spread through the entire planet’s life essence, as seems more than likely,”
Malandra Sarker said, “then it would have Unimeron’s entire technical resources
at its disposal. Placed on a war footing, a race like that would have a
frightening armaments-production wherewithal.”
“I disagree,” Renato
Vella said. “Granted they could build fleets of ships, and hundreds of
thousands of nukes, probably antimatter too. But they are not that much further
advanced than us. I still maintain the energy required to destroy a planet is
beyond this level of technology.”
I was just thinking
of the Alchemist, Ione said to
Tranquillity. She was almost afraid to mention it in case Lieria could
intercept the thought. What was it Captain Khanna said? One idea in a
lifetime is all it takes. The Laymil might not have had the initial physical
resources, but what about the mental potential of a planetary mind devoted to weapons
design?
The possibility is
an alarming one, Tranquillity
agreed. But why would they turn it on themselves?
Good question. “Even if they built a weapon, why would they
turn it on themselves?”
The group regarded her
with puzzled faces—a child innocently flooring adult logic with a simple
question. Then Renato Vella smiled suddenly. “We’ve been assuming it was
destroyed, how about if they just moved it instead?”
Kempster Getchell
chuckled. “Oh my boy, what a wonderful notion.”
“I bet it would
require less energy than obliteration.”
“Good point, yes.”
“And we’ve seen they
can build massive space structures.”
“We are evading the
point,” Parker Higgens said sternly. “We believe this reality dysfunction,
whatever it is, is behind both the removal of the Laymil planet and the suicide
of the spaceholms. Our priority now has to be to establish what it was, and if
it still exists.”
“If the planet was
moved, then the reality dysfunction is still around,” Renato Vella said,
refusing to be deflected. “It is wherever the planet is.”
“Yes, but what is it?”
Oski Katsura asked with some asperity. “It seems to be many things, some kind
of mental plague and a weapon system at the same time.”
“Oh shit,” Ione said
out loud as she and Tranquillity made the connection simultaneously. “Laton’s
energy virus.”
Tranquillity allowed
the group to access the report from Dr Gilmore through the hall’s communication
net processors, giving the images direct to Lieria via affinity.
“My God,” Parker
Higgens said. “The similarities are startling.”
“Similarities, hell,”
Kempster half-shouted. “That fucker’s come back!”
The director flinched
at the astronomer’s coarse anger. “We can’t be sure.”
“I’m sorry, Parker,
but I cannot in all sincerity consider this to be a coincidence,” Ione told
him.
“I concur,” Lieria
said.
“The Confederation,
specifically the First Admiral, must be informed immediately,” Ione said. “That
goes without question. The navy must understand that they are not facing Laton
himself but something far more serious. Parker, you will act as my
representative in this matter; you have both the authority and knowledge
necessary to convey the severity of this reality dysfunction to the First
Admiral.”
He looked shocked at
first, then bowed. “Yes, ma’am.”
“Oski, prepare copies
of every Laymil memory we have. The rest of you put down what observations you
can for the navy staff, whatever you think may help. Tranquillity is recalling
one of the patrol blackhawks now, it will be ready to leave for Avon in an
hour. I will ask the Confederation Navy office to provide an officer to escort
you, Parker, so you had better get ready. Time is important here.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Ione Saldana, I
also request a blackhawk to convey one of my colleagues home to Jobis, Lieria said. I judge these events to be of
sufficient portent to warrant informing my race.
Yes, of course. She was aware of Tranquillity summoning a
second armed blackhawk back to the docking-ledges even as she acknowledged the
Kiint’s request. All the remaining resident blackhawks would have to be
conscripted for patrol duties now, she thought tersely, probably the
independent traders too. Then a stray thought struck. Lieria, did the Kiint
ever hear the skyhavens’ starsong?
Yes.
The finality of the
tone stopped Ione from enquiring further. But only for now, she promised
herself. I’ve had enough of this mystic superiority crap they keep peddling.
“Kempster, that red mist over Unimeron’s southern continent, was that a part of
the reality dysfunction, do you think? There’s no mention of it being present
on Lalonde.”
“Its nature would
suggest so,” Kempster said. “I can’t see that it’s a natural phenomenon, not
even on that planet. Possibly a secondary effect, a by-product of the
interaction with Unimeron’s life essence, but definitely connected. Wouldn’t
you agree, lad?”
Renato Vella had been
lost in deep contemplation ever since he accessed Dr Gilmore’s report. Now he
nodded briefly. “Yes, it is likely.”
“Something on your
mind?” the old astronomer asked, his cheerfulness reasserting itself.
“I was just thinking.
They could build living space structures that completely encircled their world,
yet this reality dysfunction still defeated them. Their spaceholms were so
frightened of it they committed suicide rather than submit. What do you think
is going to happen to us when we confront it?”
Chapter 08
“Jesus, what’s all
that red gunk in the air? I don’t remember that from the last time we were
here. It’s almost as if it’s glowing. The bloody stuff’s covering the whole of
the Juliffe tributary network, look.” Joshua abandoned the Lady Mac’s
sensor input and turned to Melvyn Ducharme on the acceleration couch next to
his.
“Don’t look at me, I’m
just a simple fusion engineer. I don’t know anything about meteorology. Try the
mercs, they’re all planet-bred.”
“Humm,” Joshua mused.
Relations between the Lady Mac’s crew and the mercenary scout team they
were carrying hadn’t been exactly optimal during the voyage. Both sides kept
pretty much to themselves, with Kelly Tirrel acting as diplomatic
go-between—when she was out of the free-fall sex cage. That girl had certainly
lived up to her side of the bargain, he thought contentedly.
“Anybody care to
hazard a guess?” he called.
The rest of the crew
on the bridge accessed the images, but no one volunteered an opinion.
Amarisk was slowly
turning round into their line of sight as they closed on the planet. Nearly
half of the continent was already in daylight. From where they were, still a
hundred thousand kilometres out, the Juliffe and most of its tributaries were
smothered in a nebulous red haze. At first inspection it had looked as though
some unique refraction effect was making the water gleam a bright burgundy. But
once the Lady Mac’s long-range optical sensors were focused on Lalonde,
that notion had quickly been dispelled. The effect was caused by thousands of
long narrow cloud bands in the air above the surface of the water, clinging to
the tributary network’s multiple fork pattern with startling accuracy.
Although, Joshua realized, the bands were much broader than the actual rivers
themselves; where the first band started, just inland from the mouth of the
Juliffe, it was almost seventy kilometres across.
“I’ve never seen
anything like it on any planet,” Ashly said flatly. “Weird stuff; and it is
glowing, Joshua. You can see it stretching beyond the terminator, all the way
to the coast.”
“Blood,” Melvyn
intoned solemnly. “The river’s awash with blood, and it’s starting to
evaporate.”
“Shut it,” Sarha
snapped. The idea was too close to the thoughts bubbling round in her own mind.
“That’s not funny.”
“Do you think it’s
hostile?” Dahybi asked. “Something of Laton’s?”
“I suppose it must be
connected with him,” Joshua admitted uneasily. “But even if it is hostile, it
can’t harm us at this distance. It’s strictly lower atmosphere stuff. Which
means it may be a hazard for the merc scouts, though. Sarha, tell them to
access the image, please.” They were less likely to insult a woman.
A grumbling Sarha
requested a channel to the lounge in capsule C where the seven mercenary scouts
and Kelly Tirrel were lying on acceleration couches as the Lady Mac accelerated
in towards Lalonde. There was a gruff acknowledgment from her AV pillar, and
Joshua grinned in private.
The flight computer
alerted him that a coded signal was being transmitted from the Gemal.
“We’ve detected an unknown atmospheric phenomenon above Amarisk,” Terrance
Smith said pedantically.
“Yeah, those red
clouds sticking to the tributaries,” Joshua answered. “We see it too. What do
you want us to do about it?”
“Nothing yet. As far
as we can make out it is simply polluted cloud, presumably coming from the
river itself. If a sensor sweep shows it to be radioactive then we will
reassess the landing situation. But until then, proceed as ordered.”
“Aye, aye, Commodore,”
Joshua grunted when the channel was closed.
“Polluted cloud,”
Melvyn said in contempt.
“Biological warfare,”
Ashly suggested in a grieved tone. “Not nice. Typical of Laton, mark you. But
definitely not nice.”
“I wonder if it’s his
famed proteanic virus?” Dahybi said.
“Doubt it, that was
microscopic. And it didn’t glow in the dark, either. I’d say it has to be
radioactive dust.”
“Then why isn’t the
wind moving it?” Sarha asked. “And how did it form in the first place?”
“We’ll find out in due
course,” Warlow said with his usual pessimism. “Why hurry the process?”
“True enough,” Joshua
agreed.
The Lady Mac was
heading in towards the planet at a steady one gee. As soon as each ship in the
little fleet had emerged from its final jump into the Lalonde system, it had
accelerated away from the coordinate, the whole fleet spreading out radially at
five gees to avoid presenting an easy target grouping. Now they were holding a
roughly circular formation twenty thousand kilometres wide, with Gemal and
the cargo ships at the centre.
The six blackhawks
were already decelerating into low orbit above Lalonde to perform a preliminary
threat assessment. Bloody show-offs, Joshua thought. Lady Mac could
easily match their six gee manoeuvres if she wasn’t encumbered with escort
duties.
Even with naval
tactics programs running in primary mode, Terrance Smith was ever cautious. The
lack of any response from Durringham was extremely bad news, although
admittedly half anticipated. What had triggered the fleet commander’s paranoia
was the total absence of any orbital activity. The colonist-carrier starships
had gone, along with the cargo ships. The inter-orbit craft from Kenyon were
circling inertly in a five-hundred-kilometre equatorial parking orbit, all
systems powered down—even their navigation beacons, which was contrary to every
CAB regulation in the flek. Of the sheriff’s office’s ageing observation
satellite there was no trace. Only the geosynchronous communication platform
and civil spaceflight traffic monitoring satellites remained active, their
on-board processors sending out monotonously regular signals. He lacked the
transponder interrogation code to see if the navy ELINT satellites were
functional.
After a quick
appraisal, Smith had ordered a descent into a thousand-kilometre orbit. His fleet
moved in, the combat-capable starships dumping small satellites in their wake
to form an extensive high-orbit gravitonic-distortion-detector network. If any
starship emerged within five hundred thousand kilometres of the planet, the
satellites would spot it.
The blackhawks
released a quintet of military-grade communication satellites as they raced
towards the planet. Ion engines pushed the comsats into geostationary orbit,
positioning them to give complete coverage of the planet, with overlapping
reception footprints covering Amarisk in its entirety.
Twenty thousand
kilometres out from Lalonde, the blackhawks split into two groups and swept
into a seven-hundred-kilometre orbit at differing inclinations. Each of them
released a batch of fifteen observation satellites, football-sized globes that
decelerated further, lowering themselves into a two-hundred-kilometre orbit;
their parallel tracks provided a detailed coverage sweep over a thousand
kilometres wide. The blackhawks themselves, with their powerful sensor blisters
augmented by electronic scanner pods, were integrated into the effort to
reconnoitre Durringham and the Juliffe tributary basin. The intention was to
compile a comprehensive survey with a resolution below ten centimetres for the
mercenary scouts to use.
“It’s virtually
impossible,” Idzerda, the captain of the blackhawk Cyanea, told Terrance
Smith after the first pass. “That red cloud is completely opaque, except for
the edges where it thins out, and even there the images we’re receiving of the
land below are heavily distorted. I’m not even sure cloud is the word for it.
It doesn’t move like cloud should. It’s almost as if a film of
electrophorescent cells has been solidified into the air. Spectrographic
analysis is useless with that light it emits. One thing we have noticed; we ran
a comparison with the old cartography memory from the sheriff’s observation
satellite which you supplied. The cloud is brightest over towns and villages.
Durringham shines like there’s a star buried under there. There is no way of
telling what is going on below it. The only villages we can even see are the
ones furthest up the tributaries where the glow peters out. And they are
wrong.”
“Wrong?” Terrance
Smith asked.
“Yes. They’re the most
recently settled, the most primitive ones, right?”
“Yes.”
“We’ve seen stone
houses, gardens, domelike structures, metalled roads, heck, even windmills.
None of it was there on the old images you gave us, and they were only recorded
a month ago.”
“That can’t possibly
be correct,” Terrance said.
“I know that. So
either the whole lot are holograms, or it’s an illusion loaded directly into
the observation satellite processors by this electronic warfare gimmick you
warned us about. Although we can’t see how it disrupts the blackhawks’ optical
sensors as well. The people who put up that cloud have got some startlingly
potent projection techniques. But why bother? That’s what we don’t understand.
What’s the point of these illusions?”
“What about power
emission centres?” Terrance Smith asked. “It must take a lot of energy to
generate a covering layer like that red cloud.”
“We haven’t found any.
Even with their electronic jamming we should be able to spot the flux patterns
from a medium-sized fusion generator. But we haven’t.”
“Can you locate the jamming
source?”
“No, sorry, it’s very
diffuse. But it’s definitely ground based. It only affects us and the
satellites when we’re over Amarisk.”
“Is the red cloud
radioactive?”
“No. We’re fairly sure
of that. No alpha, beta, or gamma emission.”
“What about biological
contamination?”
“No data. We haven’t
attempted to sample it.”
“Make that your
priority,” Terrance said. “I have to know if it’s safe to send the combat scout
teams down.”
On its following pass,
the Cyanea released two atmospheric probes. The vehicles were modified
versions of the marque used by planet-survey missions, three-metre delta-wing
robots with the central cylindrical fuselage crammed full of biological
sampling and analysis equipment.
Both of them pitched
up to present their heatshield bellies to the atmosphere, curving down towards
the surface as they aerobraked. Once they had fallen below subsonic velocity,
airscoop intake ramps hinged back near the nose, and their compressor engines
whirred into silent life. A preprogrammed flight plan sent them swooping over
the first fringes of the red cloud, fifteen kilometres to the south-east of
Durringham. Encrypted data pulsed up to the newly established bracelet of
communication satellites.
The air was remarkably
clear, with humidity thirty per cent down on Lalonde’s average. Terrance Smith
accessed the raw image from a camera in the nose of one probe. It looked as
though it was flying over the surface of a red dwarf star. A red dwarf with an
azure atmosphere. The cloud, or haze—whatever—was completely uniform, as
though, finally, an electromagnetic wavefront had come to rest and achieved
mass, then someone had polished it into a ruby surface. There was nothing to
focus on, no perspective, no constituent particles or spores; its intensity was
mechanically constant. An optically impenetrable layer floating two kilometres
above the ground. Thickness unknown. Temperature unknown. Radiating entirely in
the bottom end of the red spectrum.
“No real clouds
anywhere above it,” Joshua murmured. Like most of the fleet’s crews he had
accessed the datavise from the atmospheric probes. Something had bothered him
about that lack; ironically, more than the buoyant red blanket itself. “Amarisk
always had clouds.”
Sarha quickly ran a
review of the images the fleet had recorded on their approach, watching the
cloud formations. “Oh my Lord, they split,” she said disbelievingly. “About a
hundred kilometres offshore the clouds split like they’ve hit something.” She
ran the time-lapse record for them, letting the tumbling clouds sweep through
their neural nanonics’ visualization. Great billowing bands of cumulus and
stratocumulus charged across the ocean towards Amarisk’s western shoreline,
only to branch and diverge, raging away to the north and south of the Juliffe’s
mouth.
“Jesus. What would it
take to do that? Not even Kulu tries to manipulate its climate.” Joshua
switched back to a real-time view from Lady Mac’s sensor clusters. A
cyclone was being visibly sawed into two unequal sections as it pirouetted
against the invisible boundary. He ordered the flight computer to open a
channel to the Gemal.
“Yes, we’ve seen it,”
Terrance Smith said. “It has to be tied in with the red cloud cover. Obviously
the invaders have a highly sophisticated method of energy manipulation.”
“No shit? The point
is, what are you going to do about it?”
“Destroy the focal
mechanism.”
“Jesus, you can’t mean
that. This fleet can’t possibly go into orbit now. With that kind of power
available they’ll be able to smash us as soon as we’re within range. Hell, they
can probably pull us down from orbit. You’ll have to abort the mission.”
“It’s ground based,
Calvert, we’re sure of that. It can’t be anywhere else. The blackhawks can
sense the mass of anything larger than a tennis ball in orbit, you can’t disguise
mass from their distortion fields. All we have to do is send in the combat
scout teams to locate the invader’s bases. That’s what we planned on doing all
along. You knew that when you signed on. Once we find the enemy, the starships
can bombard them from orbit. That’s what you’re here for, Calvert. Nobody
promised you an easy ride. Now hold formation.”
“Oh, Jesus.” He looked
round the bridge to make sure everyone shared his dismay. They did. “What do
you want to do? At five gees I can get us to a suitable jump coordinate in
twelve minutes—mark.”
Melvyn looked
thoroughly disgusted. “That bloody Smith. His naval programs must have been
written by the most gung-ho admiral in the galaxy. I say jump.”
“Smith has a point,”
Warlow rumbled.
Joshua glanced over at
the big cosmonik in surprise. Of everyone, Warlow had been the least eager to
come.
“There is nothing
hostile in orbit,” the bass voice proclaimed.
“It can chop up a
bloody cyclone,” Ashly shouted.
“The red cloud is
atmospheric. Whatever generates it affects lower atmospheric weather. It is
planet based, centred on Amarisk. The blackhawks have not been destroyed. Can
we really desert the fleet at this juncture? Suppose Smith and the others do
liberate Lalonde? What then?”
Jesus, he’s right,
Joshua thought. You knew you were committed after you took the contract. But
. . . Instinct. That bloody obstinate, indefinable mental itch he
suffered from—and trusted. Instinct told him to run. Run now, and run fast.
“All right,” he said.
“We stay with them, for now. But at the first—and I really mean first,
Warlow—sign of the shit hitting the fan, then we are out of orbit at ten gees.
Commitment or no commitment.”
“Thank God somebody’s
got some sense,” Melvyn murmured.
“Sarha, I want a
constant monitor of all the observation satellite data from now on. Any other
shit-loopy atmospheric happenings pop up and I want to be informed
immediately.”
“Yes, Captain.”
“Also, Melvyn, set up
a real-time review program of the grav-detector satellite’s data. I don’t
intend us to be dependent on the Gemal informing us whether we’ve got
company.”
“Gotcha, Joshua,”
Melvyn sang.
“Dahybi, nodes to be
charged to maximum capacity until further notice. I want to be able to jump
within thirty seconds.”
“They aren’t designed
for long-term readiness—”
“They’ll last for five days in that state. It’ll be
settled one way or another by then. And I have the money for maintenance.”
Dahybi shrugged his
shoulders against the couch webbing. “Yes, sir.”
Joshua tried to relax
his body, but eventually gave up and ordered his neural nanonics to send
overrides into his muscles. As they began to slacken he accessed the fleet’s
command communication channels again, and started to format a program which
would warn him if one of the ships dropped out of the network unexpectedly. It
wasn’t much, but it might be worth a couple of seconds.
The atmospheric probes
began to lose height, sliding down towards the surface of the red cloud.
“Systems are functioning perfectly,” the flight’s controlling officer reported.
“There’s no sign of the electronic warfare effect.” She flew them to within
five metres of the top, then levelled them out. There was no reaction from the
serene red plain. “Air analysis is negative. Whatever holds the boundary
together seems to be impermeable. None of it is drifting upwards.”
“Send the probes in,”
Terrance ordered.
The first probe eased
its way towards the surface, observed by cameras on the second. As it touched
the top of the layer a fan of red haze jetted up behind it, arcing with slow smoothness,
like powder-fine dust in low gravity.
“It is a solid!”
Terrance exclaimed. “I knew it.”
“Nothing registering,
sir, no particles. Only water vapour, humidity rising sharply.”
The probe sank deeper,
vanishing from its twin’s view. Its data transmission began to fissure.
“High static charge
building up over the fuselage,” the control officer reported. “I’m losing it.”
The probe’s datavise
dissolved into garbage, then cut off. Terrance Smith ordered the second one
down. They didn’t learn anything new. Contact was lost twenty-five seconds
after it ploughed into the cloud.
“Static-charged
vapour,” Terrance said in confusion. “Is that all?”
Oliver Llewelyn
cancelled the datavise from Gemal’s flight computer. The bridge was
dimly lit, every officer lying on an acceleration couch, eyes closed as they
helped coordinate the fleet’s approach. “It reminds me of a gas giant’s rings,”
the captain said. “Minute charged particles held together with a magnetic
flux.”
“The blackhawks say
there is no magnetic flux, only the standard planetary magnetic field,”
Terrance corrected automatically. “Was there any sign of biological activity?”
he asked the flight control officer on the Cyanea.
“No, sir,” she said.
“No chemicals present either. Just water.”
“Then why is it glowing?”
“I don’t know, sir.
There must be a light-source of some kind deeper inside, where the probes can’t
reach.”
“What are you going to
do?” Oliver Llewelyn asked.
“It’s a screen, a
canopy; they’re covering up whatever they’re doing below. It’s not a weapon.”
“It might only be a
screen. But it’s beyond our ability to create. You can’t commit your forces
against a total unknown, and certainly not one of that magnitude. Standard
military doctrine.”
“There are over twenty
million people down there, including my friends. I can’t leave without at least
making one attempt to find out what’s going on. Standard military doctrine is
to scout first. That’s what we’ll do.” He drew a breath, entering the newly
formatted data from the probes into his neural nanonics and letting the tactics
program draw up a minimum-risk strategy for physical evaluation of the
planetary situation. “The combat scout teams go in as originally planned,
although they land well clear of the red cloud. But I’m altering the search
emphasis. Three teams into the Quallheim Counties to find the invader’s landing
site and base; that section of the mission hasn’t changed. Then nine teams are
to be distributed along the rest of the Juliffe tributaries to appraise the
overall status of the population and engage targets of opportunity. And I want
the last two teams to investigate Durringham’s spaceport; they now have two
objectives. One, find out if the McBoeing spaceplanes are still available to
effect a landing for the general troops we’re carrying in the Gemal.
Secondly, I want them to access the records in the flight control centre and
find out where the starships went. And why.”
“Suppose they didn’t
go anywhere?” Oliver Llewelyn said. “Suppose Captain Calvert is right, and your
invaders can just reach up and obliterate ships in orbit?”
“Then where is the
wreckage? The blackhawks have catalogued every chunk of matter above the
planet, there’s nothing incongruous this side of Rennison’s orbit.”
Oliver Llewelyn showed
him a morbid grin. “Lying in the jungle below that red cloud.”
Terrance was becoming
annoyed with the captain’s constant cavils. “They were unarmed civil ships,
we’re not. And that makes a big difference.” He put his head back down on the
couch’s cushioning, closed his eyes, and began to datavise the revised landing
orders through the secure combat communication channels.
The fleet decelerated
into a one-thousand-kilometre orbit, individual ships taking up different
inclinations so that Amarisk was always covered by three of them. Repeated
sweeps by the swarm of observation satellites had revealed no new information
on ground conditions below the red cloud. The six blackhawks rose up from their
initial seven-hundred-kilometre orbit to join the rest of the starships, their
crews quietly pleased at the extra distance between them and the uncanny aerial
portent.
After one final orbit,
alert for any attack from the invaders, the mercenary scout teams clambered
into the waiting spaceplanes, and Terrance Smith gave the final go ahead to
land. As each starship crossed into the umbra its spaceplane undocked and
performed a retro-burn which pushed it onto an atmosphere interception
trajectory. They reached the mesosphere nine thousand kilometres west of
Amarisk and aerobraked over the nightside ocean, sending a multitude of
hypersonic booms crashing down over the waves.
Brendon couldn’t keep
his attention away from the red cloud. He was piloting the spaceplane from the Villeneuve’s
Revenge, taking the six-strong mercenary scout team down to their
designated drop zone a hundred kilometres east of Durringham. The cloud had
been visible to the forward sensors when they were still six hundred kilometres
offshore. From there it hadn’t been so bad, a colossal meteorological marvel.
Now though, up close, the sheer size was intimidating him badly. The thought that
some entity had constructed it, deliberately built a lightway of water vapour
in the sky, was acutely disconcerting. It hung twenty kilometres off the
starboard wing, inert and immutable. Far ahead he could just see the first fork
as it split to follow one of the tributaries. That more than anything betrayed
its artificiality, the fact that it had intent.
As the spaceplane
eased down level with it he could see the land underneath. Unbroken jungle, but
dark, tinted a deep maroon.
“It’s blocking a lot
of light under there,” said Chas Paske, the mercenary team’s leader.
“Oui,” Brendon agreed,
without looking round. “The computer estimates it’s about eight metres thick at
the edge, getting thicker deeper in, though,” he reported. “Probably three or
four hundred metres at the centre, over the river itself.”
“What about the
electronic warfare field?”
“It’s there all right,
I’m having some trouble with the flight control processors, and the
communication channel is suffering from interference, the bit rate is way down.”
“As long as we can
transmit the coordinates for the starships to bombard,” Chas Paske said.
“That’s all we need.”
“Oui. Landing
in three minutes.”
The spaceplane was
approaching the natural clearing they had chosen. Brendon checked with the
blackhawks, which were still supervising the observation. He was assured there
was no human activity within at least two kilometres of the clearing.
Qualtook and baby
giganteas ringed their allocated landing site. Inside them, burnt and broken
stumps were still visible through the mantle of vines, evidence of the fire
which had raged decades ago. The spaceplane nosed its way cautiously over the
edge of the trees, as if afraid of what it might find. Birds took to the air in
dismay at the huge predator shape and the clarion squealing it emitted. A radar
pulse slashed across the ground, slicing straight through the vine leaves to
uncover the extent of the stumps. Landing struts unfolded from the fuselage,
and after a minute of jostling to avoid the more hazardous protrusions it
settled gently on the ground, compressor nozzles blasting dusty fountains of
dead leaves and twigs into the air.
Even as silence stole
back into the clearing the outer airlock hatch was opening. Chas Paske led his
team out. Five disc-shaped aerovettes swooped into the sky, rim-mounted sensors
probing the encircling jungle for motion or infrared signatures.
The mercenaries began
to unload their equipment from the open belly holds. They were all boosted,
their appearance way outside the human norm. Chas Paske was bigger than any
cosmonik, his synthetic skin the colour of weather-worn stone. He didn’t bother
with clothes other than weapon belts and equipment straps.
“Hurry it up,” Brendon
said. “The jamming is getting worse, I can hardly get a signal through to the
satellites.”
Pods and cases began
to accumulate on the battered carpet of vines. Chas was hauling down a portable
zero-tau pod containing an affinity-bonded eagle when an aerovette datavised
him that there was a movement among the trees. He picked up a gaussrifle. The
aerovette was hovering a metre over the trees, providing him an image of heads
bobbing about through the undergrowth. Nine of them, making no attempt to hide.
“Hey,” a woman’s voice
shouted.
The mercenaries were
fanning out, positioning the aerovettes to provide maximum coverage.
“The blackhawks said
there was no one here,” Chas Paske said. “For Christ’s sake.”
“It’s the optical
distortion,” Brendon replied. “It’s worse than we thought.”
The woman emerged into
the clearing. She shouted again and waved. More people came out of the trees
behind her, women and a couple of boys in their early teens. All of them in
dirty clothes.
“Thank God you’re
here,” she said as she hurried over to Chas. “We waited and waited. It’s
terrible back there.”
“Hold it,” Chas said.
She didn’t hear him,
or ignored him. Looking down to pick her way over thick tangles of vines. “Take
us away. Up to the starships, anywhere. But get us off this planet.”
“Who the hell are you?
Where do you come from?” At the back of his mind Chas thought how odd it was
that his appearance didn’t affect her. People normally showed at least some
doubt when they saw his size and shape. This woman didn’t.
His neural nanonics
cautioned him that the gaussrifle’s targeting processor was malfunctioning.
“Stop,” he bellowed when she was six metres away. “We can’t take any chances;
you may have been sequestrated. Now, where are you from?”
She jerked to a halt
at the volume he poured into his voice. “We’re from the village,” she said,
slightly breathless. “There’s a whole group of them devils back there.”
“Where?”
The woman took another
pace forward and pointed over her shoulder. “There.” Another step. “Please, you
must help us.” Her haggard face was imploring.
All five aerovettes
fell out of the sky. The ground below Chas Paske’s feet began to split open
with a wet tearing sound, revealing a long fissure from which bright white
light shone upwards. Neural nanonics overrode all natural human feelings of
panic, enforcing a smooth threat response from his body. He jumped aside,
landing beside the smiling woman. She hit him.
Terrance Smith had
lost contact with three of the eleven spaceplanes which had landed, and the
remaining three in the air were approaching the Quallheim Counties. The
observation satellites were unable to provide much information on the fate of
those that had been silenced, the images they produced of the drop zones were
decaying by the minute. None of them had crashed, though, the blackout had come
after they landed. Encouraged by his tactics program, which estimated forty per
cent losses at the first landing attempt, Terrance assumed the worst, and
contacted the last three spaceplanes.
“Change your principal
drop zone to one of the back-ups,” he ordered. “I want you to land at least a
hundred and fifty kilometres from the red cloud.”
“It’s moving!” Oliver
Llewelyn shouted as Terrance was receiving acknowledgements from the pilots.
“What is?”
“The red cloud.”
Terrance opened a
channel to the processor array which was correlating the observation satellite
images. Whorls and curlicues were rippling along the edges of the red bands,
flat streamers, kilometres long, were shooting out horizontally, like solar
prominences. The eerie symmetry of the velvet-textured clouds was rupturing,
their albedo fluctuating as vast serpentine shadows skated erratically from
side to side.
“It knows we’re here,”
Oliver Llewelyn said. “We’ve agitated it.”
For one brutally nasty
second Terrance Smith had the idea that the massive formation of forking cloud
bands was alive, a gas-giant entity that had migrated across interplanetary
space from Murora. Damn it, the thing did resemble the kind of convoluted storm
braids which curled and clashed in week-long hostilities among the hydrogen and
frozen ammonia crystals of gas-giant atmospheres. “Don’t be absurd,” he said.
“Something is deliberately causing those disturbances. This may be our best
chance yet to discover how they shape that thing. Get onto the blackhawk
captains, I want every sensor we have available focused on it. There has to be
some kind of energy modulation going on down there. Something has to register
on some spectrum we’re covering.”
“Want to bet?” Oliver
Llewelyn muttered under his breath. He was beginning to wish he had never
agreed to fly the Gemal for Smith, and to hell with the legalities of
refusing. Some things were more important than money, starting with his life.
He grudgingly began datavising instructions round the blackhawks.
The communication
links with another two spaceplanes dropped out. But three had landed their
mercenary teams without incident and were already back in the air.
It is possible,
Terrance told himself fiercely as the pearl-white specks soared to safety above
the tangled tributary basin. We can find out what’s happening down there.
He observed the red
cloud sending huge pseudostorm streamers boiling ferociously out across the
jungle. A navigational graphics overlay revealed the position of the spaceplanes
still on the ground. The largest swellings were heading for the landing zones
with unerring accuracy.
“Come on,” he urged
them through clenched teeth. “Get up. Get out of there.”
“Sensors report no
energy perturbation of any kind,” Oliver Llewelyn said.
“Impossible. It’s
being directed. What about the sensors the invaders used to track our
spaceplanes, have we detected those?”
“No.”
Five more spaceplanes
were back in the air, streaking away from the grasping claws of red cloud. Two
of them were ones they had lost contact with earlier. Terrance heard a cheer go
round the Gemal’s bridge, and added his own whoop of exhilaration.
Now the mission was
starting to come together. With the combat scout teams on the ground they would
have targets soon. They could start hitting back.
The last three
spaceplanes landed in the Quallheim Counties. One of them was from the Lady
Macbeth.
The Villeneuve’s
Revenge had the standard pyramid structure of four life-support capsules at
its core. They were spherical, divided into three decks, with enough volume to
make life for the crew of six very agreeable. Fifteen passengers could be
accommodated with only a modest reduction in comfort. None of the six
mercenaries they had brought to Lalonde had complained. The fittings, like the
rest of the ship’s systems, could be classed as passable with plenty of room
for improvement, upgrading, or preferably complete replacement.
Erick Thakrar and Bev
Lennon sailed headfirst through the ceiling hatch of the lounge deck above the
spaceplane hangar. The compartment’s surfaces were coated in a thin grey-green
foam with stikpads at regular intervals, though most of them had lost their
cohesiveness. Furniture was all lightweight composite that had been folded back
neatly into alcoves, producing a floor made up of labelled squares, hexagons,
and circles like some mismatched mosaic. Walls were principally storage
lockers, broken by hatchways into personal cabins, the red panels of emergency
equipment cubicles, and inbuilt AV player blocks with their projector pillars.
There was a watery vegetable smell in the air. Only two of the lightstrips were
on. Several purple foil food wrappers were drifting through the air like lost
aquatic creatures, with a couple more clamped against the roof grilles by the
gentle air flow. A black flek was spinning idly. It all added up to lend the
lounge a discarded appearance.
Erick slapped casually
at the plastic-coated ladder stretching between floor and ceiling, angling for
the floor hatch. His neural nanonics reported André Duchamp opening a direct
communication channel.
“He’s docking now,”
the captain datavised. “Or attempting to.”
“How is the
communication link? Can you get anything from inside?”
“Nothing. It’s still a
three per cent bit rate, just enough to correlate docking procedures. The
processors must have been bollocksed up quite badly.”
Erick glanced over his
shoulder at Bev, who shrugged. The two of them were armed; Bev with a neural
jammer, Erick a laser pistol he hoped to God he wouldn’t have to use.
The spaceplane had
emerged from the upper atmosphere and re-established contact with a weak signal
from a malfunctioning reserve transmitter. Brendon claimed the craft had been
subject to a ferocious electronic warfare attack which had decimated the
on-board processors. They only had his word for it, the link had barely enough
power to broadcast his message, a full-scale datavise to assess the internal
electronic damage was impossible.
In view of the known
sequestration ability of the invaders, André Duchamp wasn’t taking any chances.
“That anglo Smith
should have anticipated this,” André grumbled. “We should have had an
examination procedure set up.”
“Yes,” Erick agreed.
He and Bev traded a grin.
“Typical of this
bloody bodge-up mission,” André chuntered on. “If he wants proper advice he
should have experienced people like me on his general staff, not that arsehole
Llewelyn. I could have told him you need to be careful when it comes to
sequestration. Fifty years of experience, that’s what I’ve got, that counts for
a hell of a lot more than any neural nanonics tactics program. I’ve had every
smartarse weapon in the Confederation thrown at me, and I’m still alive. And he
goes and chooses a Celt who makes a living from flying the brain dead. Merde!”
Bev’s legs cleared the
rim of the hatch into the lounge, and he datavised a codelock at it. The
carbotanium hatch slid shut, its seal engaging with a solid clunk.
“Come on, then,” Erick
said. He slipped through the floor hatch into the lower deck. His neural
nanonics provided him with an image from the starship’s external sensor
clusters. The spaceplane was floundering, just metres away from the hull.
Without a full navigational datalink, Brendon was having a great deal of
trouble inserting the spaceplane’s nose into the hangar’s docking collar.
Novice pilots could do better, Erick thought, wincing as reaction-control
thrusters fired hard, seconds before the radar dome tip scraped the hull. “Ye
gods. We might not have anything left to inspect at this rate.”
The lower deck was
severely cramped, comprising an engineering shop for medium-sized
electromechanical components, a smaller workshop for electronic repairs, two
airlocks, one for the spaceplane hangar, one for EVA work, storage bins, and
space armour lockers. Its walls were naked titanium, netted with conduits and
pipes.
“Collar engaged,”
André said. “Madeleine is bringing him in now.”
The whine of actuators
carried faintly through the starship’s stress structure into the lower deck.
Erick accessed a camera in the hangar, and saw the spaceplane being pulled into
the cylindrical chamber. A moth crawling back inside a silver chrysalis. The
retracted wings had a clearance measured in centimetres.
He datavised orders
into the hangar systems processors. When the spaceplane came to rest, power
lines, coolant hoses, and optical cables plugged into umbilical sockets around
its fuselage.
“There’s very little
data coming out,” Erick said, scanning the docking operations console holoscreen
to see the preliminary results of the diagnostic checks. “I can’t get any
internal sensors to respond.”
“Is that the
processors or the sensors themselves which are malfunctioning?” André asked.
“Difficult to tell,”
Bev said, hanging from a grab hoop behind Erick to look over his shoulder.
“Only ten per cent of the internal databuses are operational, we can’t access
the cabin management processors to see where the fault lies. God knows how
Brendon ever piloted that thing up here. He’s missing half of his control
systems.”
“Brendon is the best,”
Madeleine Collun said.
The console’s AV
pillar bleeped, showing a single communication circuit was open from the
spaceplane. Audio only.
“Anyone out there?”
Brendon asked. “Or have you all buggered off to lunch?”
“We’re here, Brendon,”
Erick said. “What’s your situation?”
“The atmosphere is
really bad, total life-support failure as far as I can make out . . .
I’m gulping oxygen from an emergency helmet . . . Get that airlock
connected now . . . This is killing my lungs . . . I can
smell some kind of plastic burning . . . Acid gas . . .”
“I can’t cycle the
cabin atmosphere for him,” Erick datavised to André. “Our pumps are working and
the hose seals are confirmed, but the spaceplane pressure valves won’t open, there’s
no environmental circuit.”
“Get him into the
airlock, then,” André said. “But don’t let him into the life-support cabin, not
yet.”
“Aye, aye.”
“Come on!” Brendon
shouted.
“On our way, Brendon.”
Bev ordered the
airlock tube to extend. The spaceplane’s fuselage shield panel slid back to
reveal the circular airlock hatch below.
“Lucky that worked,”
Erick muttered.
Bev was staring into
the AV pillar’s projection, watching the airlock tube seal itself to the hatch
rim. “It’s a simple power circuit. Nothing delicate about that.”
“But there’s still a
supervising processor—Hell.” Environment sensors inside the airlock tube were
picking up traces of toxic gases as the spaceplane’s hatch swung open. The
console holoscreen switched to a camera inside the metal tube. A curtain of
thin blue smoke was wafting out of the hatch. A flickering green light shone
inside the cabin. Brendon appeared, pulling himself along a line of closely spaced
grab hoops. His yellow ship’s one-piece was smeared with dirt and soot. The
copper-mirror visor of the shell-helmet he was wearing covered his face, it was
connected to a portable life-support case.
“Why didn’t he put his
spacesuit on?” Erick asked.
Brendon waved at the
camera. “God, thanks, I couldn’t have lasted much longer. Hey, you haven’t
opened the hatch.”
“Brendon, we have to
take precautions,” Bev said. “We know the invaders can sequestrate people.”
“Oh, sure, yes. One
moment.” He started coughing.
Erick checked the
environmental readings again. Fumes were still pouring out of the spaceplane
cabin; the airlock tube filters could barely cope.
Brendon opened his
visor. His face was deathly white, sweating heavily. He coughed again,
flinching at the pain.
“Christ,” Erick
muttered. “Brendon, datavise a physiological reading please.”
“Oh God it hurts.”
Brendon coughed again, a hoarse croaking sound.
“We’ve got to get him
out,” Bev said.
“I don’t get any
response from his neural nanonics,” Erick said. “I’m trying to datavise them
through the airlock tube’s processor but there isn’t even a carrier code
acknowledgement.”
“Erick, he’s in
trouble!”
“We don’t know that!”
“Look at him.”
“Look at Lalonde. They
can build rivers of light in the sky. Faking up one injured crewman isn’t going
to tax them.”
“For God’s sake.” Bev
stared at the holoscreen. Brendon was juddering, one hand holding a grab loop
as he vomited. Sallow globules of fluid burped out of his mouth, splashing and
sticking to the dull-silver wall of the tube opposite.
“We don’t even know if
he’s alone,” Erick said. “The hatch into the spaceplane isn’t shut. It won’t
respond to my orders. I can’t even shut it, let alone codelock it.”
“Captain,” Bev
datavised. “We can’t just leave him in there.”
“Erick is quite
right,” André replied regretfully. “This whole incident is highly suspicious.
It is convenient for somebody who wants to get inside the ship. Too
convenient.”
“He’s dying!”
“You may not enter the
airlock while the hatch into the spaceplane remains open.”
Bev looked round the
utilitarian lower deck in desperation. “All right. How about this? Erick goes
up into the lounge and codelocks that hatch behind him, leaving me in here.
That way I can take a medical nanonic in to Brendon, and I can check out the
spaceplane cabin to make sure there aren’t any xenoc invaders on board.”
“Erick?” André asked.
“I’ve no objection.”
“Very well. Do it.”
Erick swam up into the
empty lounge, and poised himself on the ladder. Bev’s face was framed by the
floor hatch, grinning up at him. “Good luck,” Erick said. He datavised a
codelock at the hatch’s seal processor, then turned the manual fail-safe handle
ninety degrees.
Bev twisted round as
soon as the carbotanium square closed. He pulled a medical nanonic package from
a first aid case on the wall. “Hold on, Brendon. I’m coming in.” Red
environmental warning lights were flashing on the panel beside the circular
airlock tube hatch. Bev datavised his override authority into the management
processor, and the hatch began to swing back.
Erick opened a channel
into the lounge’s communication net processor, and accessed the lower deck
cameras. He watched Bev screw up his face as the fumes blew out of the open
hatchway. Emerald green light flared out of the spaceplane’s cabin, sending a
thick, blindingly intense beam searing along the airlock tube to wash the lower
deck. Caught full square, Bev yelled, his hands coming up instinctively to
cover his eyes. A ragged stream of raw white energy shot along the centre of
the green light, smashing into him.
The camera failed.
“Bev!” Erick shouted.
He sent a stream of instructions into the processor. A visualization of the
lower deck’s systems materialized, a ghostly reticulation of coloured lines and
blinking symbols.
“Erick, what’s
happening?” André demanded.
“They’re in! They’re
in the fucking ship. Codelock all the hatches now. Now, God damn it!”
The schematic’s
coloured lines were vanishing one by one. Erick stared wildly at the floor, as
if he could see what was happening through the metal decking. Then the lounge
lights went out.
“Five minutes until we
land at our new drop zone, and the tension in the cabin is really starting to
bite,” Kelly Tirrel subvocalized into a neural nanonics memory cell. “We know
something has happened to at least five other spaceplanes. What everyone is now
asking themselves is, will the extra distance protect us? Do the invaders only
operate below their protective covering of red cloud?”
She accessed the
spaceplane’s sensors to observe the magnificent, monstrous spectacle again.
Thousand-kilometre-long bands of glowing red nothingness suspended in the air.
Astounding. This far inland they were slim and complex, interwoven like the web
of a drunken spider above the convoluted tributaries. When she had seen them
from orbit, calm and regular, they had intimidated her; up close and churning
like this they were just plain frightening.
Coiling belts were
edge-on with the starboard wing, growing larger as they spun through the sky
towards the spaceplane. It was an excellent image, a little bit too realistic
for peace of mind. But then the spaceplane’s sensor array was all
military-grade. Long streamlined recesses on both sides of the fuselage belly
were now holding tapering cylindrical weapons pods—maser cannons providing a
three-hundred-and-sixty-degree cover, an electronic warfare suite, and a
stealth envelope. They weren’t quite an assault fighter, but neither were they
a sitting duck like some of the spaceplanes.
Typical that Joshua
would have a multi-role spaceplane. No! Thank God Joshua had a multi-role
spaceplane.
Forty minutes into the
descent, and already she missed him. You’re so weak, she swore at herself.
Kelly was starting to
have serious second thoughts about the whole assignment. Like all war
correspondents, she supposed. Being on the ground was very different to sitting
in the office anticipating being on the ground. Especially with the appearance
of that red cloud.
The seven mercenaries
had discussed that appearance ad nauseam the whole way in from the emergence
point. Reza Malin, the team’s leader, had seemed almost excited by the prospect
of venturing below it. Such adverse circumstances were a challenge, he said.
Something new.
She had taken time to
get to know all of them reasonably well. So she knew what Reza said wasn’t
simple bravado. He had been a Confederation Navy Marine at one time. An
officer, she guessed; he wasn’t very forthcoming about that period of his life,
nor subsequent contracts as a marshal on various stage one colony planets. But
he must have been good at the second oldest profession, money in large
quantities had paid for a considerable number of physical enhancements and
alterations. Now he was one of the elite. Like a cosmonik, blurring the line
between machine and human. The kind of hyper-boosted composite the mundane
troops stored in zero-tau on the Gemal aspired to become.
Reza Malin retained a
basic humanoid shape, although he was now two metres tall, and proportionally
broad. His skin was artificial, a tough neutral grey-blue impact-resistant
composite with a built-in chameleon layer. He didn’t bother with clothes any
more, and there were no genitalia (rather, no external genitalia, Kelly
recorded faithfully). Cybernetic six-finger claws replaced his natural hands.
Both forearms were wide, with integral small-calibre gaussrifles, his skeleton
rigged to absorb recoil. Like Warlow, his face was incapable of expression.
Black glass bubble-shields covered both eyes; the nose was now a flat circular
intake which could filter chemical and biological agents. The back and sides of
his bald skull were studded with a row of five sensor implants, smooth
centimetre-wide ulcerlike bulges.
Despite the lack of
expression, she learned a lot from his voice, which was still natural. Reza
wasn’t easily flustered. That and a civilized competence, the way the other six
followed his orders without question, gave her more confidence than she would
otherwise have had in the scouting mission. In the final analysis, she
realized, she trusted him with her life.
The spaceplane banked
sharply. Kelly was aware of Ashly Hanson focusing the optical sensors on a
small river three kilometres below. The silvery water had a curious speckling
of white dots.
“What does he think he’s
doing?” Pat Halahan asked. The team’s second in command was sitting in the seat
next to her. A ranger-scout, as he described himself, slimmer and smaller than
Reza, but with the same blue-grey skin, and powerful adipose legs. Each forearm
had twin wrists, one for ordinary hands, one a power data socket for
plug-ins—weapons or sensors. His senses were all enhanced, with a raised rim of
flesh running from the corner of his eyes right around the back of his skull.
“Hey, what’s
happening, Ashly?” he called out. Electronic warfare was a thought all the
mercenaries were sharing.
“I’m going to land us
here,” Ashly said.
“Any particular
reason?” Reza Malin asked with quiet authoritativeness. “The surveyed back-up
landing site is another seventy kilometres south-east.”
“Listen, anyone who
can create that damn cloud can intercept our communications without even
trying. They’ll have every site Terrance Smith ever reviewed marked in a big
red circle that says ‘hit this’.”
There was a moment’s
silence.
“Smart man,” Pat
Halahan muttered to Kelly. “I wish we’d had him on the Camelot operation. Lost
a lot of good people because the general hired too many virgins.”
“Go ahead,” Reza said.
“Thank you,” Ashly
sang back. The spaceplane dived steeply, spiralling at an angle which sent
Kelly’s stomach pressing up against her collar bones. “Are you quite sure you
want to land?” the pilot asked. “You ask me, we’re in way over our heads.
Terrance Smith couldn’t organize a gang-bang in a brothel.”
“If Smith is going to
beat the invaders, the starships have to know where to hit them,” Reza said.
“For that you need us. We always go in at the shit end. It’s what we’re good
at.”
“Whatever you say.”
“Don’t worry about us.
Ultra-tech never works well in jungle terrain, nature is just too damn messy.
And I don’t think I’ve seen many jungles worse than this one. They can probably
swat us with some energy blast, even lob a baby-nuke on us if they’re feeling
particularly bitchy. But they’ve got to find us first. And rooting us out of
that forest wilderness is going to be tricky, I’ll make bloody sure of that.
You just make sure you and young Joshua stay intact to pick us up afterwards.”
“If I’m alive, I’ll
pick you up.”
“Good, I’ll hold you
to that.”
The spaceplane’s yaw
angle reversed as it performed an abrupt roll. Kelly clung to the armrests with
white knuckles as the webbing shifted its hold around her body. This wasn’t a
clean aerodynamic dive, it was a death plummet.
“How you doing, Kell?”
Sewell shouted, sounding hugely amused. Sewell was one of the team’s three
combat-adept types, and looked it. Standing two metres thirty, his leathery
skin matt-black, and woven through with a web of energy absorption/dispersal
fibres. His head was virtually globular, a glossy shell that protected his
sensors, sitting on a short neck. Trunklike upper arms supported dual elbows;
he had attached heavy-calibre gaussrifles to the top joints.
Chuckles went round
the cabin. Kelly realized her eyes were tight shut, and forced herself to open
them. The spaceplane was shaking.
“You should eat, take
your mind off it,” Sewell crowed. “I’ve got some big gooey slices of strawberry
creamcake in my pack. Want some?”
“When you were
boosted, the doctors wired your neural nanonics to your liver,” she said. “It
was one fuck of a lot smarter than your brain, bollockhead.”
Sewell laughed.
A judder ran through
the cabin as the wings began to sweep out.
“Irradiate the drop
zone, Ashly, please,” Reza said.
“Affirmative.”
“There might be
civilians down there,” protested Sal Yong, another of the combat-adepts.
“Doubt it,” Ashly
said. “The nearest village is fifty kilometres away.”
“We’re not on a Red
Cross mission, Sal,” Reza said.
“Yes, sir.”
The spaceplane twisted
again.
Great swaths of maser
radiation poured out of the unblemished sky around the small shallow river.
Hundreds of birds dropped to the ground or splashed into the water, charred
feathers smoking; vennals tumbled from the trees, limbs still twitching; sayce
howled briefly as their hides wizened and cracked, then died as their brains
broke apart from the intense heat; danderil nibbling at the vegetation
collapsed, their long elegant legs buckling as their viscera boiled. The
verdant emerald leaves of the trees and vines turned a darker, bruised shade of
green. Flowers shrivelled up. Berries and fruit burst open in puffs of steam.
The spaceplane came
down fast and level. It actually landed in the river, undercarriage struts
crushing the stony bed, nose jutting over the grassy bank. Steam and spray
erupted from the water as it was struck by the compressor jets, sending a large
circular wave sloshing outwards over the bank.
Sewell and Jalal were
first out, the two big combat-adept mercenaries didn’t wait for the aluminium
airlock stairs to extend. They jumped down into the lathery water, covering the
quiet wilting trees with their gaussrifles, and sprinted ashore. The half-metre
depth didn’t even slow them down.
Reza released a couple
of aerovettes, ordering them to scan the immediate jungle. The stealthed,
disc-shaped aerial combat robots were a metre and a half wide, their central
section a curving mesh-grid to protect the wide-cord contra-rotating fans in
the middle. Five infrared lasers were mounted around their rim, along with a
broad passive-sensor array. They hummed softly and slipped through the air,
climbing up to traverse the top of the nearby trees.
Pat Halahan and Theo
Connal were second to emerge, following the first two mercenaries ashore. Theo
Connal had a short body, one and a half metres tall, boosted for jungle roving.
His skin was the same tough chameleon envelope as Reza and Pat, but his legs
and arms were disproportionately long. Both feet were equipped with fingers
instead of toes. He walked with an apeish stoop. Even his bald head portrayed
simian characteristics, with a tiny button nose, squashed circle mouth, and
slanted eyes, heavily lidded.
He activated the
chameleon circuit when he landed in the water, and scrambled up the shallow
incline of the bank. Only a faint mauve optical shimmer betrayed his
silhouette. As soon as he reached a tree he seemed to embrace it, then
levitated, spiralling round the trunk. At which point the spaceplane sensors
lost him, even the infrared.
“My God,” Kelly said.
She had wondered why Reza had included someone as basically harmless-looking as
Theo on the team. A small buzz of excitement began in her belly. This kind of
flawless professionalism was darkly enticing; it was easy to see how combat
missions became so narcotic.
Another pair of
aerovettes skimmed off over the trees. Sal Yong and Ariadne, the second ranger,
came down the airlock steps. Ariadne was the only other female on the team,
although her gender was obscured like all the others. There was very little
difference between her and Pat, maybe lacking just a few centimetres in height,
and her sensor band was broader.
“Now or never, Kelly,”
Reza said.
“Oh, now,” she said,
and stood up. “Definitely.” The visor of her shell-helmet slid down. Collins
had given her carte blanche on selecting her equipment back in Tranquillity, so
she had asked for Reza’s advice and bought what he suggested. After all, it was
in his own interest not to have a liability tramping through the jungle with
the scout team. “Keep it simple, and make it the best,” he’d said. “You’re not
combat trained, so all you have to do is keep up with us and stay undetected.”
“I can load combat
programs into my neural nanonics,” she’d offered generously.
Reza simply laughed.
She had wound up with
a one-piece suit of rubbery body-armour, produced in the New Californian
system, that would protect her from a modest level of attack from both
projectile and energy beam weapons. Reza had taken her to an armourer who
serviced mercenary equipment, and had a chameleon layer added.
More aerovettes whirred
overhead as she hurried down the airlock steps into the river. Steam hung in
the air. She was glad of the shell-helmet’s air filters, cremated birds bobbed
around her ankles.
Pat Halahan and Jalal
were unloading the gear from the forward cargo hold.
“Help them,” Reza
ordered Kelly. He was wading through the shallows, carrying some composite
containers. A nylon harness held a black metallic sphere about twenty
centimetres in diameter to his right side, just above his equipment belt. Kelly
wondered what it was, her neural nanonics couldn’t identify it, there were no
visible features to assist the search and comparison program. None of the other
mercenaries had one. She knew this wasn’t the time to ask.
The spaceplane’s steps
were already folding back into the fuselage. She set to, stacking the metal
cases and composite containers on the muddy grass of the bank.
Reza and Pat carried a
trunk-sized zero-tau pod ashore. The black negating surface evaporated to
reveal a white plastic cylinder. It split open, and a mahogany-coloured
geneered hound lumbered out. Kelly thought its fangs could probably cut through
her armour suit.
Reza knelt down beside
the big beast and ruffled its head fondly with his hand. “Hello, Fenton. How
are you, boy?”
Fenton yawned, pink
tongue hanging limply between his front fangs.
“Go have a look round
for me. Go on.”
Reza patted his
hindquarters as he rose. Fenton swung his neolithic head round to give his
master a slightly maligning look, but trotted off obediently into the
undergrowth.
Kelly had been
standing perfectly still. “He’s well trained,” she said vaguely.
“He’s well bonded,”
Reza replied. “I have affinity neuron symbionts fitted.”
“Ah.”
Pat and Jalal were
wading ashore with a second zero-tau pod.
“Adieux,” Ashly
datavised.
The spaceplane lifted
with a brassy shriek. Vigorous geysers of water sprouted under the compressor
nozzles, splashing up against the carbotanium fuselage. Then it was above the
trees, undercarriage folding up, and the geysers withering away to white-foam
ripples.
Kelly tracked her
shell-helmet sensors round the forbidding wall of water-basted jungle. Oh,
crap, I’m committed now.
She watched the
spaceplane pitch up nearly to the vertical and accelerate away into the eastern
sky at high speed. Her neural nanonics said they had landed less than three
minutes ago.
The explosion was
large enough for the Gemal’s ordinary sensor clusters to pick it up as
the starship fell into the planet’s umbra, leaving Amarisk behind. For the
vastly more sensitive observation satellites in low orbit it registered as a
savage multi-spectrum glare, overloading some scanners.
Terrance Smith’s
neural nanonics informed him it was the spaceplane from the blackhawk Cyanea,
which had been landing a scout team in the Quallheim Counties. It had been on
the ground when the blast happened. “What the hell did that?” he demanded.
“No idea,” Oliver
Llewelyn replied.
“Shit. It was over
seventy kilometres from the nearest piece of red cloud. Did the scout team get
clear?”
“No response from any
of their personal communicator blocks,” one of the bridge’s communication
officers reported.
“Bugger.” His neural
nanonics’ strategic display showed him the remaining four spaceplanes climbing
into orbit. Seven more had already docked with their parent starships. Two were
manoeuvring for a rendezvous.
“Do you want to divert
a spaceplane for a rescue?” Oliver asked.
“Not without
confirmation that someone is alive down there. It was a hell of an explosion.
The electron matrices must have shorted out.”
“Neat trick if you can
do it,” Oliver said. “They have a lot of safeguards built in.”
“Do you suppose that
electronic warfare—”
“Sir, message from the
Villeneuve’s Revenge,” the communications officer said. “Captain Duchamp
says the invaders have boarded his ship.”
“What?”
“That was one of the
spaceplanes we lost contact with,” Oliver said.
“You mean they’re up
in orbit?” Terrance asked.
“Looks like it.”
“Christ.” He datavised
the processor managing the command communication channels, ready to issue a
general alert. But his neural nanonics informed him a couple of starships were
leaving their assigned orbital slots. When he requested the strategic display
it showed him Datura and Gramine under acceleration, rising out
of the thousand-kilometre orbit. His fist hit the acceleration couch
cushioning. “What is happening?”
“The spaceplanes from
both the Datura and Gramine experienced communication
difficulties,” Oliver said in a strained voice. He glanced over at Terrance
Smith. The ordinarily prim bureaucrat looked haunted.
“Cut them out of our
communication net,” Terrance ordered. “Now. I don’t want them to access our
observation satellite data.”
“They’re running,”
Oliver said. “They must be heading for a jump coordinate.”
“Not my problem.”
“The hell it isn’t. If
they are xenocs, you’ll be letting them loose in the Confederation.”
“If they have the
technology to put together that cloud, they already have bloody starships. My
concern and mission is Lalonde. I’m not sending the blackhawks to intercept
them, we don’t have the numbers to send ships off on wild-goose chases.”
“Their drives aren’t
right,” Oliver said. “They aren’t burning the fuel cleanly. Look at the
spectroscopic analysis.”
“Not now, fuck it!”
Terrance shouted. He glared at Oliver. “Contribute something positive or shut
up.” His neural nanonics linked him in to the communication processor, opening
direct channels to the remaining starships. “This is an emergency warning,” he
datavised. Even as the painful phrase emerged, he wondered how many listeners
were still under his command.
The Lady Macbeth’s
bridge was completely silent as Terrance Smith’s voice came out of the AV
pillars.
“Oh, Jesus,” Joshua
moaned. “This is all we need.”
“It looks like Datura
and Gramine are preparing to jump,” Sarha said. “Sensor clusters and
thermo-dump panels are retracting.” She frowned. “Most of them, anyway. Their
thrust is very erratic. They should be above the five-thousand-kilometre
gravity-field boundary in another four minutes.”
“This invasion force
is too big, isn’t it,” Joshua said. “We’re not going to save Lalonde, not with
what we’ve got.”
“Looks that way,”
Dahybi said in a subdued tone.
“Right then.” Joshua’s
mind was immediately full of trajectory graphics. A whole range of possible
jump coordinates to nearby inhabited star systems popped up.
You’ll be abandoning
Kelly, a voice in his head said.
It’s her choice.
But she didn’t know
what was happening.
He instructed the
flight computer to retract the thermo-dump panels. Fully extended, the panels
couldn’t withstand high-gee acceleration. And if he was going to run, he wanted
to do it fast.
“As soon as Ashly
returns we’re leaving,” he announced.
“What about the merc
team?” Warlow asked. “They are dependent on us knocking out the invader’s
bases.”
“They knew the risks.”
“Kelly is with them.”
Joshua’s mouth
tightened into a hard line. The crew were looking at him with a mixture of
sympathy and concern.
“I’m thinking of you,
too,” he said. “The invaders are coming up here after us. I can’t order you to
stay in these circumstances. Jesus, we gave it our best shot. There isn’t going
to be any mayope again. That’s all we ever really came for.”
“We can make one
attempt to pick them up,” Sarha said. “One more orbit. A hundred minutes isn’t
going to make much difference.”
“And who’s going to
tell Ashly he has to go down there again? The invaders will know he’s coming
down for a pick-up.”
“I’ll pilot the
spaceplane down,” Melvyn said. “If Ashly doesn’t want to.”
“She’s my friend,”
Joshua said. “And it’s my spaceplane.”
“If there’s any
trouble in orbit, then we’ll need you, Joshua,” Dahybi said. The slightly built
node specialist was uncharacteristically firm. “You’re the best captain I’ve
ever known.”
“This is both
melodramatic and unnecessary,” Warlow said. “You all know that Ashly will pilot
it.”
“Yes,” Joshua said.
“Joshua!” Melvyn
shouted.
But Joshua’s neural
nanonics were already feeding him an alarm. The gravitonic distortion warning
satellites were recording nine large gaps in space being forcibly opened.
Thirty-five thousand
kilometres above Lalonde, the voidhawks from Meredith Saldana’s 7th Fleet
squadron had arrived.
An electronic warfare
technique that can knock out power circuits as well as processors? What the
hell have we come up against?
A single gleam of
bright pale green light shone up into the lounge through the inspection window
in the middle of the floor hatch. There was movement below.
“Erick, what’s
happening?” André Duchamp datavised.
The channel to the
lounge’s net processor was thick with interference. Erick’s neural nanonics had
to run a discriminator program to make any sense of the captain’s signal.
“We’re getting power
drop-outs all over the ship!” Madeleine called.
Erick pushed off from
the ladder, and grasped the floor hatch’s handle to steady himself. Very
gingerly he edged his face over the fifteen centimetre diameter window and
directly into the beam of light. A second later he was airborne, arms and legs
cycling madly as a twisted shout burst from his lips. He hit the ceiling.
Bounced. Grabbed at the ladder as his body spasmed in reaction.
Erick had looked into
hell. It was occupied by goblinesque figures with hideous bone faces, long,
reedy limbs, large arthritis-knobbed hands. They dressed in leather harnesses
sewn together with gold rings. A dozen at least, boiling out of the airlock
tube. Grinning with tiny pointed teeth.
Three of them had
clung to Bev, yellow talon fingers slashing rents in his ship-suit. His head
had been flung back, mouth open in black horror as the abdominal gashes spewed
entrail strands of translucent turquoise jelly. And suicide-terror shone in his
eyes.
“Did you see that?”
Erick wailed.
“See what? Merde!
The net is screwed, our databuses are glitched. I’m losing all control.”
“Dear God, they’re
xenocs. They’re fucking xenocs!”
“Erick, enfant,
dear child, calm down.”
“They’re killing him!
They love it!”
“Calm! You are an
officer on my ship. Now calm. Report!”
“There’s
twelve—fifteen of them. Humanoid. They’ve got Bev. Oh, God, they’re chopping
him to pieces.” Erick shifted a stored sedative program into primary mode, and
immediately felt his breathing regularize. It seemed heartless, callous even,
wrapping Bev’s suffering away behind an artificial cliff of binary digits. But
he needed to be calm. Bev would understand.
“Are they heavily
armed?” André asked.
“No. No visible
weapons. But they must have something in the spaceplane, that light I saw—”
All six electronically
operated bolts on the floor hatch thudded back together. The metallic bang rang
clear across the lounge.
“God . . .
André, they just cracked the hatch’s codelock.” He stared at it, expecting the
manual bolts to slide open.
“But none of the
systems processors are working in that capsule!”
“I know that! But they
cracked it!”
“Can you get out of
the lounge?”
Erick turned to the
ceiling hatch and datavised the code at it. The bolts remained stubbornly in
place. “The hatch won’t respond.”
“Yet they can open
it,” André said.
“We can cut through
it,” Desmond Lafoe suggested.
“Our hatches and the capsule decking have a
monobonded carbon layer sandwiched in,” Erick replied. “You’d never get a
fission blade through that stuff.”
“I can use a laser.”
“That will allow them
into the other capsules, and the bridge,” André said. “I cannot permit that.”
“Erick’s trapped in
there.”
“They will not take my
ship.”
“André—” Madeleine
said.
“Non. Madeleine,
Desmond, both of you into the lifeboats. I will stay. Erick, I am so sorry. But
you understand. This is my ship.”
Erick thumped the
ladder, grazing his knuckles. This life-support capsule’s lifeboats were
accessed from the lower deck. “Sure.” You murdering pirate bastard. What the
fuck do you know about honour?
Someone started
hammering on the floor hatch.
They’ll be through
soon, Erick thought, monobonded carbon or not. Count on it.
“Call Smith for help,”
Desmond said. “Hell, he’s got five thousand troops on the Gemal, armed
and itching to kill.”
“It will take time.”
“You got an
alternative?”
Erick looked round the
lounge, inventorying everything in sight—cabins, lockers filled with food and
clothes, emergency equipment cubicles. All he had was a laser pistol.
Think!
Open the floor hatch
and pick them off one at a time as they come through?
He aimed the laser at
a cabin door, and pressed the trigger stud. A weak pink beam stabbed out, then
flickered and died. Several small blisters popped and crackled where it had
struck the composite.
“Bloody typical,” he
said out loud.
Look round again. Come
on, there must be something. Those dreary months spent on CNIS initiative
courses. Adapt, improvise. Do something.
Erick dived across the
intervening space to a wall of lockers, catching a grab loop expertly. There
wasn’t much in the emergency cubicle: medical nanonics, pressure patches,
tools, oxygen bottles and masks, torch, processor blocks with ship’s systems
repair instructions, fire extinguishers, hand-held thermal sensor. No
spacesuit.
“Nobody said it was
going to be easy.”
“Erick?” André asked.
“What is happening?”
“Got an idea.”
“Erick, I have spoken
with Smith. Several other ships have been hijacked. He is taking some of his
troops out of zero-tau, but it will be at least another thirty minutes before
anyone can rendezvous with us.”
The lounge was getting
lighter. When Erick looked over his shoulder he saw a ring of small
hemispherical blue flames chewing at a patch of the hard grey-green foam on the
floor decking. Little twisters of smoke writhed out from the edge. When a
circle of titanium roughly a metre in diameter had been exposed it began to
glow a dull orange. “No good, Captain. They’re coming through the decking, some
sort of thermal field. We haven’t got five minutes.”
“Bastards.”
Erick opened the
tool-box, and took out a fission-blade knife. Please, he prayed. The blade
shone a cool lemon when he thumbed the actuator. “Sweet Jesus, thank you.”
He flew cleanly
through the air. A stikpad anchored him near the middle of the ceiling. He
pushed the fission blade into the reinforced composite conditioning duct, and
started to saw a circle about thirty centimetres wide.
“Madeleine? Desmond?”
he datavised. “Are you in spacesuits yet?”
“Yes,” Desmond
replied.
“You want to do me a real
big favour?”
“Erick, they cannot
stay on board,” André warned.
“What do you want,
Erick?” Desmond asked.
“Hauling out of here.
Soon.”
“I forbid it,” André
said.
“Stuff you,” Desmond
retorted. “I’m coming down, Erick. You may count on me, you know you can.”
“Desmond, if they
break into the lounge I will scuttle the ship,” André datavised. “I must do it
before they glitch the flight computer.”
“I know. My risk,”
Desmond replied.
“Wait to see if they
break out of the lounge first,” Erick said. “That’ll give Desmond a chance to
get clear if this doesn’t work.”
There was no answer.
“You owe me that! I’m
trying to save your ship, damn you.”
“Oui, d’accord. If
they get out of the lounge.”
The yellow patch on
the floor had turned white. It started to hiss, bulging up in the centre,
rising into a metre-high spike of light. A ball of fire dripped off the end,
gliding up to hit the ceiling where it broke into a cluster of smaller globes
that darted outwards.
Erick ducked as
several rushed past. He finished cutting a second circle out of the duct and
moved along.
Another ball of fire
dripped off the spike. Then another. The patch was spreading out over the floor
decking, scorching away more of the foam.
“I’m by the hatch,
Erick,” Desmond datavised.
The empty lounge was
awhirl with small beads of white fire. They had stung Erick several times now,
vicious skewers of pain that charred out a centimetre-wide crater of skin. He
glanced at the ceiling hatch’s inspection window to see the sensor-studded
collar of an SII spacesuit pressed against it, and waved.
Erick had cut eight
holes in the duct when he heard a shrill creaking sound rise above the hiss.
When he glanced down he saw the floor decking itself had started to distend.
The metal was cherry red, swelling and distorting like a cancerous volcano.
He watched,
mesmerized, as the top burst open.
“Erick,” a voice
called out of the rent. “Let us out, Erick. Don’t make it hard on yourself.
It’s not you we want.”
The triangular rips of
radiant metal began to curl back like petals opening to greet the dawn. Shapes
scuttled about in the gloom below.
Erick kicked away from
the stikpad that was holding him to the ceiling. He landed beside the floor
hatch.
“We want the ship,
Erick, not you. You can go in peace. We promise.”
A big bloodshot eye
with a dark green iris was looking at him through the floor hatch’s inspection
window. It blinked, and the lounge lights came back on.
Erick gipped the
manual lock handle, twisted it ninety degrees, and pulled up.
The possessed came up
through the open hatch, cautiously at first, glancing round the sweltering
smoky lounge with wide eyes. Their skin was as white as bleached bone, stretched
tight over long wiry muscles. Oily black hair floated limply. They started to
advance towards him, grinning and chittering.
“Erick,” they cooed
and giggled. “Erick, our friend. So kind to let us in when we knocked.”
“Yeah, that’s me,”
Erick said. He had positioned himself beside one of the cabin doors, a
silicon-fibre strap round his waist tethering him to a grab hoop. Level with
his shoulder, the environment control panel’s cover swung free. Erick’s right
hand rested on a fat red lever inside. “Your friend.”
“Come with us,” the
one in front said as they floated sedately towards him. “Come join us.”
“I don’t think so.”
Erick yanked the atmosphere-vent lever down.
The vent system on
board a starship was included as a last resort to extinguish fire. It dumped
the affected life-support capsule’s air straight out of the hull, cutting off
oxygen to the flames and killing them dead. And because of the danger a fire
represented inside the confined cabin space of a starship, the vent was
designed to be quick acting, evacuating an entire deck within a minute.
“NO!” The leader of
the possessed screamed in fury and panic. His hands were flung forwards towards
Erick in a futile belated attempt to stop the lever clicking home. Spears of
white fire arced out of his fingertips.
The panel, its lever,
the circuitry behind, Erick’s hand, and a half metre circle of wall composite
flamed into ruin. Molten metal and a fount of incendiary composite blasted
outwards.
Erick cried out in
agony as his entire right arm was flayed down to the bone. His neural nanonics
responded instantly, erecting an analgesic block. But the shock was too much,
he lurched away from consciousness, only to have stimulant programs bully him
back. Menus and medical physiological schematics appeared inside his dazed
fragile mind. Options flashed in red. Demands for drugs and treatments to be
administered at once. And a single constant pressure alarm.
The very air itself
howled like a tormented banshee in its rush to escape from the lounge. Thin,
layered sheets of smoke drifting around the ruddy cone torn in the floor
condensed to form airborne whirlpools underneath the five ceiling grilles. They
spun at a fantastic rate, betraying the speed of the air molecules as they were
sucked into the duct.
The possessed were in
turmoil, clinging desperately at grab hoops and each other, their assumed
shapes withering like glitched AV projections to reveal ordinary bodies
underneath. All of them were buffeted savagely by the tempest force drawing
them inexorably towards the ceiling. One flew up through the hatch from the
lower deck, curving helplessly through the air to slam against a ceiling
grille. Suction held him there, squirming in pain.
Another lost hold of a
grab hoop, to be sucked backwards up to a grille. Both of them tried to push
their way off, only to find it was impossible. The strength that the external
vacuum exerted was tremendous. They could feel themselves being pulled through
the narrow metal bands of the grille. Sharp edges cut their clothes and began
shredding the flesh underneath. Ripples of blue and red energy shimmered around
their bodies for a short time, delaying the inevitable; but the exertion proved
too much, and the ghostlight quickly faded. The bands of metal sawed down to
their ribs. Strips of lacerated flesh were torn off. Blood burst free from a
hundred broken veins and arteries, foaming away down the conduit. Organs
started to swell through the gaps between the ribs.
Erick activated the
Confederation Navy’s emergency vacuum-survival program stored in his neural
nanonics. His heart began to slow; muscles and organs were shut down, reducing
the amount of oxygen they took from his blood, extending the time which the
brain could be kept alive. He hung inertly from the strap fastening him to the
wall, limbs pulled towards the ceiling. The charred remnant of his right hand
broke off and smacked against a grille.
Blood oozed from the
blackened meat of his upper arm.
Scraps of paper,
clothing, tools, miscellaneous litter, and personal items from the cabins and
lower deck plunged through the lounge to crash into the grilles. There might
have been enough material to block them, at least long enough for the possessed
to rally and try and shut down the vent or retreat back into the spaceplane.
But the extra holes Erick had cut into the duct allowed an unrestricted flow of
smaller articles into space. Tattered ribbons of water from the shower and taps
in the bathroom poured through the open door to streak through the nearest
hole.
The uproarious torrent
of air began to abate.
Through pain-hazed
eyes, Erick had watched the group’s leader turn from semi-naked ogre to a podgy
forty-year-old man in dungarees as the micro-storm raged. He was hanging onto a
grab loop two metres away, legs pointing up rigidly at the nearest grille,
trousers and shirt flapping madly. His mouth worked, bellowing curses and
obscenities that were snatched away. A red glow grew around his hand,
bloodlight shining through the skin, illuminating the bones within. Mucus and
saliva streamed from his nose, joining the flood of debris and liquids
vanishing into the duct. The seepage began to turn pink, then crimson.
Now the glow from his
hand was fading along with the sound and the fury of the evacuating air. He
fixed Erick with a disbelieving stare as tears began to bubble and boil from
the surface of his eyes. Balls of blood were spitting out of his nostrils with
each beat of his heart.
The last wisp of air
vanished.
Erick swung round as
the force waned, rotating languidly on the end of the tether strap. The
physiological medical schematic his neural nanonics were displaying appeared to
be a red statue, except for the right arm which was completely black. Each turn
swept the lounge into view. He saw the surviving possessed struggling through
the solid cloud of junk that filled the achingly silent compartment. It was
difficult to tell which of them were alive. Corpses—two badly mutilated—floated
and tumbled and collided with the ones trying to reach the floor hatch. Dead or
alive, everyone was weeping blood from their pores and orifices as capillaries
ruptured and membranes tore from the immense pressure gradient. They were
acting out a bizarre three-dimensional wrestling match in slow motion, with the
hatch as their prize. It was macabre. It swam from his view.
Next time round there
were fewer movements. Their faces—those he would remember without any help from
his neural nanonics image-storage program. Turning.
They were slowing,
running down like mechanoids suffering a power drain. The vacuum was turning
foggy with fluid. He realized some of it was his own. Red. Very red.
Turning.
All purposeful
movement had ceased within the lounge. There was only the gentle stirring of
soggy dross.
Around and around. And
the redness was fading to grey with the ponderous solemnity of a sunset.
Around.
Ilex and its eight cousins flew into a standard
defence sphere formation two and a half thousand kilometres wide. Their
distortion fields flared out to sample the masses and structure of local space.
In their unique perceptive spectrum Lalonde hung below them like a deep shaft
bored into the uniformity of space, radiating weak gravity streams to bind its
three smaller moons and Kenyon, as it in turn was bound to the bright
blue-white star. The interplanetary medium was rich with solar and
electromagnetic energy; Van Allen belts encircling the planet shone like
sunlight striking an angel’s wings. Starships and spaceplanes were revealed in
orbit, dense knots in the fabric of space-time, pulsing hotly with electrical
and magnetic forces.
Electronic sensors
detected a barrage of narrow-beam maser radiation flying between small
high-orbit sensor satellites, communication-relay satellites, and the
starships. Terrance Smith was being informed of their presence, but there was
no hostile response. Satisfied there was no immediate threat, the voidhawks
maintained their relative positions for another ninety seconds.
Near the centre of the
formation a zone of space the size of a quark warped to an alarming degree as
its mass leapt towards infinity, and the first frigate emerged. The remaining
twenty warships jumped insystem over the next six minutes. It was a
textbook-sharp manoeuvre, giving Admiral Meredith Saldana the widest possible
number of tactical options. All he needed was the relevant data to evaluate.
The normal background
murmur of voices on Arikara’s bridge died away into a shocked hush as the first
sensor scans came in. Amarisk occupied the centre of the planet’s daylight
hemisphere, the red cloud bands above the Juliffe resembling a jagged
thunderbolt captured in mid-discharge.
“Was there ever
anything like that on this God-blighted planet before?” Meredith Saldana asked
in a voice that strained for reasonableness.
“No, sir,” Kelven
replied.
“Then it is part of
the invasion, a new phase?”
“Yes, sir. It looks
that way.”
“Captain Hinnels, do
we know what it is?” the Admiral asked.
The staff science
officer looked round from a discussion with two of the sensor evaluation team.
“Haven’t got a clue, Admiral. It’s definitely optically radiant, but we’re not
picking up any energy emission. Of course, we’re still a long way off. It’s
rearranging the local weather patterns, too.”
Meredith datavised for
the sensor image again, and grunted when he saw the clouds being parted like
candyfloss curtains. “How much power would that take?”
“It would depend on
the focal accuracy—” Hinnels broke off at the Admiral’s gaze. “Controlling the
weather over a quarter of a continent? A hundred, two hundred gigawatts at
least, sir; I can’t be more specific, not until I understand how they apply it.”
“And they have that
much power to spare,” Meredith mused out loud.
“More importantly,
where’s it coming from?” Kelven said. “Durringham had thirty-five fusion
generators in the dumpers, and three smaller units in the navy office. Their
entire power output didn’t add up to more than twenty megawatts.”
“Interesting point,
Commander. You think there has been a massive landing operation since you
left?”
“Shipping generators
in would be the logical answer.”
“But?”
“I don’t believe it.
The amount of organization necessary to set it up would be incredible, not to
mention the number of starships involved. And you saw the flek of Jacqueline
Couteur, she can summon up energy from nowhere.”
The admiral gave him a
dubious stare. “There is a difference between flinging fireballs and this.” His
hand waved expansively at one of the big bridge holoscreens showing the planet.
“A difference of
scale, sir. There are twenty million people on Lalonde.”
Meredith didn’t like
either alternative. Both implied forces immeasurably superior to that available
to his squadron. Probably superior to the whole damn navy, he thought in
apprehension. “Hinnels? Give me an evaluation. Is it safe to move the squadron
closer?”
“Given the capability
the invaders are demonstrating, I’d say it’s not safe even being here, Admiral.
Moving into low orbit will obviously increase the risk, but by how much I
wouldn’t like to say.”
“Thank you,” Meredith
said acidly. He knew he shouldn’t take out his anxiety on the crew. But damn,
that red cloud was unnerving. The size of it.
“Very well, we shall
attempt to accomplish the First Admiral’s orders and halt any use of force by
Smith’s starships, with the proviso that at the first sign of aggression from
the invaders we withdraw at once. I’m not committing the squadron to fight that
. . . whatever it is.” He was aware of the relieved looks flashing
round the bridge, and diplomatically ignored them. “Lieutenant Kanuik, have you
completed a status review of the mercenary ships?”
“Yes, sir.”
Meredith datavised the
computer for a tactical situation display. The mercenary starships seemed to be
in considerable disarray, with three under power, heading out of orbit.
Probably running for a jump coordinate. Small VTOL spaceplanes were docked to
five of the blackhawks. The Adamist craft left in orbit all had their hangar
doors open. Another two spaceplanes were rising up from the planet. He cursed
silently. They must have landed their scout teams already.
One of the Adamist
starships was venting heavily, a grey jet of atmospheric gas shooting out of
the hull. Its ion thrusters glowed bright blue to compensate the wayward
thrust.
He saw a blackhawk’s
purple vector line begin to curl up like a corkscrew. Long-range optical
sensors showed him the bitek starship tumbling and twisting hectically.
“Sir!”
He cancelled the
datavise. Lieutenant Rhoecus, his staff voidhawk coordination officer, was
wincing. “One of the blackhawks, it’s . . .” The Edenist puffed his
cheeks out and jerked up from his acceleration couch as though someone had
thumped him in the belly. “Its captain is being attacked . . .
tortured. There are voices. Singing. The blackhawk’s frightened.” He closed his
eyes, teeth gritted. “They want the captain.”
“Who does?”
Rhoecus shook his
head. “I don’t know. It’s fading. I had the impression of thousands speaking to
the captain. It was almost like a habitat multiplicity.”
“Signal from the Gemal,
Admiral,” a communications rating said. “Terrance Smith wants to talk to you.”
“Does he now? Put him
on.”
Meredith looked into
his console’s AV projection pillar, seeing an exceptionally handsome man with
perfectly arranged black hair. Corporate clone, the Admiral thought. Although
the usual smooth flair of competence endemic to the type was in danger of
crumbling. Terrance Smith looked like a man under a great deal of pressure.
“Mr Smith, I am
Admiral Saldana, commander of this squadron; and under the authority invested
in me by the Confederation Assembly I am now ordering you to suspend your
military operation against Lalonde. Recall all your personnel from the
planetary surface and do not attempt to engage the invader’s forces. I also
require you to hand over all combat wasps and nuclear devices to the navy. The
starships currently under your command are free to leave this system once they
have complied with my instructions, except for the Lady Macbeth, which
is now under arrest. Do you understand?”
“They’re up here.”
“Pardon me?”
Terrance Smith’s eyes
flicked to one side, glancing at someone out of pick-up range. “Admiral, the
invaders are up here. They came up in the spaceplanes that took my scout teams
down. They’re sequestrating my crews.”
Meredith took a second
to compose himself. Four minutes into the mission, and already it was
catastrophe. “Which crews? Which starships?” He suddenly looked across the
bridge at Lieutenant Rhoecus. “Is that what was happening to the blackhawk
captain? Sequestration?”
“It could be, yes,”
the startled Edenist replied.
“I want two voidhawks
on that blackhawk, now. Restrain it, I don’t want it to leave this system. They
are authorized to engage it with combat wasps if it resists. Deploy the
remaining voidhawks to prevent any of the Adamist starships from leaving.
Commander Kroeber.”
“Sir?”
“Squadron to move in
now. Full interception duties, I want those starships neutralized. Alert the
marine squads, have them stand by for boarding and securement.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
He turned back to the
AV pillar. “Mr Smith.”
“Yes, Admiral?”
“Which ships have been
taken over?”
“I don’t know for
certain. The only ones which haven’t sent spaceplanes down to the surface are
the Gemal, the Lythral, the Nicol, and the Inula.
But the Cyanea’s spaceplane never made it back.”
“Admiral,” Kelven
interjected.
“Yes, Commander?”
“We don’t know the Gemal
didn’t send a spaceplane down. There is no visible evidence of
sequestration, certainly not over a communication channel.”
Gravity returned to
the Arikara’s bridge as the fusion drive came on, building swiftly. The
Admiral squirmed his shoulders, trying to get completely comfortable before the
high gees squashed him. “Point taken, Commander Solanki, thank you. Commander
Kroeber, all starships are to be intercepted, no exceptions.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
Meredith checked the
tactical situation display again. There was only one spaceplane which hadn’t
rendezvoused with its parent starship now. “And tell that spaceplane to remain
where it is. It is not to dock. Solanki, start working out how we are going to
restrain any starship crew-members that have been sequestrated.”
“Sir, if this
sequestration produces the same energy-control ability in the crews that it has
in Jacqueline Couteur, I recommend the marines aren’t sent into the ships at
all.”
“I’ll bear that in
mind. However, we will certainly have to make at least one attempt.”
“Admiral,” Lieutenant
Rhoecus called through gritted teeth. “Another blackhawk captain is being
sequestrated.”
“Acknowledged,
Lieutenant.” Meredith reviewed the tactical display again, observing the
blackhawk’s crazed course, a moth caught in a tornado. “Send a voidhawk to
intercept, full interdiction authority.” That was a third of his voidhawk force
committed already. He needed the rest to contain the Adamist starships. If any
more blackhawks were taken over he would have to order a combat wasp launch.
They would probably fight back.
With his options
diminishing before his eyes, Meredith let out a pained hiss of breath as the Arikara
accelerated past six gees. Sensors reported another mercenary starship’s fusion
drive igniting.
Ashly Hanson came
through the airlock tube from the spaceplane and drifted straight into the
barrel of a laser rifle. Warlow was holding it, aiming it directly at his
forehead.
“Sorry,” the hulking
cosmonik boomed. “But we have to be sure.”
Ashly realized there
was a fission saw plugged into his spare left elbow socket, a glowing saffron
blade nearly a metre long.
“Sure of what?”
Warlow rotated his
principal left arm around the blade. He held a processor block in his hand.
“Datavise something into this.”
“Like what?”
“Anything, doesn’t
matter.”
Ashly datavised a copy
of the spaceplane’s maintenance record.
“Thanks. It was
Joshua’s idea. From the reports we’ve had it looks like they can’t use their
neural nanonics.”
“Who can’t?”
“Spaceplane pilots who
have been sequestrated.”
“Oh, God. I knew it,
they can intercept our communications.”
“Yes.” Warlow executed
a perfect mid-air roll, and headed for the airlock tube. “I’m going to check
the spaceplane’s cabin, make sure you didn’t bring any up. Nothing personal.”
Ashly eyed the deck’s
ceiling hatch. It was locked, red LEDs blinking to show the manual bolts were
engaged on the other side. “The invaders are up in orbit?”
“Yes. Busy hijacking
starships.”
“What’s Smith doing
about it?”
“Nothing. A naval
squadron has arrived, it is in their hands now. They have aborted our mission.
Oh, and we’re under arrest, too.” His diaphragm rattled a metallic
approximation of a chuckle.
“The whole fleet? They
can’t do that. We’re operating under bona fide contract to the Lalonde
government.”
“No, just the Lady
Mac.”
“Why us?” But he was
talking to a pair of disappearing horned feet.
“Erick? Erick, are you
receiving this?”
“His organs are
critical, heading for all-out cellular collapse. For God’s sake cancel that
suspension program.”
“Got it. Physiological
data coming through.”
“Program the nanonic
packages for total cranial function support. We have to sustain the brain.
André, where the hell’s that plasma? He’s lost litres of blood.”
“Here, Madeleine.
Erick, you wonderful crazy Anglo. You got them, do you hear me? You got
them!”
“Mesh the infuser with
his carotid.”
“It was magnificent.
Pull one little lever and all of them, baboom, dead.”
“Shit. Desmond, slap a
nanonic package on that stump, the epithelium membrane isn’t strong enough,
he’s leaking plasma everywhere.”
“His lungs are filling
up too, they must be ruptured. Up the oxidization factor. His brain is still
showing electrical activity.”
“It is? Oh, thank
God.”
“Erick, don’t try and
datavise. We’ve got you. We won’t let you go.”
“Do you want to put
him in zero-tau?”
“Hell, yes. We’re days
from a decent hospital. Just let me try and get him stabilized first.”
“Erick, my dear one,
don’t you worry about a thing. For this I will buy you the best, the greatest,
clone body in Tranquillity. I swear. Whatever the cost.”
“Shut up,
Captain. He’s in enough shock as it is. Erick, I’m going to put you back under.
But don’t worry, everything is going to be just fine.”
The last of the six
aerovettes stopped transmitting. Reza Malin upped his cranial audio receptors
to full sensitivity, trying to hear the noise of the little vehicle’s impact.
The sounds of the jungle invaded his brain—insect chirps, animal warbles,
leaves crackling—filtered and reduced by discrimination programs. He counted to
ten, but there was no crash.
“We’re on our own
now,” he said. The aerovettes had been sent off to the west at a fast walking
pace as a decoy, giving the scout team time to melt away into the jungle. He
had guessed the invaders could track anything electronic; as Ashly said, if
they could create the cloudbands, they could do almost anything. They weren’t
invincible though, the fact that the team had landed was proof of that. But
they were definitely going to provide a formidable challenge. Possibly the
greatest Reza would ever face. He liked that idea.
His two hounds, Fenton
and Ryall, were slinking through the undergrowth two hundred metres ahead of
the scout team, sniffing out people. So far the jungle had been deserted. Pat
Halahan’s affinity-bonded harpy eagle, Octan, was skimming the treetops,
retinal implants alert for the slightest motion below the fluttering leaves.
The animals provided a coverage almost as good as the aerovettes.
The team was following
a danderil track, heading roughly north-east towards its operational target,
the Quallheim Counties. Sal Yong was leading, brushing through the dense vines
with barely a sound. With his chameleon circuit activated it looked as though a
heavy miniature breeze was whirling along the track. The other six followed
quickly (Theo was up overhead somewhere), all of them loaded down with packs,
even Kelly. He was pleased to see she was keeping up. If she didn’t, it would
be a maser pulse through her brain, which would upset some of the team. But he
wasn’t having a liability of a reporter holding them back. He wondered if she
realized that, if it lent a note of urgency to her steps. Probably. She was
smart enough, and her bureau chief would certainly have known the deal. So
would Joshua, for all his youth, wise beyond his years.
Fenton arrived at a
river, and peered out of the bushes lining the steep bank. Reza requested a
chart from his inertial-guidance block, and confirmed their position.
“Pat, there’s a river
one eighty metres ahead, it leads into the Quallheim eventually. Send Octan
along it to check for any boat traffic.”
“Right.” The voice
seemed to emerge from a small qualtook tree.
“Are we going to use
it?” Ariadne asked, a clump of knotted tinnus vines.
“Yes, providing Octan
says nobody else is. It’s narrow enough, good tree cover. We can cut a day off
our time.” He called silently to his hounds, and ordered them to cut back
behind the team, covering their rear.
They reached the river
three minutes later, and stood at the top of the four-metre bank.
“What is that stuff?”
Jalal asked.
The water was clotted
with free-floating fleshy leaves, pure white discs a couple of metres in
diameter, a tiny purple star in their centre. Each had an upturned rim of a few
centimetres, natural coracles. They bobbed and spun and sailed calmly along
with the current, undulating with the swell. Some overlapped, some collided and
rebounded, but they all kept moving along. Upstream or downstream, whichever
way the team looked, the river was smothered in them.
Kelly smiled inside
her shell-helmet as the daylight dream of her Lalonde didactic course came
slithering into her conscious thoughts. “They’re snowlilies,” she said. “Quite
something, aren’t they? Apparently they all bloom at the same time then drift
downstream to drop their kernel. It really screws up the Juliffe basin for boat
traffic while they’re in season.” She tracked her retinal implants along the
river. It was all going into a neural nanonics memory cell, scenes of Lalonde.
Capturing the substance of a place was always important, it gave the report
that little edge, adding to reality.
“They’re a bloody
nuisance,” Reza said curtly. “Sewell, Jalal, activate the hovercraft; Pat,
Ariadne, point guard.”
The two combat-adepts
unslung the big packs they were carrying, and took out the programmed silicon
craft, cylinders sixty centimetres long, fifteen wide. They slithered down the
bank to the water’s edge.
Kelly focused on the
sky downstream. At full magnification the northern horizon was stained a pale
red. “It’s close,” she said.
“An hour away,” Reza
said. “Maybe two. This river winds a crooked course.”
Sewell shoved a couple
of snowlilies aside and dropped his cylinder into the clear patch of water. The
hovercraft began to take shape, its gossamer-thin silicon membrane unfolding in
a strict sequence, following the pattern built into its molecules. A flat
boat-shaped hull was activated first, five metres long, fifteen centimetres
thick. Water was pumped into its honeycomb structure, ballast to prevent it
from blowing away. The gunwales started to rise up.
Theo Connal dropped
lightly to the ground beside Kelly. She gave a slight start as he turned off
his chameleon circuit.
“Anything
interesting?” Reza asked.
“The cloud is still
shifting about. But it’s slower now.”
“Figures, the
spaceplanes have gone.”
“All the birds are
flying away from it.”
“Don’t blame ’em,” Pat
said.
Kelly’s communication
block reported that a signal was being beamed down from the geostationary
satellites, coded for their team. It was a very powerful broadcast, completely
non-directional.
“Kelly, Reza, don’t
respond to this,” Joshua said. “It looks like our communications are wide open
to the invaders, which is why I’m transmitting on a wide footprint, a
directional beam will pinpoint you for them. OK, situation update; we’ve got
big problems up here. Several spaceplanes were taken over while they were on the
ground, the invaders are now busy hijacking starships, but nobody can tell
which ones. You know Ashly wasn’t sequestrated, so that means you should be
able to trust me. But don’t take orders from anyone else, especially don’t
broadcast your location. Problem two, a navy squadron has just arrived and shut
down the strike mission. Jesus, it’s a total fucking shambles in orbit right
now. Some of the hijacked ships are trying to run for a jump coordinate, I’ve
got voidhawks blocking the Lady Mac’s patterning nodes, and two of my
fellow combat-capable trader starships are heading up to intercept the navy
squadron.
“Your best bet is to
turn round from that cloud and just keep going, out into the hinterlands
somewhere. There’s no point in trying to locate the invader’s bases any more.
I’ll do my best to pick you up in a day or two, if this cockup gets sorted by
then. Stay alive, that’s all you have to worry about now. I’ll keep you
informed when I can. Out.”
The two hovercraft had
finished erecting themselves. Sewell and Jalal were unpacking the energy
matrices and superconductor fan motors ready to slot them into place.
“Now what?” Ariadne
asked. The team had all gathered around Reza.
“Keep going,” he said.
“But you heard what
Joshua said,” Kelly exclaimed. “There’s no point. We have no orbital fire-power
back-up, and no mission left. If we just manage to survive for the next few
days it’s going to be a bloody miracle.”
“You still haven’t
grasped it yet, have you, Kelly?” Reza said. “This is bigger than Lalonde; this
isn’t about doing a dirty job for money, not any more. These invaders are going
to challenge the entire Confederation. They have the power. They can change
people, their minds, their bodies; mould whole planets into something new,
something that we have no part in. Some time soon those ships in orbit are
going to have to try and attack, to put a stop to it all. It doesn’t matter
whether it is Smith or the navy squadron. If the invaders aren’t stopped here,
they’ll keep on coming after us. Sure we can run, but they’ll catch us, if not
out in the hinterlands than back at Tranquillity, or even Earth if you want to
run that far. But not me. Everyone has to make a stand eventually, and mine is
right here. I’m going to find a base and let the ships know.”
Kelly held her tongue,
she could well imagine how Reza would react to her wheedling.
“More like it!” Sal
Yong proclaimed.
“OK,” Reza said.
“Finish fitting out the hovercraft, and get our gear stowed.”
It took a surprisingly
short five minutes to complete their preparations and clamber in. Fully
assembled the hovercraft was a simple affair, with a big fan at the rear and
two cycloidal impellers filling the skirt with air. It was steered
mechanically, by vanes behind the fan.
Kelly sat on a bench
at the rear of her craft, riding with Sal Yong, Theo Connal, and Ariadne. Now
the decision had been made, she was quite glad to be free of the pack and
walking through the jungle.
Reza’s lead hovercraft
moved out from the bank, skimming easily over the snowlilies, and turned
downstream. Fenton and Ryall sat in the prow, blunt heads thrust out into the
wind as they picked up speed.
Chapter 09
One thing Princess
Kirsten had always insisted on after ascending to the throne of the
Principality of Ombey was keeping breakfast a family affair. Crises could come
and go, but giving the children quality time was sacrosanct.
Burley Palace, where
she ruled from, was situated at the top of a gently sloping hill in the middle
of Ombey’s capital, Atherstone. Its pre-eminent location gave the royal
apartments at the rear of the sprawling stone edifice a grand view over the
parks, gardens, and elegant residential buildings which made up the city’s
eastern districts. Away in the distance was the haze-blurred line of deeper
blue that was the ocean.
Atherstone was only
fifteen degrees south of the equator, putting it firmly in the tropical climate
belt, but the early morning breeze coming in off the ocean kept the temperature
bearable until about ten o’clock. So Kirsten had the servants set the table on the
broad, red-tiled balcony outside her bedroom, where she could sit amid the
yellow and pink flowers of the aboriginal tolla vines that choked the back of
the palace, and have a leisurely hour with her husband and three natural-born
children.
Zandra, Emmeline, and
Benedict were aged seven, five, and three respectively, the only naturally
conceived children she and Edward had produced. Their first five offspring had
been gestated in exowombs after the zygotes had been carefully geneered to the
latest physiological pinnacle which the Kulu geneticists had achieved. It was
the Saldana family way; incorporating the freshest advances into each new
generation, or at least that part of it destined to actually hold high office.
Always the elder children, following the old Earth European aristocratic
tradition.
Kirsten’s first five
children would probably live for around two hundred years, whereas she herself
and the natural-born three could only hope for about a hundred and eighty
years. She had been sixty-six in 2608, when she was crowned in Atherstone
Cathedral, two months after her brother Alastair II had assumed the throne on
Kulu. As the ninth child, she had always been destined (barring an accident
among her older brothers and sister) to rule Ombey, the newest principality.
Like all her nine
exowomb siblings, and the five natural-born children of her mother and father,
she was tall and physically robust; geneering gave her dark red hair and an
oval face with well-rounded cheeks—and of course a thin nose with a tip that
curved down.
But geneering could
only provide the physical stamina necessary for the stresses resulting in a
century of wielding the supreme authority vested in a reigning monarch. She had
been in training for the intellectual challenge from birth; first loaded up
with the theory, endless politics and economics and management didactic
courses, then five years at Nova Kong University learning how to apply them.
After serving a twelve-year naval commission (compulsory for all senior
Saldanas) she was given divisional management positions in the Kulu
Corporation, the massive kingdom-wide utilities, transport, engineering,
energy, and mining conglomerate founded by Richard Saldana when he settled Kulu
(and still owned solely by the king), graduating up to junior cabinet posts. It
was career designed with the sole intent of giving her unrivalled experience on
the nature and use of power for when she came to the throne.
Only the siblings of
the reigning monarch ruled the Kingdom’s principalities on his behalf, keeping
the family in direct command. The hierarchy was long established and
extraordinarily successful in binding together nine star systems which were
physically spread over hundreds of light-years. The only time it had ever come
near to failure was when Crown Prince Michael germinated Tranquillity; and the
Saldana family would never let anything like that happen again.
Kirsten came out onto
the balcony the morning after the Ekwan’s arrival feeling distinctly
edgy. Time Universe had been triumphantly broadcasting its Laton exclusive
since yesterday evening. She had given the news programmes a quick scan after
she woke, and the deluge hadn’t yet abated. Speculation over the Ekwan and
Guyana’s code two alert was red hot. For the first time since her coronation
she found herself considering censorship as an option for calming the mounting
media hysteria. Certainly there would have to be some sort of official
statement before the day was over.
She pushed up the
voluminous sleeves of her rising robe and looked out over the superb lawns with
their mixture of terrestrial and xenoc flower-beds, and the artificial lakes
graced by black swans. The sky was a deep indigo, without any cloud. Another
gorgeous, balmy day; if not in paradise, then as close as she would ever see.
But the sunshine panorama left her unmoved. Laton was a name which carried too
many adolescent fear-images with it. Her political instinct was telling her
this wasn’t a crisis that would blow over in the night. Not this one.
That same political
instinct which had kept the Saldana family securely on their various thrones
for four hundred years.
The children’s nanny
brought her excitable charges out of the nursery, and Kirsten managed to smile
and kiss them all and make a fuss. Edward lifted little Benedict into his lap,
while she seated Emmeline next to her own chair. Zandra sat at her place and
reached eagerly for the jug of dorze juice.
“Grace first,” Kirsten
admonished.
“Oh, Mummy!”
“Grace.”
Zandra sighed
woundedly, clasped her hands together and moved her lips. “Now can I eat?”
“Yes, but don’t bolt
it.” She signalled one of the four attendant footmen to bring her own tea and
toast.
Edward was feeding
Benedict slim slices of bread along with his boiled egg. “Is the news still all
Laton?” he asked over Emmeline’s head.
“Yes,” Kirsten said.
He pulled a
sympathetic face, and dangled another bread soldier in front of a cheerful
Benedict.
They had been married
forty years. A good marriage by any reasonable standards, let alone an
institution as odd as a royal marriage. Edward was old money, titled as well,
and an ex-navy officer who had served with some distinction. He was also
geneered, which was a big plus; the court liked matches with the same range of
life expectancy—it made things tidy. They hadn’t quite been pushed into it by
the family, but the pressure had been there for someone like him. All the
senior Saldanas displayed for public consumption the Christian monogamy ideal.
Divorce was, of course, out of the question. Alastair was head of Kulu’s
Church, Defender of the Faith throughout the Kingdom. Royalty didn’t break the
commandments, not publicly.
However, she and
Edward enjoyed a relationship of mutual respect, and trust, and even
considerable fondness. Maybe love had been there too at the start of it, forty
years ago. But what they had now was enough to carry them through the next
century together without bitterness and regret. Which was an achievement in
itself. When she thought of her brother Claude’s marriage . . .
“Mummy’s thinking
again,” Emmeline announced loudly.
Kirsten grinned.
“Thinking what to do with you.”
“What?” Emmeline
squealed.
“Depends what you’ve
done wrong.”
“Nothing! Ask Nanny,
I’ve been good. All day.”
“She pinched Rosy
Oldamere’s swimming towel yesterday,” Zandra said. Emmeline burst into giggles.
“You said you wouldn’t tell.”
“It was so funny. Miss
Eastree had to lend Rosy hers, she was shivering all over.”
“Her skin was turning
blue,” Emmeline said proudly.
“Who’s Laton?” Zandra
asked.
“A bad man,” Edward
said.
“Is he on Ombey?”
“No,” Kirsten said.
“Now eat your rice chips.”
Her neural nanonics
gave a silent chime, which warned her from the start it was going to be bad
news; her equerry would never allow a datavised message through unless it was
serious, not at breakfast. She accessed the Defence and Security Council
datapackage.
“Trouble,” she said
resentfully.
Edward glanced over as
she rose.
“I’ll help get them
ready for day club,” he said.
“Thanks.” He was a
good man.
She walked through the
private apartments and emerged into the wide marbled corridor which led to the
cabinet offices, drawing startled looks and hurried bows from staff who were in
early. She was still dressed in her turquoise and grey rising robe.
The official reception
room was a decagonal chamber with a vaulting roof that dripped chandeliers. A
horizontal sheet of sunlight was pouring in through a ring of azure windows
halfway up the walls. Pillars were inlaid with gold and platinum under a
lofriction gloss which kept the metal permanently agleam. Holoprints of
impossibly violent stellar events alternated with oil paintings around the
walls. There were no modern dreamphase or mood-effusion works; the Saldanas
always favoured antiquity for the intimation of timeless dignity it gave.
Three people were
waiting for her in the middle of the black tushkwood tile floor. Sylvester
Geray was at their head; her equerry, a thirty-six-year-old captain wearing his
Royal Kulu Navy dress uniform. Hopelessly formal, she always thought, but he
hadn’t put a foot wrong since he took up the post three months after her
coronation.
The other two, both
wearing civilian suits, were a less welcome sight. Roche Skark, the director of
the ESA office on Ombey, smiled politely at his princess and inclined his head.
Despite geneering, he was a rotund man, in his eighties, and twenty centimetres
shorter than Kirsten. He had held his post for thirteen years, dealing with
threats and perceived threats throughout the sector with pragmatism and a
judicious application of abstruse pressure on the people who counted. Foreign
governments might grumble endlessly about the ESA and its influence and
meddling in local internal politics, but there was never any solid proof of
involvement. Roche Skark didn’t make the kind of elementary mistakes which
could lead to the diplomatic embarrassment of his sovereign.
Jannike Dermot, on the
other hand, was quite the opposite of the demure ESA director. The
fifty-year-old woman wore a flamboyant yellow and purple cord stripe suit of
some expensive silk-analogue fabric, with her blonde hair arranged in a thick,
sweep-back style. It was the kind of consummate power dressing favoured by
corporate executives, and she looked the part. However, her business was strictly
the grubbier side of the human condition: she was the chief of the Internal
Security Agency on Ombey, responsible for the discreet maintenance of civil
order throughout the principality. Unlike its more covertly active sister
agency, the ISA was mostly concerned with vetting politicians and mounting
observations on subversives or anyone else foolish enough to question the
Saldana family’s right to rule. Ninety-five per cent of its work was performed
by monitor programs; fieldwork by operatives was kept to a minimum. Also within
its province was the removal of citizens deemed to be enemies of the state;
which—contrary to popular myth—was actually a reasonably benign affair. Only
people who advocated and practised violence were physically eliminated, most were
simply and quietly deported to a Confederation penal planet from which there
was never any return.
Quite where the
boundaries of the respective agencies’ operational fields were drawn tended to
become a little blurred at times, especially in the asteroid settlements or the
activities of foreign embassy personnel. Kirsten, who chaired Ombey’s Defence
and Security Council, often found herself arbitrating such disputes between the
two. It always privately amused her that despite the nature of their work the
agencies were both basically unrepentant empire-building bureaucracies.
“Sorry to disturb you,
ma’am,” Sylvester Geray said. “The matter was deemed urgent.”
“Naturally,” Kirsten
said. She datavised a code at one set of high double doors, and gestured for
them to follow. “Let’s get on with it.”
The doors opened into
her private office. It was a tastefully furnished room in white and powder
blue, though lacking in the ostentation of the formal State Office next door
where she received diplomats and politicians. French windows looked out into a
tiny walled garden where fountains played in a couple of small ornamental
ponds. Glass-fronted cabinets and bookshelves stood around the walls, heavy
with exquisite gifts from visitors and institutions who enjoyed her patronage.
A malachite bust of Alastair II sat on a pedestal in an alcove behind her desk
(Allie looking over her shoulder, as always). A classic Saldana face, broadly
handsome, with a gravity the sculptor had captured perfectly. She remembered
her brother practising that sombre poise in the mirror when he was a teenager.
The doors swung shut
and Kirsten datavised a codelock at them. The processor in her desk confirmed
the study was now physically and electronically secure.
“The datapackage said
there has been a new development in the Ekwan case,” she said as she sat
in her high-backed chair behind the desk.
“Yes, ma’am,” Jannike
Dermot said. “Unfortunately there has.”
Kirsten waved a hand
for them to sit. “I didn’t think it would be good news.”
“I’d like to bring in
Admiral Farquar,” Sylvester Geray said.
“Of course.” Kirsten
datavised the processor for a security level one sensenviron conference and
closed her eyes.
The illusion was of a
curving featureless white chamber with a central oval table; Kirsten sat at the
head, with Roche Skark and Pascoe Farquar on one side, and Jannike Dermot and
Sylvester Geray on the other. Interesting that the computer should be
programmed to seat the two agency directors opposite each other, she thought.
“I would like to formally
request a system-wide code two defence alert,” the Admiral said as his opening
gambit.
Kirsten hadn’t been
expecting that. “You believe Laton will attack us?” she asked mildly. Only she
could issue a code two alert, which allowed the military to supersede all civil
administration, and requisition whatever personnel and materials it required.
Basically it was a declaration of martial law. (A code one alert was a full
declaration of war, which only Alastair could proclaim.)
“It’s a little more
complicated than that, ma’am,” the Admiral said. “My staff have been reviewing
the whole Lalonde-Laton situation. Now this reporter Graeme Nicholson has
confirmed Laton was present on the planet, we have to begin to consider other
factors, specifically this energy virus which the Edenists reported.”
“I find it quite
significant they wanted their findings to be known,” Roche Skark said. “In fact
they actually requested that we should be told. Which is an unusual step given
the Kingdom’s standard relationship with Edenism. They obviously considered the
threat dangerous enough to exceed any political differences. And considering
what happened to our G66 troops in Lalonde’s jungle I believe they were totally
justified.”
“Our analysis of both
Jenny Harris’s jungle mission and subsequent events on Lalonde suggests that
the energy virus and this prevalent sequestration are the same thing,” said the
Admiral. “What we are dealing with is an invisible force that can take over
human thought processes and bestow an extremely advanced energy manipulation
ability. Sophisticated enough to act as an electronic warfare field, and
construct those white fireballs out of what appears to be thin air.”
“I reviewed parts of
the jungle mission,” Kirsten said. “The physical strength those people had was
phenomenal. Are you suggesting anyone who is infected will acquire similar
capabilities?”
“Yes, ma’am.”
“How is the energy
virus transmitted?”
“We don’t know,” the
Admiral admitted. “Though we do consider the fact that Laton called it a virus
to be significant. The very nature of the term virus, whether employed in the
biological or software sense, implies a pattern that can reproduce itself
within its host, usually at an exponential rate. But again, I’m not sure. We
really are working in the dark on this one, putting together appraisals from
observed data. There has to be a priority to discover its exact nature.”
“We can find out
relatively easily,” Jannike Dermot said. “The answer is in Gerald Skibbow’s
memory—how he was infected and sequestrated, how the energy virus behaves, what
its limits are. I consider him to be the key to alleviating our lack of
knowledge.”
“Has he recovered
yet?” Kirsten asked.
“No. The doctors say
he is suffering from a case of profound trauma; it’s touch and go if he ever
will recover his full intellectual faculties. I want him to undergo a
personality debrief.”
“Is that wise, in his
state?”
The ISA director
showed no emotion. “Medically, no, not making him relive the events. But a
debrief will provide us with the information we require.”
It was a
responsibility Kirsten could have done without; Skibbow was somebody’s child,
probably had children of his own. For a moment she thought of Benedict sitting
in Edward’s lap. “Proceed,” she said, trying to match the ISA director’s
impersonality.
“Thank you, ma’am.”
“The report from
Lalonde said it was Laton himself who warned the Edenists of this energy virus?
He claimed he was being attacked by it.”
“That’s right, ma’am,”
Admiral Farquar said. “Which is what makes our current problem even more
acute.”
“You think he was
telling the truth, that it is a xenoc incursion?”
“Under the
circumstances, I have to give it strong consideration. Which is why I want a
code two alert. It will give me the resources to defend the Ombey system should
they back up the virus with a physical invasion.”
Kirsten felt her palms
tingle, that earlier unsettling notion that this wasn’t just an ordinary crisis
was abruptly resumed. “What do you mean: back up the virus?”
The Admiral flicked a
glance at Roche Skark. “It is a possibility that the Ekwan brought it to
Ombey,” he said.
“Oh, dear God. Do you
have any proof?”
“We are ninety per
cent convinced Gerald Skibbow has been purged, although none of the science
team can offer an explanation as to how that happened. However, in their haste
to get him here, the Lalonde Embassy’s Intelligence team may have overlooked
the fact that some of their own people were carrying it. After all, Graeme
Nicholson’s report confirms that Laton—presumably a sequestrated Laton—was in
Durringham the day they left. We have to assume the virus was also present in
the city’s population at that time.”
“When the Admiral’s
staff informed me of this probability, my Guyana operatives immediately tried
to round up the Ekwan’s crew and all the embassy staff,” the ISA
director said. “Three embassy people were unaccounted for: Angeline Gallagher,
Jacob Tremarco, and Savion Kerwin. We subsequently found that all three took a
spaceplane down to Ombey as soon as the code three restrictions were lifted. We
know they landed at Pasto Spaceport seven hours ago. The spaceplane which
brought them down suffered from several systems failures and processor glitches
during the flight.”
“Ekwan’s flight
from Lalonde was one long list of malfunctions. But since it docked at Guyana
its systems have functioned smoothly,” the Admiral said.
“And the spaceplane?”
Kirsten asked, guessing.
“When my people
arrived at the spaceport it was in the line company’s engineering hangar,”
Jannike Dermot said. “The maintenance crews couldn’t find a thing wrong with
it.”
“And there was some
difficulty with the zero-tau pod when Gerald Skibbow was put in it,” Roche
Skark added. “The implication is that this energy virus isn’t quite under
control, it interferes with nearby electronic equipment on a permanent basis.”
“So what you’re
telling me is that they’re down here,” Kirsten said.
“Yes, ma’am,” the ISA
director acknowledged. “I’m afraid we have to assume they are. We’re hunting
them, of course. I’ve already alerted the police.”
“What about the others
who were on board the Ekwan?”
“As far as we can
tell, they have not been infected.”
“Exactly how do you
tell?”
“Those that have
neural nanonics can use them. We thought that if the energy virus does have an
unrestrained capacity to interfere with circuitry then implants would be the
first to suffer a loss of efficiency.”
“Good idea,” she said.
“The rest of Ekwan’s
complement of colonists are being brought into close proximity with delicate
electronics. So far none of the processor arrays have been affected, but we’re
repeating the procedure every few hours just to be sure.”
“What about people the
three from the embassy came into contact with while they were in Guyana?”
“We have reviewed the
spaceport crews,” the Admiral said. “And we’re drawing up a schedule now to run
the entire asteroid population through these assessments. Including myself, no
exceptions.”
“I see.”
“Will you declare a
code two alert, ma’am?”
“I would point out
that a code two alert will allow me to quarantine the Xingun continent,”
Jannike Dermot said. “It is unlikely that Gallagher, Tremarco and Kerwin have
left yet. I can shut down all air transport to and from the rest of Ombey. I
can also order all road traffic to be suspended, though it may prove difficult
to enforce in practice. We might get lucky and trap them in Pasto City itself.”
Kirsten summoned up
the emergency statutes file from a memory cell and began to review it. Her
neural nanonics started to chart a course of action, balancing necessity
against the chaos that would come with an attempt to suspend all Ombey’s civil
and industrial activities. “Without direct evidence of a physical threat I
cannot issue a code two alert,” she said. “However, I am declaring a code three
alert, and a biohazard isolation order for the orbiting asteroids. I want them
insulated from each other, from the planet, and from incoming starships. Our
orbital facilities are essential to our defence, and I agree that they must be
safeguarded against the carriers of this virus. Admiral Farquar, you are to
order and enforce a complete quarantine as of now. All civil spacecraft in
transit to return to their port of origin.
“Your primary military
task is the defence of Ombey and the orbital asteroids with their associated
strategic-defence systems. A code three alert will give you the authority to
mobilize our resident naval reserve forces; although if it is to mean anything
the quarantine order must apply equally to the fleet. Crews will have to be
rearranged to ensure that personnel from different asteroid bases are not mixed
together. The navy’s secondary role will be guarding against further risk of
infiltration within the star system as a whole. That means all incoming
starships to be refused docking permission.
“As to Xingu, I agree
that it should be segregated from the rest of the planet. Sylvester, you are to
inform the Xingun continental parliament’s speaker that there is now a state of
civil emergency in existence. Shut down its air transport links now. And I do
mean now, all planes in the air to return to their departure airport. Admiral,
if any refuse to comply you are ordered to shoot them out of the sky. Use the
low-orbit strategic-defence platforms.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Kirsten watched
Sylvester Geray’s image freeze as he started to datavise her orders into the
secure government communication net. “Roche, do you believe the embassy three
are going to try and spread the virus among our population?”
“Their actions so far
indicate that is their main goal, yes, ma’am.”
“So it’s not just them
we’re looking for, we’re going to have to round up anyone they came into
contact with?”
“Yes, ma’am. Speed in
this instance is going to be essential; the faster they are caught, the fewer
possible contamination cases we will have to worry about. It’s an exponential
problem again. If they go free for too long then it may well escalate beyond
our ability to contain, as it did on Lalonde.”
“Jannike, do the
police on Xingu have sufficient resources to track them down?”
“I believe so, ma’am,”
the ISA director said.
“May I suggest we use
someone more familiar with people who have been sequestrated by the virus?”
Roche Skark said smoothly. “I’m sure the civil authorities are capable,
Jannike, but I feel hands-on experience will be of immense benefit in this
instance. Someone who is perfectly aware of the urgency, and knows how to react
should things turn ugly. And judging by Lalonde that may well happen.”
The ISA director
stared at him levelly. “One of your agents, you mean?”
“It is a logical
appointment. I recommend Ralph Hiltch is sent to Xingu to oversee the search.”
“Him? The man who
didn’t even know Laton was on Lalonde, the greatest criminal psychopath the
Confederation has ever known!”
“I feel that’s slightly
unfair, Madam Director. The Confederation and the Edenists believed Laton was
dead after the navy destroyed his blackhawks. How many corpses are you
currently investigating?”
“Enough,” Kirsten
said. “That will do, both of you. In this situation I think every resource has
to be deployed without prejudice; I’d like to believe we can deal with this
incident better than a stage one colony planet. That was a good suggestion,
Roche; have Ralph Hiltch sent to Pasto immediately. He is to liaise with the civil
authorities there, with a brief to advise and assist with the capture of the
embassy personnel and identification of anyone else who has been sequestrated.”
“Thank you, ma’am.
I’ll inform him at once.”
“I just hope he can
contain them,” she said, allowing her deeper worries to surface momentarily.
“If not, he could be facing a one-way trip.”
The cloudband which
lay over the Quallheim was a muddy rouge colour when seen from the underside,
streaked with long rusty gold ridges as though it was reflecting the twilight
rays of a sinking sun. It grew ever broader, the frayed edges stirring and
flexing in disquiet as it swam out lazily over the sweltering jungle.
Kelly, casually
accustomed to the enormousness of Tranquillity, was dumbfounded by its size. To
the west and east there was no visible end, the band could encircle the world
for all those sitting in the hovercraft knew. Straight ahead, to the north,
there might have been a hairline of blue sky above the black treetops. Amarisk
was slipping gently into a deep luminous cavern.
Thunder, strident bass
rumbles that echoed strangely, taking a long time to fade, had been audible for
the last twenty minutes as the two hovercraft eased their way towards the
Quallheim over the buoyant mass of snowlilies coating the unnamed tributary.
There was no sign of any lightning.
The hovercraft slipped
under the tempestuous lip of cloud, and red-tinged darkness tightened around
them like a noose. With the morning sun high in the sky, the transition into
shadow was abrupt, leaving none of the scout team in any doubt of the change.
Kelly couldn’t help a shiver inside her armour even though the suit kept her
skin temperature at a comfortable constant.
Reza’s communication
block reported it had lost the geosynchronous communication-satellite’s beacon.
They were cut off from Smith, Joshua, and the navy squadron.
Trees lining the bank
became dark and sullen, even the flowers which eternally sprouted from the
vines lost their perky glimmer. Snowlilies were the rancid colour of drying
blood. High overhead large flocks of birds were embarking on their first ever
migration, flapping and gliding towards the brightness sleeting down beyond the
cloud.
“The cloud stretches
across the heavens like the Devil’s own wedding veil. It is the coming of an
immortal penumbra as Lalonde is eclipsed by a force before which nature
trembles in fear. The planet is being forcibly wedded to a dark lord, and the
prospect of cold alien offspring issuing forth is one which gnaws menacingly at
the team’s fragile spirit.”
“Please!” Sal Yong
protested loudly. “I want to eat sometime today.” The big combat-adept
mercenary was sitting on the bench ahead of Kelly, shoulders slewed so the
front of his rounded, dull-gloss head was aligned on her.
“Sorry,” she said. She
hadn’t been aware she was talking out loud. “This is crazy, you know. We should
be running the opposite way.”
“Life is crazy, Kell.
Don’t let that stop you from enjoying it.” He swung his doughty shoulders back.
“The problem is, I’d
like to go on enjoying it, preferably for decades.”
“Then why come here?”
Ariadne asked. She was sitting next to Sal Yong, steering the hovercraft with a
small joystick.
“Born stupid, I
guess.”
“I’ve been with Reza
for a decade now,” the female ranger scout said. “I’ve seen atrocities and
violence even your scoop-happy company would never show for public consumption.
We’ve always made it home. He’s the best combat scout team leader you’ll ever
meet.”
“On a normal mission,
yes. But this bloody thing—” Her arm rose to take in the cloud and gloomy
jungle with an extravagant sweep. “Look at it, for Christ’s sake. Do you really
think a couple of well-placed maser blasts from orbit are going to knock it
out? We need the whole Confederation Navy armed with every gram of antimatter
they’ve ever confiscated.”
“Still got to have
somewhere to shoot that antimatter down at,” Sal Yong said. “The navy would
have to send the marines in if we weren’t already here shovelling shit. Think
of the money we’re saving the Confederation taxpayer.”
Beside Kelly, Theo
broke into a high-pitched chuckle. He even sounds like a monkey, she thought.
“Regular marines
couldn’t handle this,” Ariadne said cheerfully, guiding the hovercraft round a
rock. “You’d need the Trafalgar Greenjackets. Special-forces types, boosted
like us.”
“Bunch of knuckle
shufflers, all theory and drills,” Sal Yong said witheringly. The two of them
started arguing over the merits of various regiments.
Kelly gave up. She
just couldn’t get through to them. Perhaps that was what made mercenaries so
different, so fascinating. It wasn’t just the physical supplement boosting, it
was the attitude. They really didn’t care about the odds, staking their life
time and again. That would make a good follow-up story back at Tranquillity;
interview some ex-mercs, find out why they had quit. She loaded a note in her
neural nanonics. The pretence of normality. Keep the mind busy so it doesn’t
have time to brood.
The hovercraft arrived
at the Quallheim itself after another forty minutes. It was four or five times
the width of the tributary, over two hundred and fifty metres broad. Both banks
were overrun with tall trees that leant over the river at sharp angles,
plunging aerial roots and thick vines into the water. Snowlilies lay three deep
on the surface, moving at an infinitesimal pace. Where the tributary emptied
into the Quallheim they formed a mushy metre-high dune on top of the water.
Now the scout team
headed upriver, keeping close to the northern bank and the paltry cover of the
trees. Reza seemed more concerned about lying exposed to the cloud than
proximity to possible hostiles on the land. With nothing but the lightly
furrowed carpet of snowlilies opening out like an empty ten-lane motorway
ahead, the hovercraft began to pick up speed.
It was dark on the
river, under the centre of the cloudband, an occultation which made all the
team switch to infrared vision. The trees blocked any sight of the natural
sunlight beyond it. Thunder was a constant companion, booms slithering up and
down the river like the backwash of some vast creature burrowing its way
through the vermilion vapour above. Big insects, similar to terrestrial
dragonflies but without wings, skipped across the snowlilies, only to be hurled
tumbling by the wind of the hovercraft’s passage. Vennals, burning with a
pink-blue radiance of charcoal embers, hung in the branches of the trees,
watching the small convoy rush past with wide, soft eyes.
Towards the middle of
the morning, Reza stood up and signalled the second hovercraft towards the
northern bank where there was a break in the trees. Ariadne rode the craft up
the lush grass to a halt next to its twin. Fenton and Ryall were already
bounding off into the undergrowth.
“I didn’t want to
datavise,” Reza said when they all gathered round. “And from now on we’ll
operate a policy of minimal electronic emission. Ariadne, have you detected any
broadcasts from the invaders?”
“Not yet. I’ve had our
ELINT blocks scanning since we landed. The electromagnetic spectrum is clean.
If they’re communicating it’s either by ultra-tight beam, or fibre optics.”
“They could be using
affinity, or an analogue,” Pat said.
“In that case, you can
forget homing in on them,” she said. “Nobody can intercept that kind of
transmission.”
“What about the
blackhawks?” Jalal asked. “Could they detect it?”
“No good,” Pat said.
“They can’t even detect the bond between me and Octan, let alone some xenoc
variant.”
“Never mind,” Reza
said. “The Quallheim Counties were the origin of the invasion. There has to be
a large base station around here somewhere. We’ll find it. In the meantime,
there is a village called Pamiers a couple of kilometres ahead. Pat says Octan
has located it.”
“That’s right,” Pat
Halrahan said. “He’s circling it now, at a reasonable distance. The whole place
is illuminated with white light, yet there is no break in the cloud overhead.
There are houses there as well, about thirty or forty proper stone buildings
alongside the wood shacks the colonists build.”
“Smith said there were
buildings like that in villages the observation satellites did manage to view,”
Reza said.
“Yeah, but I can’t see
where they came from,” Pat said. “There are no roads at all, no way to bring
the stone in.”
“Air or river,” Sewell
suggested.
“Invade a planet then
airlift in stone houses for the population?” Pat said. “Come on, this is weird,
but not insane. Besides, there is no sign of any construction activity. The
grass and paths haven’t been churned up. And they should have been, the houses
have only been here a fortnight at most.”
“They could be
something like our programmed silicon,” Kelly said, and rapped a gloved knuckle
on the hard gunwale behind her. “Assembled in minutes, and easily airlifted
in.”
“They look
substantial,” Pat said with vague unease. “I know that’s not an objective
opinion, but that’s the way it feels. They’re solid.”
“How many people?”
Reza asked.
“Twenty or twenty-five
walking about. There must be more inside.”
“OK, this is our first
real chance to obtain serious Intelligence data as to what’s going on down
here,” Reza said. “We’re going to deactivate the hovercraft and cut through the
jungle around the back of Pamiers. After we’ve reached the river again and set
up a retreat option, I’ll take Sewell and Ariadne with me into the village,
while the rest of you provide us with some cover. Assume anyone you meet is
hostile and sequestrated. Any questions?”
“I’d like to come into
Pamiers with you,” Kelly said.
“Your decision,” Reza said indifferently. “Any
real questions?”
“What information are
we looking for?” Ariadne asked.
“Intent and
capability,” Reza said. “Also physical disposition of their forces, if we can
get it.”
Hackles raised inside
her armour, Kelly let the team shove a couple of hovercraft electron matrices
into her pack before they all set off again. Reza didn’t want them to walk in
single file, for fear of ambush; instead they fanned out through the trees with
chameleon circuits on, avoiding animal paths. There was a method of trekking
through the raw jungle, Kelly learnt, and for her it was always walking where
Jalal walked. He seemed to instinctively find the easiest way around trees and
thick undergrowth, avoiding having to force his way against the clawing
branches and heavy loam. So she kept her helmet sensors focused on the
low-power UV pin-point light at the nape of his neck, and bullied her legs to
keep up.
It took them fifty
minutes to skirt the village and wind up back at the river. Sewell and Jalal
set to activating the hovercraft at the top of a short slope above the water.
Kelly dumped her pack into the locker at the rear of the second craft, and felt
as though she could fly without the extra weight. With equipment stowed, the
team fitted their weapons, checked power and projectile magazines, and set off
back towards Pamiers.
Reza found the first
corpse two hundred metres short of the village clearing. It was Ryall who smelt
it for him, a sharp tang of dead flesh which even the jungle’s muggy air
couldn’t disguise. He sent the hound veering off towards it. Ryall promptly
smelt another corpse, causing Reza to hurriedly damped down his reception of
the hound’s olfactory sense.
It was a child, about
five or six, he guessed. Ryall had found it sitting huddled up at the foot of a
mayope tree. Age was hard to determine; there wasn’t a lot left, so he had to
go by size. Insects and humidity had accelerated the decomposition, though it
was strange no animal had disturbed it. According to his didactic memory, sayce
were supposed to be fairly brutal carnivores.
He led Sewell, Kelly,
and Ariadne through the trees to the body, and dispatched Ryall to the second.
“It’s a girl,” Ariadne
said after examining the remains. She held up a nondescript length of filthy,
dripping-wet fabric. “This is a skirt.”
Reza wasn’t going to
argue. “How did she die?” he asked.
“There are no broken
bones, no sign of violence. Judging by the way she’s curled up between the
roots I’d say she crawled here to die. Poisoned? Starving? No way of knowing
now.”
“Scared of the
invaders,” Reza said thoughtfully. “They probably didn’t bother to sequestrate
the children.”
“You mean the adults
just ignored her?” Kelly asked in disgust.
“Ignored her, or drove
her away. A child like this wouldn’t walk around in the jungle by herself. The
village had been established long enough for her to pick up basic jungle lore.”
Ryall trotted up to
the second corpse, emitting a warm feeling of satisfaction as his muzzle
touched the putrefying flesh. Reza picked up the sense of accomplishment and
expanded the affinity band allowing himself to see through the hound’s enhanced
retinas. “It’s another kid,” he told them. “A bit older, there’s a baby in its
arms.” Ryall could scent more decaying meat in the humid air, three or four
blends, all subtly different. Closer to the river, Fenton had picked up a
further series of traces. “My God,” Reza growled in a dismayed whisper.
“They’re everywhere, all around.”
A village like Pamiers
would start off with a population of about five hundred. Say two hundred
families, and they’ve been here a couple of years. That would mean about a
hundred and fifty children.
He stood, scanning the
jungle. Slender yellow target graphics slid up over the black and red image in
an uncomplicated, unprogrammed reflex. He wanted to shoot something dead. His
neural nanonics ordered a slight endocrine effusion, stabilizing the sudden
hormonal surge.
“Come on, she can’t
help us any more,” he said, and began pushing briskly through the bushes and
vines towards the village. He turned his chameleon circuit off, and after a few
paces the others followed suit.
Pamiers followed the
standard configuration of settlements along the Juliffe’s tributaries. A
semicircular clearing chopped out of the jungle along the side of the river.
Crude single-storey houses clustered together in no particular order at the
centre, along with larger barns, a church, a meeting hall, an Ivet compound.
Wooden jetties ventured ten or fifteen metres into the water, with a few
fishing skiffs tied up. Fields and plots ringed the outside, a surfeit of crops
pushing out of rich black loam.
However, Pamiers’
layout was all that remained recognizable as the four of them stepped out of
the trees.
“Where is this light
coming from?” Kelly asked, looking round in surprised confusion. As Pat had
reported, the village bathed luxuriantly in a bright pool of sunlight, and
yellow pollen was thick in the air. She scanned the cloud overhead, but there
was no break. Thunder, muted while they were in the trees, rolled insistently
around them once more.
Ariadne walked on a
few paces, activating her full implant sensor suite as well as the specialist
blocks clipped to her belt. She turned a complete circle, sampling the
environment. “It’s omnidirectional. We’re not even leaving shadows. See?”
“Like an AV
projection,” Reza said.
“Yes and no. The
spectrum matches Lalonde’s sun.”
“Let’s go see what
those new houses are made of,” he said.
Pamiers’ fields had
been left untended. Terrestrial plants were fighting a fierce battle for light
and height with the vines that had surged out of the jungle to reclaim their
native territory. Fruit was hanging in mouldy white clusters.
Yet inside the ring of
fields, the grass around the houses was short and tidy, studded with what looked
suspiciously like terrestrial daisies. When he had studied the sheriff’s
satellite images on the flight from Tranquillity Reza had seen the way the
village clearings were worn down and streaked with muddy runnels. Grass and
weeds grew in patchy clumps. But this was an even, verdant carpet that matched
Tranquillity’s parkland for vitality.
Stranger still were
the houses.
Apart from three
burnt-out ruins, the original wooden shacks had been left standing, their
planks bleached a pale grey, shuttered windows open to the weather, bark slates
slipping and curling, solar-cell panels flapping loosely. They were
uninhabited, that was obvious at a glance. Mosses, tufts of grass, and green
moulds were tucked into corners and flourishing promisingly. But jammed at random
between the creaky cabins were the new structures. None of them was the same,
with architectural styles ranging across centuries—a beautiful two-storey Tudor
cottage, an Alpine lodge, a Californian millionaire’s cinderblock ranch, a
circular black landcoral turret, a marble and silverglass pyramid, a marquee
which resembled a cross between a Bedouin tent and a medieval European
pavilion, complete with heraldic pennants fluttering on tall poles.
“Having some trouble
with my blocks,” Ariadne said. “Several malfunctions. Guido and communications
are right out.”
“If it begins to
affect the weapons we’ll pull back,” Reza cautioned. “Keep running diagnostic
programs.”
They cleared the
fields and started to walk over the grass. Ahead of them a woman in a long blue
polka-dot dress was pushing a waist-high gloss-black trolley that had a white
parasol above it, and huge spindly wheels with chrome wire spokes. Whatever it
was, it was impossibly primitive. Reza loaded the image’s pixel pattern into
his neural nanonics with an order to run a comparison search program through
his encyclopaedia. Three seconds later the program reported it was a
European/North American style pram circa 1910–50.
He walked over to the
woman, who was humming softly. She had a long face that was crudely painted in
so much make-up it was almost a clown’s mask, with dark brown hair worn in a
severe bun, encased by a net. She smiled up happily at the four members of the
team, as though their weapons and equipment and boosted form were of no consequence.
That simpleton smile
was the last straw for Reza, whose nerves were already stretched painfully
thin. Either she was retarded, or this whole village was an incredibly warped
trap. He activated his short-range precision sensors, and scanned her in both
electromagnetic and magnetic spectrums, then linked the return into a
fire-command protocol. Any change in her composition (such as an implant
switching on or a neural nanonics transmission) and his forearm rifle would
slam five EE rounds into her. The rest of his sensors were put into a
track-while-scan mode, allowing his neural nanonics to keep tabs on the other
villagers he could see walking about among the buildings behind her. He had to
use four backup units, several principal sensors had packed up altogether. The
overall resolution was way down on the clarity he was used to.
“What the fucking
hell’s going on here?” he demanded.
“I have my baby
again,” she said in a lilting tone. “Isn’t he gorgeous?”
“I asked you a
question. And you will now answer.”
“Do as he says,” Kelly
said hastily. “Please.”
The woman turned to
her. “Don’t worry, my dear. You can’t hurt me. Not now, not any more. Would you
like to see my baby? I thought I’d lost him. I lost so many back then. It was
horrible, all those dead babies. The midwives tried to stop me seeing them; but
I looked just the same. They were all perfect, so beautiful, my babies. An evil
life it was.” She bent forwards over the pram and lifted out a squirming bundle
draped in lacy white cloth. The baby cooed as she held it out.
“Where have you come
from?” Reza asked. “Are you the sequestration program?”
“I have my life back.
I have my baby back. That’s what I am.”
Ariadne stepped
forward. “I’m going to get a sample from one of those buildings.”
“Right,” Reza said.
“Sewell, go with her.”
The two of them walked
round the woman and started off towards the nearest house, a whitewashed
Spanish hacienda.
The baby let out a
long gurgle, smiling blithely, feet kicking inside the wrap. “Isn’t he just
adorable,” the woman said. She tickled his face with a finger.
“One more time,” Reza
said. “What are you?”
“I am me. What else
could I be?”
“And that?” He pointed
to the cloud.
“That is part of us.
Our will.”
“Us? Who is us?”
“Those who have
returned.”
“Returned from where?”
She rocked the baby
against her chest, not even looking up. “From hell.”
“She’s either nuts, or
she’s lying,” Reza said.
“She’s been
sequestrated,” Kelly said. “You won’t get anything out of her.”
“So sure of
yourselves,” the woman said. She gave Kelly a sly look as she cuddled the baby.
“So stupid. Your starships have been fighting among themselves. Did you know
that?”
Reza’s neural
nanonics’ optical-monitor program reported more people were appearing from the
houses. “What do you know about it?”
“We know what we feel,
the pain and the iron fire. Their souls weeping in the beyond.”
“Can we check?” Kelly
asked urgently.
“Not from here.”
The woman laughed, a
nervous cackle. “There aren’t many left to check, my dear. You won’t hear from
them again. We’re taking this planet away, right away. Somewhere safe, where
the ships can never come to find us. It will become paradise, you know. And my
baby will be with me always.”
Reza regarded her with
a chill of foreboding. “Yes, you are a part of this,” he said quietly. The
yellow target graphics locked on to her torso. “What is happening here?”
“We are come, and we
are not going to leave. Soon the whole world will be hiding from the sky. From heaven.
And we shall live on in peace for ever.”
“There will be more of
this red cloud?”
The woman slowly
tilted her head back until she was staring straight up. Her mouth fell open as
though in wonder. “I see no clouds.” She started to laugh wildly.
Reza saw Ariadne had
reached the hacienda. The ranger scout was bending over, scraping at the wall
with some kind of tool. Sewell was standing behind her, the long gaussrifle
barrels he had plugged into his lower elbow sockets swivelling from side to
side in an automatic sweep pattern.
“Ariadne,” Reza
bellowed. “Get back here. We’re leaving now.”
The woman’s laughter
chopped off. “No, you’re not.” She dropped the baby.
It was Reza’s infrared
sensors which caught the change. A wave of heat emerged right across her body
and started to flow like a film of liquid, rushing along her arms as she
brought them up, becoming denser, hotter.
His left forearm’s
gaussgun fired five electron explosive rounds just as a white light ignited
around her hands. There was three metres between them. Impact velocity alone
would have been enough to tear her body apart, with the EEs detonating as well
there was nothing left for the last three rounds to hit.
Kelly’s armour
hardened protectively as the blast wave slammed into her. Then she screamed as
a jet of spumescent gore slopped across the front of the paralysed fabric.
“Sewell, zero the
area!” Reza shouted.
The twin heavy-calibre
gaussrifles the big combat-adept mercenary carried began to blaze, squirting
out a barrage of EE projectiles. Emerald-green laser beams emerging from Reza
and Ariadne snapped on and off, traversing the clearing in a strobe waltz as
their lighter weapons picked off targets.
Kelly’s armour
unlocked. She fell to her knees, centimetres from the baby. Her hand went out
instinctively, twitching the blood-soaked lace aside to see if it was still
alive.
There was a vennal
inside the wrap. The little xenoc creature had been distorted, its vulpine
skull swollen and moulded into a more globular shape, scales melded together
and stretched. They were losing their distinctive blue-green pigmentation,
fading to pale pink. Its forepaws had become chubby, tiny human hands scrabbled
feebly at the air. Squeals of terror emerged from its toothless mouth.
Her neural nanonics
were unable to quell her stomach spasm in time. An emergency program triggered
the shell-helmet’s quick-release seal, and the visor sprang open. She vomited
onto the neatly mown grass.
Sewell ran backwards
across the grass, making almost as much speed as he could travelling forward.
An autonomic locomotion program took care of that, guiding his feet round
possible obstacles, leaving his conscious thoughts free to assist with target
selection.
The first fire
sequence had ripped into the houses, smashing them apart in plumes of ionic
flame and smoke. Even Sewell, who was aiming for maximum destruction, was
surprised by the devastating effect the rifles inflicted. As soon as the first
EE projectile hit the buildings their bright colours switched off, leaving
behind a neutral grey. The rifles laid down a comprehensive fire pattern. Walls
and roofs buckled and collapsed, sending out billowing clouds of thick dust,
support timbers splintered then seemed to crumble. Within seconds the whole
area had been reduced to pulverized rubble. The old shacks bent and bowed
before the pressure blasts; they were far sturdier than the new houses. Several
keeled over, wood twisting and shrieking. Slate-tile roofs somersaulted, intact
walls slewed through the air rippling like giant mantas.
Sewell switched to the
people, concentrating on coordinates where the target-allocation program had
located individuals. The feed tubes from his backpack magazine hummed smoothly
as they supplied the gaussrifles with fresh ammunition. There had been eighteen
people visible to his sensors before Reza’s shouted order. He pumped airburst
shrapnel rounds after them as they dived for cover amid the shattered houses.
Infrared sensors
showed him eccentric waves of heat shimmering amid the expanding dust. White
fire, like an earthbound comet, streaked towards him. Boosted muscles flung him
aside. The gaussrifles swung round to the origin, compensating for his dive. EE
projectiles pummelled the area.
“Up, you bitch!” Reza
yelled at Kelly. “Back to the hovercraft.”
She rolled over,
seeing a fermenting red cloudscape sky lit by green lasers and white fireballs.
Fear and hatred fired her limbs and she jerked to her feet. The houses were a
flattened circle belching smoke and dust. White fire raged in a spiral
maelstrom above them, slinging out splinters that arced overhead. Trees fell
and fire bloomed where they struck the wall of jungle. Sewell and Ariadne were
charging towards her, both firing back into the rubble.
Kelly took three paces
towards the trees then stopped. She pulled her nine-millimetre automatic pistol
from her holster in one smooth movement. The gun’s familiarization and
targeting program went into primary mode, and she fired two bullets into the
mutated vennal. Then she sprinted after Reza, neural nanonics releasing a
torrent of adrenalin and amphetamines into her bloodstream.
Pain stabbed into the
back of Ariadne’s left thigh as the fireball struck her. Neural nanonics
erected an analgesic block straight away. Compensator programs shifted her
balance, favouring her right leg, activating those left thigh muscles which
remained functional. Valves in the veins and arteries of her pelvis and knee
sealed, limiting the blood loss. Her speed was barely reduced. She caught up
with Kelly just as a fireball hit the reporter in the side of her ribs.
Kelly’s armour gleamed
an all-over ruby as it tried to disperse the energy. A circle of the suit
flared as it melted. The fire lingered round the rent, chewing at the exposed
skin. She stumbled and fell, rolling on the damp loam of an overgrown
strawberry patch, beating wildly at the flame with her gauntlets.
“Keep going,” Ariadne
shouted. Her targeting program located another figure moving through the
thinning dust cloud. The TIP pistol plugged into her wrist socket fired a burst
of energy at it.
The entire left side
of Kelly’s ribs had gone numb, frightening her at a deeper level than programs
or chemicals could relieve. None of the mercenaries were slowing down. They’re
not going to help me!
Kelly ordered her
neural nanonics to override her trembling muscles and scrambled to her feet.
Her integral medical program was signalling for attention. She ignored it and
ran on. The clearing’s sourceless sunlight went out, plunging her back into the
stark red and black landscape of the infrared image.
It took her eight
minutes to reach the hovercraft. Eight minutes of furiously punching vines out
of her way and skidding on mud while the three mercenaries hurled out a barrage
of fire through the jungle to cover their retreat. Eight minutes of white
fireballs twisting and swerving round trunks, pursuing the team with the
tenacity of smart seeker missiles. Of thunder roaring overhead and flinging
down stupendous lightning bolts that rocked the ground. Sudden impossible gusts
of wind rising from nowhere to slap her around like a lightweight doll. Of
neural nanonic programs and endocrine implant effusions assuming more and more
control of her body as its natural functions faltered under the unrelenting
demands of her flight.
One hovercraft was
already rushing down the slope into the snowlily-congested river when she
arrived at the little glade.
“Bastards!” she yelled
weakly.
Lightning struck
twenty metres behind her, sending her sprawling. Reza was sitting behind the
second hovercraft’s control panel, hand playing over the switches. The impeller
fans began to spin, forcing air into the skirt. It began to rise slowly
upwards; Sewell and Sal Yong stood on either side of it, their gaussrifles
blasting away at unseen targets.
Kelly started to
crawl. The first of the white fireballs shot out of the trees, curving round to
drop on the hovercraft. Lightning flashed down again. A mayope tree toppled
over with a sepulchral splintering. It crashed down ten metres behind her, one
of the upper boughs coming down straight on top of her legs. Her armour
stiffened, and her bent knees were pushed sharply into the yielding loam.
“Wait!” Kelly begged
in a rasp. “For fuck’s sake, you shitheads. Wait!”
The hovercraft’s skirt
was fully inflated, twigs and leaves were thrown out from under the thick
rubbery fabric. Sewell hopped over the gunwale.
“Jesus God, I can’t
move. Help me!” Her vision contracted to a tunnel with the hovercraft at the
far end.
“Help me!”
Sewell was standing in
the middle of the hovercraft. One of his gaussrifles turned towards her. Leaves
and small branches rustled and slithered like serpents over her legs, she could
feel them coiling round her calves. Then Sewell fired. The explosions sent her
cartwheeling over the ground. She slammed into something hard. It grated along
the side of her armour suit. Moving. Hovercraft! Her hands scrabbled with
animal passion against it. And she was being lifted effortlessly into the air.
Rationality ended there and she kicked and flailed against the air. “No! No!
No!”
“Easy there, Kell,
I’ve got you.”
Her world spun round
as the big mercenary dumped her unceremoniously on the floor of the hovercraft.
She gagged, limbs juddering as the neural nanonics stopped sending out
compulsive overrides. After a minute she began to sob, the quivering muscle
motions starting deep in her belly and emerging through her mouth.
“You made it,” Sal
Yong said later. How much later Kelly didn’t know, her mind was furred with
tranquillizers, thoughts slow. She tried to sit up, and winced at the bands of
pain tightening around her ribs. A medical diagram unfolded inside her skull.
Her body’s decay in unwelcome detail.
“The tree!” she barked
hoarsely.
“We got it,” Sewell
said. “Shitfire, but that was weird.”
“You were going to
leave me!” Panic set her skin crawling. Blue lights flashed silently around the
physiological display. More tranquillizers.
“You’re going to have
to learn to keep up, Kell,” Reza said in his normal level tones. “We’re on a
combat mission. I told you when we started, I can’t spare anyone for
baby-sitting duties.”
“Yes.” She flopped
back down. “So you did. I’m sorry.” I simply didn’t realize you were serious,
that you would leave a fellow human being behind, to face . . . that.
“Hey, you did all
right,” Sal Yong said. “Lotsa people would have screwed up, they had all that
shit thrown at them.”
“Oh, thanks.”
There were mechanical
clunks from somewhere behind her as Sewell detached his gaussrifles. “Let’s see
about getting that armour off you, Kell. You look like you could do with some
field aid.” She felt him touch the suit’s seal catch, and then humid sticky air
was sliding over her skin. Her helmet came off, and she blinked dizzily.
Sewell was sitting on
a bench above her, holding a couple of medical nanonic packages. Kelly avoided
looking at her ribs; the physiological display was bad enough.
“Looks like I’m not
the only one,” she said, smiling bravely. His artificial skin was pitted with
small deep blackened craters where the white fire had struck, including a long
score on the side of his glossy head. Blood and fluid dribbled out of the
cracks each time he moved. “Or are you going to say they’re just flesh wounds?”
“Nothing critical.”
“Oh, crap, I’m
drowning in macho culture.”
“You can put your gun
down now, Kell.”
The nine-millimetre
pistol was still in her hand, fingers solidified round its grip. She gave it a
bewildered stare. “Right. Good idea.”
He tilted her gently
on her right side, then peeled the covering off the nanonic package. It moulded
itself to her left side, curving round to cover her from her navel to her
spine. The colours of her physiological display changed, reds diluting to
amber, as it began knitting itself to her wound.
“Where are we going?”
she asked. The hovercraft was moving faster than it had before. Humidity was
making her sweat all over, the smell of vegetation was rank, itching her
throat. Lying half-naked racing through a xenoc jungle being chased by monsters
and cut off from any hope of rescue. She knew she ought to be reduced virtually
to hysterics, yet really it was almost funny. You wanted a tough assignment, my
girl.
“Aberdale,” Reza said.
“According to the LDC’s chief sheriff, that’s where the first reported trouble started.”
“Of course,” Kelly
answered. There was a strange kind of strength on the far side of utter
despair, she found, or maybe it was just the tranquillizers.
“Kell?”
She closed her leaden
eyelids. “Yes.”
“Why did you shoot the
baby?”
“You don’t want to
know.”
The navy squadron
closed on Lalonde at seven gees, crews prone on their acceleration couches with
faces screwed up against the lead-weighted air which lay on top of them. When
they were seventeen thousand kilometres out, the fusion flames died away and
the starships rotated a hundred and eighty degrees in a virtuoso display of
synchronization, ion thrusters crowning them in a triumphant blue haze. The Arikara
and the Shukyo released twenty combat communication-relay satellites,
streaking away at ten gees to englobe the planet. Then the warships began to
decelerate.
As the merciless gee
force returned to Arikara’s bridge Meredith Saldana accessed the
tactical display. The voidhawks had performed small swallow manoeuvres, taking
them to within two and a half thousand kilometres of the planet and curving
into orbit ahead of the Adamist warships to which such short-range precision
jumps were impossible. But the mercenary fleet was leading the bitek starships
a merry dance. Three blackhawks were racing away from Lalonde, striving for the
magic two thousand kilometre altitude where they would be outside the influence
of the planet’s gravitational field, allowing them to swallow away. Voidhawks
were in pursuit. Four of the nine combat-capable independent traders were also
under acceleration. Two of them, Datura and Cereus, were heading
on a vector straight towards the squadron at two and a half gees. They wouldn’t
respond to any warning calls from the Arikara, nor Terrance Smith.
“Haria, Gakkai,
go to defensive engagement status, please,” Meredith datavised. The situation
display showed him the two frigates end their deceleration burn, flip over, and
accelerate ahead of the rest of the squadron.
“What is the state of
the remaining mercenary ships?” the Admiral enquired.
“Smith claims the
starships remaining in orbit are obeying his orders, and therefore haven’t been
hijacked,” said Lieutenant Franz Grese, the squadron Intelligence officer.
“What do you think?”
“I think Commander Solanki
was right, and we’d better be very careful, Admiral.”
“Agreed. Commander
Kroeber, we’ll send a marine squad into the Gemal first. If we can
verify that Smith himself hasn’t been hijacked or sequestrated it may just make
our job that bit easier.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
The tactical situation
warned him the Datura and Cereus were launching combat wasps.
Meredith observed in astonishment as each of them released a salvo of
thirty-five; according to the accompanying identification codes the starships
were small vehicles, forty to forty-five metres in diameter. They couldn’t have
held back any reserves—what absurd tactics. The drone armaments began to
accelerate from their launch craft at twenty gees.
“No antimatter,
Admiral,” datavised Second Lieutenant Clark Lowie, the Arikara’s weapons
officer. “Fusion drives only.”
That’s something,
Meredith thought. “What’s their storage capacity?”
“Best estimate would
be forty combat wasps maximum, Admiral.”
“So they haven’t left
any for their own defence?”
“Looks that way, sir.”
Haria and Gakkai launched a counter salvo;
eighty combat wasps leaping ahead to intercept the incoming hostiles at
twenty-seven gees. Purple, red, and green vector lines sprang up in Meredith’s
mind, as if someone was performing laser acupuncture right across his skull.
The combat wasps started to squirt megawatt electronic warfare pulses at each
other. Active and kinetic submunitions began to scatter. Two disc-shaped swarms
formed, five hundred kilometres across, alive with deceitful impulses and
infrared signatures. Electron beams flashed out, perfectly straight lightning
bolts glaring against the starfield. The first explosions flared. Kiloton
nuclear devices were detonated on each side. Smaller explosions followed as
combat wasps blew apart under the prodigious energy impact.
A second, smaller,
salvo was launched by the frigates, compensating for the loss.
“Admiral, the Myoho
reports the blackhawk it’s chasing is about to swallow outsystem,”
Lieutenant Rhoecus called. “Request permission to follow.”
“Granted. Follow and
interdict; it is not to come into contact with inhabited Confederation
territory.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
A vast circle of space
burst into pyrotechnic oblivion as the two antagonistic combat wasp swarms
collided, as though a giant wormhole had been torn open into the heart of a
nearby star. The annular plasma storm eddied violently, radiating down through
the visible spectrum in seconds until only nebulous violet mists were left.
Arikara’s sensor clusters struggled to burn through
the conflagration and present an accurate representation of events through the
tactical situation display. Some submunitions from both sides had survived. Now
they were accelerating towards their intended targets. All four combatant ships
began high-gee evasive manoeuvres.
Myoho and its blackhawk disappeared from the display.
Granth and Ilex both fired a volley of combat wasps at their
respective prey.
Haria’s masers began to fire as the remaining
submunitions closed on it. Small vivid explosions peppered nearby space. Rail
guns thumped out a stream of steel spheres which formed a last-ditch kinetic
umbrella. Eight surviving submunitions drones detected it, three of them were
gamma-pulse lasers. A second before they struck the umbrella they fired.
Large oval sections of
the frigate’s hull turned cherry red under the radiation assault.
Molecular-binding generators maxed out as they fought to keep the monobonded
silicon’s structure intact. The energy-dispersal web below the silicon
struggled to absorb and redistribute the intense influx. All the sensor
clusters either melted or had their electronics burnt out by the gamma-ray
deluge. Replacement clusters rose immediately; but the starship was blind for a
period of three seconds.
In that time the
remaining five submunitions hit the kinetic umbrella. They disintegrated
instantly, but hypervelocity fragments kept coming. With the sensors unable to
see them and direct the frigate’s close-range weapons they struck the hull and
vaporized. The binding generators, already heavily stressed, couldn’t handle the
additional loading. There were half a dozen localized punctures. Fists of
plasma punched inwards. Internal systems melted and fused as they were exposed.
Fuel tanks ripped open sending hundred-metre fountains of vaporizing deuterium
shooting out.
“Bellah,
assist, please,” Commander Kroeber ordered. “Rescue and recovery.” The stricken
frigate’s emergency beacon was howling across the distress bands. The
life-support capsules should have easily withstood the strike. Even as he
requested more information from the computer the sensor image showed him ion
thrusters firing to slow the frigate’s wayward tumble.
With all of their
combat-wasp stocks exhausted in the first salvo, Datura and Cereus were
left with only short-range masers to defend themselves against the assault from
the frigates’ drones. The electronic warfare barrage was unrelenting as the
drones closed at twenty gees, defeating the starships’ sensors. The two
mercenary starships exploded within seconds of each other.
A cheer went round the
Arikara’s bridge. Meredith felt like joining in.
“Admiral, another
blackhawk is leaving orbit,” Lieutenant Rhoecus said.
Meredith cursed, he
really couldn’t spare another voidhawk. A quick check on the tactical display
revealed little information, the blackhawk was on the other side of Lalonde
from the squadron. “Which is the nearest voidhawk?”
“The Acacia,
Admiral.”
“Can they hit it with
combat wasps?”
“They have a launch
window, but estimate only a thirty per cent chance of success.”
“Tell them to launch,
but remain in orbit.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
“Bellah reports
survivors from the Haria have been detected, Admiral,” Commander Kroeber
said. “They’re matching velocities.”
“Good. Hinnels, has
there been any reaction from the Juliffe cloud bands?”
“Nothing specific,
sir. But they’ve been growing wider at a constant rate, the area they’re
covering has increased by one and a half per cent since we arrived. It adds up
to a respectable volume.”
Another combat-wasp
battle raged high above Lalonde’s terminator as the drones from the Granth encountered
defences fired by their prey. Then the blackhawk vanished down a wormhole
interstice. Three seconds later Granth followed.
“Damn,” Meredith
muttered.
But the Ilex was
having better luck. Its combat-wasp salvo had forced the blackhawk it was
chasing to flee back down towards the planet.
The Admiral requested
a channel to the Gemal. “We shall be boarding you first, Smith. Any
resistance and the marines will shoot to kill, understood?”
“Yes, Admiral,”
Terrance Smith replied.
“Have you received any
updates from the teams you landed?”
“Not yet. I expect
most of them were sequestrated,” he added gloomily.
“Tough. I want you to
broadcast a message that their mission is over. We will pick up any survivors
if at all possible. But none of them is to attempt to penetrate under the
cloud, no hunting of enemy bases. This is now a Confederation Navy problem. I
don’t want the invaders antagonized unduly.” Not while my squadron is so close
to that bloody cloud, he finished silently. It was the sheer quantity of power
involved again. Frightening. And the berserk way the hijacked ships were
behaving didn’t help.
“I’m not sure I can
guarantee that, Admiral,” Smith said.
“Why not?”
“I issued the team
leaders with kiloton nukes. It would give them a fall-back in case the
starships were unable to provide strike power. I was worried the captains might
balk at bombarding a planetary surface.”
If it hadn’t been for
the fierce gee force Meredith would have put his head in his hands. “Smith, if
you get out of this with your life, it won’t be on my account.”
“Well, fuck you!”
Terrance Smith yelled. “You Saldana bastard, why do you think I had to hire
these people in the first place? It’s because Lalonde is too poor to rate
decent navy protection. Where were you when the invaders landed? You would
never have come to help us put down that first insurrection, because it didn’t
affect your precious financial interests. Money, that’s what you shits respect.
What the hell would you know about ordinary people suffering? You were born
with a silver spoon in your mouth that’s so big it’s sticking out through your
arse. The only reason you’re here now is because you’re frightened the invasion
might spread to worlds you own, that it might hit your credit balance. I’m
doing what I can for my people.”
“And that includes
nuking them, does it?” Meredith asked. He’d been subject to anti-Saldana
bigotry for so long now the insults never even registered. “They’re
sequestrated, you cretin, they don’t even know they’re your people any more.
This invasion isn’t going to be beaten by brute force. Now, you will broadcast
that message, make the mercenary teams turn back.”
The tactical display
sounded an alarm. A broad fan of curving purple vector lines were rising high
over Wyman, Lalonde’s small arctic continent. Someone behind the planet had
launched a salvo of fifty-five combat wasps.
“My God,” Meredith
muttered. “Lowie, what are they aimed at?”
“Unclear, Admiral.
There is no single target, it’s a rogue salvo. But from the vectors I’d say they
were seeking to engage anything in the thousand-kilometre orbit . . .
Bloody hell.”
A second salvo, of
equal size, was curving round the south pole.
“Jesus, that’s a neat
pincer movement,” Joshua said. At some ridiculous private level he was
delighted he didn’t need any intervention from his neural nanonics to remain
calm. He felt his mind function with that same cool reserve which had
manifested itself back in the Ruin Ring when Neeves and Sipika appeared.
This is me, what I am:
a starship captain.
The Lady Mac’s
three fusion drives came on almost without conscious thought. “Stand by for
combat gees,” he warned.
“How many?” Sarha
asked nervously.
“How high is up?”
Other starships were
getting under way, retracting their thermo-dump panels. Three of them launched
combat wasps in a defensive cluster formation.
“Remain in orbit,”
Smith ordered over the command net. “The navy squadron will provide us with
protective cover from the salvo.”
“Like bollocks they
will,” Joshua said. The squadron was still four minutes from orbital injection.
A sensor scan revealed blackhawks and voidhawks alike racing up for a higher
altitude; the slower Adamist starships were following, with three exceptions, Gemal
one of them.
The gee force in Lady
Mac’s bridge passed five gees. Ashly groaned in dismay. “My bones can’t
take this.”
“You’re younger than
me,” Warlow countered.
“I’m more human, too.”
“Wimp.”
“Castrated mechanoid.”
Sarha suddenly noticed
the trajectory Joshua had loaded into the flight computer. “Joshua! Where the
hell are you taking us?”
Lady Mac was rising above the equatorial plane at seven
gees, decreasing altitude at the same time.
“We’re going under
them.”
“This trajectory is
going to graze the atmosphere!”
He watched more of the
mercenary starships launching combat wasps. “I know.” It had been an
instinctive manoeuvre, opposing every tactic program in the flight computer’s
memory core; they all said altitude was the key in orbital combat situations,
giving you more room to manoeuvre, more flexibility. Everyone else in the
little mercenary fleet was clinging to that doctrine, escaping from Lalonde
with fusion drives operating way out on the limit. “Dad was always telling me
about this one,” he said in what he hoped was a confident manner. “He always
used it in a scrape. Lady Mac’s still about, isn’t she?”
“Your bloody father
isn’t!” Sarha had to datavise, she couldn’t expel enough air from her lungs to
talk. The acceleration had reached nine gees. She hadn’t known even Lady Mac
could produce that kind of drive level. Every internal membrane supplement
had turned rock hard. An arterial implant at the base of her neck was injecting
oxygen into her bloodstream, making sure her brain didn’t starve. She couldn’t
ever remember having to use it before. Joshua Calvert, we are not a bloody
combat wasp!
“Look, it’s very
simple,” he explained, trying to sort out the logic in his own mind. As usual,
rationality was trailing well behind impetuosity. “Combat wasps are designed
for deep-space operations. They can’t operate in the atmosphere.”
“We are designed for
deep-space operations!”
“Yes, but we’re
spherical.”
Sarha couldn’t snarl,
she would have dislocated her jaw bone; but she managed to grate her teeth
together.
Lady Macbeth flew over the Sarell continent in forty-five
seconds, arching down sharply towards the brown and yellow volcanic deserts.
She was three hundred kilometres in altitude when she passed over the northern
coastline; the north pole was two and a half thousand kilometres ahead. Seven
hundred kilometres above, and four thousand kilometres ahead, the combat wasp
salvo spotted her. Six of them abruptly altered course and dived down.
“Here they come,”
Joshua said. He fired eight of Lady Mac’s combat wasps, programming them
for a tight defence-shield formation. The drones leapt upwards at twenty gees,
scattering submunitions almost immediately.
Aft sensors showed the
starships in orbit behind and above were releasing more and more combat wasps.
Even the Gemal was breaking out of its thousand-kilometre orbit, the old
colonist-carrier could only make one and a half gees. And there was no escort,
Joshua saw sadly. Far away to the east, barely above the horizon, there was a
volley of explosions followed by the unmistakable larger smeared detonation of
a starship. Wonder who that was? It didn’t seem to matter much, only that it
wasn’t him.
“Melvyn, keep
monitoring the grav-detector satellite data. I want to know if any ships start
jumping outsystem, and if possible where to.”
“I’m on it, Joshua.”
“Dahybi, I can’t
believe the voidhawks can keep jamming our nodes with all this going on, the
second they slip I want to know.”
“Yes, Captain.”
The sensors showed
Joshua the attacking combat wasps releasing their submunitions. Particle beams
lanced out from both swarms. “OK, everybody, here we go.” He shot an order
directly into the drive deflector coils, and Lady Mac lurched downwards.
Meredith Saldana
caught the crazy flight vector developing and datavised a request into the tactical
situation computer for confirmation. The vector was recomputed and verified.
Half of the squadron’s frigates would be unable to produce a nine-gee thrust.
“Who’s that idiot?” he asked in reflex.
“Lady Macbeth,
sir,” Lieutenant Franz Grese said. “None of the others have triple-fusion
drives.”
“Well, if they all
suicide on us I shall be a very happy man.”
It wasn’t looking
good. He had already changed the squadron’s operational orbit from one thousand
kilometres to two thousand three hundred, which would give them a superior
look-down shoot-down position—but only if the mercenary ships stayed put.
Injection was in ninety seconds. Combat wasps were being launched at a
prodigious rate from the mercenary fleet. Intelligence and tactics programs
couldn’t say which were defensive and who was attacking whom. Each of his
squadron’s ships had launched a defence cluster salvo.
One of the voidhawks
exploded with appalling savagery, and the victorious blackhawk skirted its
roiling debris plume to vanish into a wormhole interstice.
“Who?” he asked
Rhoecus.
“Ericra, but
they saw the combat-wasp barrage approaching. Ilex has their memory
patterns safe.”
Even now, after all
the truths he had seen in his cosmopolitan life, Meredith felt the old twang of
prejudice. Upon death, souls departed this life for ever. It was the Christian
way. They were not to be ensnared in a mockery of God’s living creatures.
You can leave the
Kingdom, he acknowledged jadedly, but it never leaves you.
Go in peace, he prayed silently for the dead Edenists. Wherever
you roam.
On a more pertinent
level he was down to six voidhawks.
“Combat wasps have
locked on to the Gemal, sir,” Clarke Lowie reported.
The gee force on the
bridge was reducing rapidly as the Arikara slid into orbit.
Thank Christ for small
mercies, Meredith thought. “Commander Kroeber, squadron to engage all combat
wasps launched by the mercenary fleet. We’ll sort out who’s friendly and who
isn’t when events become a little less immediate.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
Arikara trembled as a salvo was fired.
“Issue a blanket order
for all mercenary starships to cease acceleration and evasive manoeuvres as
soon as the combat wasps have been cleared. Failure to comply will result in
naval fire.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
When the Lady Mac reached
one hundred kilometres’ altitude Joshua withdrew all but five sensor clusters.
Wyman’s fjord-etched coastline was directly below. Three hundred kilometres
overhead, the two combat-wasp swarms were firing a fusillade of kinetic
missiles and coherent radiation at each other. They clashed at a closing speed
of over seventy kilometres per second. A patch of sky burst into pure white
atomic fury, bringing a transient dawn to the arctic continent’s month-long
night underneath.
Eleven submunitions
broke through to descend on the Lady Macbeth with cybernetic mayhem in
their silicon brains. Two of them were one-shot gamma pulsers. They tracked the
hurtling starship as it buffeted its way through the upper atmosphere, then
discharged the energy in their electron matrices with one swift burst. The
resulting gamma-ray beam lasted for a quarter of a second.
A sheath of ions had
already built up around the Lady Macbeth’s hull, a tangerine florescence
that radiated away from the forward fuselage in hypersonic ripples. But they
were swiftly lost against the incandescent streams of energized helium emerging
from the fusion tubes. The stratosphere reeled from the unrestrained tumult of
the starship’s passage. Her exhaust stretched out over a hundred and fifty
kilometres behind her, evanescing into titanic electrical storms which lashed
the sharp icy steppes seventy-five kilometres below with a vigour that
threatened to split the glaciers open to the bedrock. Insubstantial green and
scarlet borealis spectres cavorted over the ice-encrusted continent in a
display which rivalled the bands over the Juliffe in scale.
“Breakthrough!” Warlow
cried.
Systems schematics
filled Joshua’s mind, laced with red symbols. The hull’s molecular-binding
generators, already labouring with the burden imposed by the ion sheath, had
overloaded in half a dozen places as the gamma pulses drilled into the
monobonded silicon.
He switched back to
the flight management display. The thrust from one of the fusion tubes was
reducing. “Any physical violation?” The thought of needles of blazing
atmospheric gases searing in over the delicate modules and tanks at this
velocity was terrifying. Neural nanonics effused an adrenalin antidote into his
bloodstream.
“Negative, it’s all
energy seepage. But there’s some heavy component damage. Losing power from
generator two, and I’ve got cryogenic leakages.”
“Compensate, then,
just keep us functional. We’ll be through the atmosphere in another twenty
seconds.”
Sarha was already
datavising a comprehensive list of instructions into the flight computer,
closing pipes and tanks, isolating damaged sub-components, pumping vaporized
coolant fluid from the malfunctioning generator into emergency dump stores.
Warlow began to help her, prioritizing the power circuits.
“Three nodes are out,
Joshua,” Dahybi reported.
“Irrelevant.” He took
the starship down to sixty kilometres.
The nine remaining
kinetic missile drones followed. They were, as Joshua said, intended for deep
space operation: basically a sensor cluster riding on top of fuel tanks and a
drive unit. There was no streamlining, no outer fuselage; in a vacuum there was
no need for such refinements. All they had to do was collide with their victim,
mass and velocity would obey Newton’s equations and combine to complete the task.
But now they were flying through the mesosphere, a medium implacably alien and
hostile. Ionization started to accumulate around their blunt circular sensor
heads as the gas thickened, turning to long tongues of violet and yellow flame
which licked back along the body. Sensors burnt away in seconds, exposing the
guidance electronics to the radiant incoming molecules. Blinded, crippled,
subject to intolerable heat and friction pressures, the kinetic drones
detonated in garish starburst splendour twenty kilometres above the Lady
Macbeth.
The Arikara’s
tactical situation display showed their vectors wink out almost simultaneously.
“Very smart,” Meredith said grudgingly. It took a hell of a nerve to pilot a
starship like that—nerve and egomaniacal self-confidence. I doubt I would have
that much gumption.
“Stand by. Evasive
manoeuvring,” Commander Kroeber said.
And Meredith had no
more time to reflect on the singular antics of Joshua Calvert. Punishing
gravity returned abruptly to the flagship’s bridge. A third salvo of combat
wasps leaped out of their launch-tubes.
Lady Macbeth soared out of the mesosphere, throwing off her
dangerous cloak of glowing molecules. Behind her, Wyman’s ice-fields glimmered
under eerie showers of ethereal light. Combat-sensor clusters rose out of their
hull recesses on short stalks, their golden-lensed optical scanners searching
round.
“We’re in the clear.
Thank you, sweet Jesus.” Joshua reduced the thrust from the fusion drives until
it was a merely uncomfortable three gees. Their trajectory was taking them
straight away from the planet at a high inclination. There were no combat wasps
within four thousand kilometres. I knew the old girl could do it. “Told
you so,” he sang at the top of his voice.
“Awesome,” Ashly said,
and meant it.
On the couch next to
Joshua, Melvyn shook his head in dazed admiration despite the gee force.
“Thanks, Joshua,”
Sarha said gently.
“My pleasure. Now,
damage assessments please. Dahybi, can we jump?”
“I’ll need time to run
more diagnostics. But even if we can jump it isn’t going to be far. Those three
nodes were physically wrecked by the gamma pulses. Our energy patterns will
have to be recalculated. Ideally, we need to replace the nodes first.”
“We’re only carrying
two spares. I’m not made of money. Dad always jumped with nodes damaged and—”
“Don’t,” Sarha
pleaded. “Just for once, Joshua. Let’s deal with the present, OK?”
“Somebody’s jumped
outsystem,” Melvyn said. “The grav-detector satellites registered at least two
distortions while we were performing our dodo impersonation, I think there may
have been a wormhole interstice opened as well. I can’t tell for sure, half of
the satellites have dropped out.”
“There is no jamming
from the voidhawks any more,” Dahybi said.
“OK, great. Warlow,
Sarha, how are our systems coping?”
“Number two
generator’s out,” Warlow said. “I’ve shut it down. It took the main strike from
the gamma rays. Lucky really, most of the energy was absorbed by its casing.
We’ll have to dump it when we dock, it’s got a half-life longer than some
geological eras now.”
“And I’d like you to
stop using the number one fusion-drive tube,” Sarha said. “The injection
ionizers are damaged. Other than that, nothing serious, we’ve got some leaks
and some component glitches. But none of the life-support capsules were
breached, and our environmental-maintenance equipment is fully functional.”
“Got another jumper,”
Melvyn called out.
Joshua reduced thrust
to one gee, cutting drive tube one altogether, then accessed the sensors.
“Jesus, will you look at that?”
Lalonde had acquired
its own ring, gloriously radiant stripes of fusion fire twining together to
form a platinum amulet of immense complexity. Over five hundred combat wasps
were in flight, and thousands of submunitions wove convoluted trajectories.
Starships initiated high-gee evasive manoeuvres. Nuclear explosions blossomed.
The Lady Macbeth’s
magnetic and electromagnetic sensors were recording impulses nearly off the
scale. It was a radiative inferno.
“Two more wormhole
interstices opening,” Melvyn said. “Our bitek comrades are leaving in droves.”
“I think we’ll join
them,” Joshua said. Just for once in her life, Sarha might be right, he
conceded. It was the now which counted. Lady Mac was already two
thousand kilometres in altitude, and rising steeply from the pole; he shifted
their inclination again, carrying them further north of the ecliptic and away
from the conflict raging above the planet’s equatorial zones. Another three
thousand kilometres and they would be out of the influence of Lalonde’s gravity
field, and free to jump. He made a mental note to travel an additional five
hundred klicks—no point in stressing the nodes, given their state. About a
hundred seconds at their current acceleration. “Dahybi, how is the patterning
coming?”
“Reprogramming.
Another two minutes. You really don’t want to rush me with this one, Joshua.”
“Fine, the further we
are from the gravity field the better.”
“What about the
mercs?” Ashly said. It wasn’t loud, but his level voice carried the bridge
easily.
Joshua banished the
display showing him possible jump coordinates. He turned his head and glared at
the pilot. Why was there always one awkward bastard? “We can’t! Jesus, they’re
killing each other back there.”
“I promised them,
Joshua. If they were alive I said I would go down and pick them up. And you
said something similar in your message.”
“We’ll come back.”
“Not in this ship, not
in a week. If we dock at a port, it’ll take a month to refit. That’s without
any hassle from the navy. They won’t be alive in two days, not down there.”
“The navy said they’d
pick up any survivors.”
“You mean that same
navy which right now is shooting at our former colleagues?”
“Jesus!”
“There isn’t going to
be a combat wasp left in thirty minutes,” the pilot said reasonably. “Not at
the rate they’re expending them. All we have to do is sit tight for a couple of
hours out here.”
Instinct pushed
Joshua, repelled him from Lalonde and the red cloud bands. “No,” he
said. “I’m sorry, Ashly, but no. This is too big for us.” The coordinate
display flipped up in his mind.
Ashly looked
desperately round the bridge for an ally. His eyes found Sarha’s guilty
expression.
She let out an
exasperated sigh. “Joshua?”
“Now what!”
“We should jump to
Murora.”
“Where?” His almanac
file produced the answer, Murora was the largest gas giant in the Lalonde
system. “Oh.”
“Makes sense,” she
said. “There’s even an Edenist station in orbit to supervise their new habitat’s
growth. We can dock there and replace the failed nodes with our spares. Then we
can jump back here in a day or so and do a fast fly-by. If we get an answer
from the mercs, and the navy doesn’t shoot us on sight, Ashly can go down to
pick them up. If not, we just head straight back to Tranquillity.”
“Dahybi, what do you
think?” Joshua asked curtly. Most of his anger was directed at himself; he
should have thought of Murora as an alternative destination.
“Gets my vote,” the
node specialist said. “I really don’t want to try an interstellar jump unless
we absolutely have to.”
“Anybody else object?
No? OK, nice idea, Sarha.” For the third time, the jump coordinate display
appeared in his mind. He computed a vector to align the Lady Mac on the
gas giant, eight hundred and fifty-seven million kilometres distant.
Ashly blew Sarha a
kiss across the bridge. She grinned back.
Lady Macbeth’s two remaining fusion drives powered down.
Ion thrusters matched her course to the Murora jump coordinate with tiny nudges.
Joshua fired a last coded message at the geostationary communications
satellites, then the dish antenna and various sensor clusters started to sink
down into their jump recesses.
“Dahybi?” Joshua
asked.
“I’ve programmed in
the new patterns. Look at it this way, if they don’t work, we’ll never know.”
“Fucking wonderful.”
He ordered the flight computer to initiate the jump.
Two kinetic missiles
hammered into the frigate Neanthe, almost severing it in half. When the
venting deuterium and glowing debris cleared, Arikara’s sensors observed
Neanthe’s four life-support capsules spinning rapidly. Still intact.
Kinetic missiles found two of them while a one-shot pulser discharged eighty
kilometres away, stabbing another with a beam of coherent gamma radiation.
Admiral Saldana
clenched his teeth in helpless fury. The battle had rapidly escalated out of
all control, or even sanity. All the mercenary ships had fired salvos of combat
wasps, there was simply no way of telling which were programmed to attack ships
(or which ships) and which were for defence.
The tactical situation
computer estimated over six hundred had now been launched. But communications
were poor even with the dedicated satellites, and sensor data was degraded by
the vast amount of electronic warfare signals emitted by everybody’s combat
wasps. One of the bridge ratings had said they’d be better off with a
periscope.
When it came, the
explosion was intense enough to outshine the combined photonic output of the
six hundred-plus fusion drives whirling round above Lalonde. An unblemished
radiation nimbus expanded outwards at a quarter of the speed of light,
engulfing starships, combat wasps, submunitions, and observation satellites
with complete dispassion; hiding their own detonation behind a shell of
scintillating molecules. When it was five hundred kilometres in diameter it
began to thin, swirling with secondary colours like a solar soap bubble. It was
three thousand kilometres ahead of the Arikara, yet it was potent enough
to burn out every one of the sensors which the flagship had orientated on that
sector of space.
“What the hell was
that?” Meredith asked. The fear was there again, as always. Antimatter.
Seven gees slammed him
down in his couch as the starship accelerated away from the planet and the
dwindling explosion.
Clark Lowie and Rhys
Hinnels reviewed the patchy tactical situation data leading up to the
explosion. “It was one of their starships which imploded, sir,” Clarke Lowie
said after a minute’s consultation. “The patterning nodes were activated.”
“But it was only three
thousand kilometres above Lalonde.”
“Yes, sir. They must
have known that. But they took out the Shukyo and the Bellah. I’d
say it was deliberate.”
“Suicide?”
“Looks that way, sir.”
Five ships. He had
lost five ships, and God knows how much damage inflicted on the rest of them.
Mission elapsed time was twenty-three minutes, and most of that had been spent
flying into orbit from the emergence point.
“Commander Kroeber,
withdraw all squadron ships from orbit immediately. Tell them to rendezvous at
the jump coordinate for Cadiz.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
A direct repudiation
of the First Admiral’s orders, but there was no mission left, not any more. And
he could save some crews by retreating now. He had that satisfaction, for
himself.
The gravity plane
shifted slightly as the Arikara came round onto its new vector, then
reduced to five gees. Another salvo of combat wasps was fired as enemy drones
curved round to intercept them.
Madness. Utter
madness.
The river was one of
the multitude of smaller unnamed tributaries that covered the south-western
region of the colossal Juliffe basin. Its roots were the streams wandering
round the long knolls which made up the land away to the south of Durringham,
merging and splitting a dozen times until finally becoming a single steadfast
river two hundred kilometres from the Juliffe itself.
At the time the
spaceplanes brought down the mercenary scout teams there was still a
respectable current running through it, the deflected rains hadn’t yet begun to
affect the flow of water. In any case, the lakes and swamps which accounted for
a third of its length formed a considerable reservoir, capable of sustaining
the level for months.
The snowlilies, too,
were relatively unaffected. The only difference the red cloud made was to
extend the period it took for the aquatic leaves to ripen and break free of
their stems. But where it ran through the thickest jungle that made up the
majority of the Juliffe basin, the snowlilies seemed almost as numerous as
always. Certainly they managed to cover the river’s thirty-metre width, even if
they weren’t layered two or three deep as they had been in previous seasons.
Where the tributary
ran through a quiet section of deepest jungle, one of the snowlilies five
metres from the bank bulged up near the centre, then tore. A fist with grey
water-resistant artificial skin punched through and began to widen the tear.
Chas Paske broke the surface, and looked round.
The banks on either
side of him were steep walls made from the knotted roots of cherry oak trees.
Tall trunks straddled the summit, their white bark stained magenta from the
light filtering through the tenebrous canopy far overhead. As far as the
combat-boosted mercenary could see there was nobody around. He struck out for
the shore.
His left thigh had
been badly damaged by the white fire flung by the women who’d ambushed them. It
was one reason for diving into the river as his team fled from the spaceplane’s
landing zone. Nothing else seemed to extinguish the vile stuff.
Their shrill,
delighted laughter had reverberated through the trees as the mercenaries
crashed through the undergrowth. If he had just been granted another minute to
unload their gear, establish a perimeter defence formation, the outcome would
have been so very different. They had enjoyed it, those vixen women, that was
the terrifying part of it, calling happily to each other as the mercenaries ran
in panic. It was a game to them, exhilarating sport.
They weren’t people as
he understood. Chase Paske was neither a superstitious nor religious man. But
he knew that whatever evil had befallen Lalonde had nothing to do with Laton,
nor was it going to be solved by Terrance Smith and his rag-tag forces.
He reached the bank
and started to climb. The roots were atrociously slippery, his left leg dangled
uselessly, and his arms and back were badly burnt, debilitating the boosted
muscles. It was a slow process, but by jamming his elbows and right knee into crannies
he could lever and pull himself upwards.
The women, it
appeared, hadn’t understood the feats a boosted metabolism was capable of. He
could survive for an easy four hours underwater without taking a breath. A
useful trait when chemical and biological agents were being used.
Chas scrambled up the
last couple of metres to the top of the woody bank, and rolled into the lee of
a crooked trunk. Only then did he start to review the bad news his neural
nanonics medical program was supplying.
The shallow flesh
burns he could ignore for now—although they would need treating eventually.
Almost half of his outer thigh had been burnt away, and the dull glint of his
silicolithium femur was visible through the minced and charred muscle tissue.
Nothing short of a total rebuild was going to get his leg functioning again. He
started picking long white worm-analogues from the lairs they were burrowing
into the naked wound.
He didn’t even have
his pack with him when the women attacked. There was only his personal
equipment belt. Which was better than nothing, he thought phlegmatically. It
contained two small neural nanonic packages, which he wrapped round the top of
his thigh like an old-fashioned bandage. They didn’t cover half the length of
the wound, but they would stop poisoned blood and aboriginal bacteria from
getting into the rest of his circulatory system. The remainder of it was going
to fester, he realized grimly.
Taking stock, he had a
first aid kit, a laser pistol with two spare power magazines, a small fission-blade
knife, a hydrocarbon analyser to tell him which vegetation contained toxins his
metabolism couldn’t filter, a palm-sized thermal inducer, and five EE grenades.
He also had his guido block, a biological/chemical agent detector block, and an
electronic warfare detector block. No communications block, though, which was a
blow; he couldn’t check in with Terrance Smith to request evacuation, or even
find out if any other members of his team had survived.
Finally there was the
kiloton fusion nuke strapped to his side in its harness. A black carbotanium
sphere twenty centimetres in diameter, thoroughly innocuous looking.
Chas did nothing for
five minutes while he thought about his situation; then he began to cut strips
of wood from the cherry oaks to form a splint and a crutch.
Hidden behind its
event horizon, the singularity came into being two hundred and twenty thousand
kilometres above Murora, its intense mass density bending the course of nearby
photons and elementary particles in tight curves. It took six milliseconds to
expand from its initial subatomic size out to fifty-seven metres in diameter.
As it reached its full physical dimensions the internal stresses creating the
event horizon ceased to exist.
Lady Macbeth fell in towards the gas giant, ion thrusters
squirting out long spokes of cold blue fire to halt the slight spin caused by
venting coolant gases. Thermo-dump panels stretched wide to glow a smoky
cardinal red as they disposed of the excess thermal energy acquired during the
starship’s frantic flight through Lalonde’s polar atmosphere. Sensor clusters
swept the local environment for hazards while star trackers fixed their exact
position.
Joshua exhaled loudly,
allowing his relief to show. “Well done, Dahybi. That was good work under
pressure.”
“I’ve been in worse
situations.”
He refused to rise to
the bait. “Sarha, have you locked down those malfunctioning systems yet?”
“We’re getting there,”
she said blandly. “Give me another five minutes.”
“Sure.” After the
harsh acceleration of Lalonde orbit, free fall was superbly relaxing. Now, if
she’d just give him a massage . . .
“That was one hell of
a scrap back there,” Melvyn said.
“We’re well out of
it,” Warlow rumbled.
“Feel sorry for the
scout teams, trapped on a planet full of people who behave like that.” Melvyn
stopped and winced, then gave Joshua a cautious glance.
“She knew what she was
going down to,” Joshua said. “And I meant what I said about going back to
check.”
“Reza Malin knew what
he was about,” Ashly said. “She’ll be safe enough with him.”
“Right.” The flight
computer datavised an alarm into Joshua’s neural nanonics. He accessed the
sensor array.
Murora’s storm bands
were smears of green and blue, mottled with the usual white ammonia cyclones. A
thick whorl of ochre and bronze rings extended from the cloud tops out to a
hundred and eighty thousand kilometres, broken by two major divisions. The gas
giant boasted thirty-seven natural satellites, from a quartet of
hundred-kilometre ring-shepherds up to five moons over two thousand kilometres
in diameter; the largest, M-XI, named Keddie, had a thick nitrogen methane
atmosphere.
Aethra had been
germinated in a two hundred thousand kilometre orbit, far enough outside the
fringes of the ring to mitigate any danger of collision from stray particles.
The seed had been brought to the system in 2602 and attached to a suitable
mineral-rich asteroid; it would take thirty years to mature into a structure
capable of supporting a human population, and another twenty years to reach its
full forty-five-kilometre length. After nine years of untroubled development it
was already three and a half kilometres long.
In the same orbit, but
trailing five hundred kilometres behind the young habitat, was the supervisory
station, occupied by fifty staff (it had accommodation for a thousand). The
Edenists didn’t use bitek for such a small habitational environment; it was a
carbotanium wheel seven hundred and fifty metres in diameter, eighty metres
wide, containing three long gardens separated by blocks of richly appointed apartments.
Its hub was linked to a large non-rotating cylindrical port, grossly
under-used, but built in anticipation of the traffic which would start to
arrive once the habitat reached its median size and He3 cloud-scoop
mining began in Murora’s atmosphere. During the interim there were just two
inter-orbit vessels docked, which the station staff used to commute to Aethra
on their inspection tours.
Lady Macbeth had emerged forty thousand kilometres away from
the solitary Edenist outpost, a jump accuracy Joshua was entirely satisfied
with considering the conditions. Her sensors focused on the station in time to
see it break apart. The rim had been sliced open in several places, allowing
the atmosphere to jet out. Small thrusters were still firing in a useless
attempt to halt the ominous wobble which had developed. Optical sensors
revealed trees, bushes, and oscillating slicks of water rushing out of the long
gashes.
“Like the Ruin Ring,”
Joshua whispered painfully.
Small circular spots
on the carbotanium shell glowed crimson. The tough metal was visibly undulating
as the structure’s seesaw fluctuations increased. Then one of the cryogenic
fuel-storage tanks in the non-rotating port exploded, which triggered another
two or three tanks. It was hard to tell the exact number, the entire station
was obscured by the white vapour billowing out.
As the cloud dispersed
large sections of the wheel tumbled out of the darkening centre.
A hundred kilometres
away, two fusion drives burnt hotly against the icy starscape, heading for the
immature habitat. One of the ships was emitting a steady beat of microwaves
from its transponder.
“They’re here
already,” Melvyn said. “Bloody hell. They must have jumped before we did.”
“That is the Maranta’s
transponder code,” Warlow said without any notable inflection. “Why would
Wolfgang leave it transmitting?”
“Because he’s not the
captain any more,” Ashly said. “Look at the vectors. Neither of them is
maintaining a steady thrust. Their drives are unstable.”
“They’re going to kill
the habitat, aren’t they?” Sarha said. “Just like Laton did all those years
ago. Those bastards! It can’t hurt them, it can’t hurt anybody. What kind of
sequestration is this?”
“A bad one,” Warlow
grumbled at an almost subliminal volume. “Very bad.”
“I’m picking up
lifeboat beacons,” Melvyn said with a rush of excitement. “Two of them.
Somebody escaped.”
Joshua, who had felt
eager triumph at their successful jump to Murora and anger at the station’s
violation, was left empty, leaving his mind in an almost emotion-free state.
His crew was looking at him. Waiting. Dad never mentioned this part of
captaining a ship.
“Melvyn, Sarha;
recalibrate the injection ionizers for the number one fusion tube. Whatever
thrust we can get, please. I’m going to need it. Ashly, Warlow, get down to the
airlock deck. We won’t have much time to bring them on board, make sure they
come through as fast as possible.”
Warlow’s couch webbing
peeled back immediately. The cosmonik and the pilot went through the floor
hatch as though they were in a race.
“Dahybi, recharge the
nodes. I’ll jump outsystem as soon as we have them on board.” If we get
them on board.
“Yes, Captain.”
“Stand by for combat
gees. Again!”
On the other side of
hugely complex schematic diagrams, Sarha smiled knowingly at the hard-used
martyred tone.
Lady Macbeth’s fusion drives ignited, driving the ship
towards the twirling wreckage of the station. Thermo-dump panels hurried back
into their recesses as the gee force climbed. The starship’s sensors tracked
the two fusion drives forty thousand kilometres ahead. Joshua was wondering how
long it would take for them to spot the rescue attempt. If they use the sensors
the way they do the fusion drives they may never see us. Maranta was
only accelerating at half a gee.
Melvyn and Sarha finished
their work on fusion tube number one, and gave him control, warning it wouldn’t
last for long. Joshua brought Lady Mac up to five gees, and held her
there.
“They’re launching
combat wasps,” Dahybi said.
Joshua observed the
flight computer plotting purple vector lines. “That’s odd.” The six combat
wasps were flying around Aethra, forming a loose ring. Their drives went off
when they were two hundred kilometres from the habitat, coasting past it.
Submunitions burst out from two, and accelerated towards the slowly rotating
cylinder.
“Kinetic missiles,”
Joshua said. “What the hell are they doing?”
Bright orange
explosions rippled across the rust-red polyp surface.
“Injuring it,” Sarha
said with terse determination. “That kind of assault won’t destroy it, but
they’ll inflict a lot of harm. Almost as if they’re deliberately mutilating
it.”
“Injuring it?” Dahybi
asked. The normally composed node specialist was openly incredulous. “What for?
People injure. Animals injure. Not habitats. You can’t hurt them like you can a
mammal.”
“That’s what they’re
doing,” Sarha insisted.
“It does look that
way,” Joshua said.
The Maranta’s
drive came on again, followed a few seconds later by the second ship.
“They’ve seen us,”
Joshua said. It had taken eight minutes, which was appallingly sloppy detection
work. Lady Mac was over halfway towards the lifeboats. Less than twenty
thousand kilometres away now. The other ships were barely five hundred
kilometres distant from the squealing beacons. “This is where it gets
interesting.” He launched eight combat wasps and upped the Lady Mac’s
acceleration to seven gees. The drones shot ahead at twenty-five gees. An
answering salvo of twelve emerged from the two starships.
“Shit,” Joshua
exclaimed. “They’re running for Aethra.”
“Clever,” Melvyn said.
“We can’t use the nukes when they’re close to it.”
“No, but I can still
use the gamma pulsers for offence.” He fired off a string of coded instructions
to the combat wasps. “And it may give us the time we need to pick up the
lifeboats. None of their combat wasps are targeting them.” He thought for a
moment. “Sarha, broadcast a tight-beam warning to the lifeboats. Tell them to
deactivate their beacons now. Anyone warped enough to maim a habitat won’t
think twice about snuffing refugees.”
The first combat-wasp
conflict took place five thousand kilometres from Aethra, a ragged rosette of
plasma sprawling across six hundred kilometres. Joshua watched several
attackers come through unscathed and launched another salvo of five drones,
programming three to form a defence-shield formation. The bridge’s gravity
plane shifted sharply as he initiated an evasion manoeuvre.
The children were
crying with their voices and minds. Gaura broadcast a soothing harmonic in the
general affinity band, adding to the compulsion of the other adults. What I
need, he thought, is someone to calm me.
The lifeboat was a
sturdy cylinder ten metres long and four wide. It had no propulsion system
apart from the solid-fuel booster to fire it clear of any conceivable
emergency, and reaction thrusters to hold it stable while the refugees waited
for rescue. Like all the systems on the station it was spacious and well
equipped. There were eight seats, lockers with enough food for a fortnight, and
a month-long oxygen supply. For Edenists, even disasters would be inconvenient
rather than dangerous.
Such arrogance, he
cursed inside the confines of his own skull, such stupid blind faith in our
technological prowess.
Right now there were
fourteen adults and five children crammed inside. There hadn’t been time for
them to reach another lifeboat. With a hubris which hindsight revealed to be
quite monstrous, the disasters which the designers anticipated had all been
natural. Even a meteorite strike would leave most of the wheel intact, and
evacuation would be a calm rational process.
What had never been
even a theoretical contingency was insane Adamist starships slicing the station
apart with lasers.
It had all happened so
fast. Now little Gatje and Haykal hugged Tiya, their mother, faces distraught
as she kept them anchored. The air was too hot, it stank of vomit. Aethra
couldn’t hide its torment over the kinetic missile attack that bit deep into
its shell from the young impressionable minds. Candre’s death convulsions as
she went through explosive decompression was still causing wintry shivers along
Gaura’s spine. The combined psychological stresses of the last fifteen minutes
was going to leave a trauma scar that would take a long time to heal even for
the well-balanced psyche of an Edenist.
And it was all his
fault. As station chief he should have taken precautions. He had known about
the civil strife on Lalonde. Yet he had done nothing.
It is not your
fault, Aethra said softly into
his mind. Who could have anticipated this?
I should have.
From the
information you had, this was not predictable.
I had enough data
from Ilex. It was chaos on the planet when they left.
These starships did
not come from Lalonde. They are mercenaries, recruited elsewhere.
I could still have
done something. Put people into apartments closer to the lifeboats. Something!
How are Candre and the others?
I have them. But
now is not a good time to begin raising my consciousness to multiplicity
status.
No. And you? How
are you?
I was angry, frightened.
Now I feel sorrow. It is a sad universe where such wanton acts can take place.
I’m sorry we
brought you into existence. You have done nothing to deserve this.
I am glad I live.
And I may yet continue to live. None of the craters is more than twenty metres
deep. I have lost a lot of nutrient fluid though, and my mineral-digestion
organs have been damaged from the shockwaves.
Gaura’s hand squeezed
the grab hoop he was holding. Fury and helplessness were alien to him, but he
felt them now with a daunting strength. The physical damage can be repaired.
It will be repaired, never doubt that. Not as long as one Edenist remains
alive.
Thank you, Gaura.
You are a fine supervisor. I am privileged to have you and your staff attend
the dawn of my intellect. And one day Gatje and Haykal shall run around in my
park. I will enjoy their laughter.
A solid beam of
intolerable white light stabbed into the lifeboat through its one small,
heavily shielded port. Space was being devastated by another hail of fusion
explosions. The children started crying again.
Through Aethra’s
much-degraded perception he saw the long white fusion exhaust of the third Adamist
starship decelerating towards them. With its tremendous velocity it had to be a
warship, but there had been no contact apart from the curt woman telling them
to switch off the beacon. Who were they? Who were the other two? Why had they
attacked Aethra?
Not knowing was
difficult for an Edenist.
You will soon be
safe, Aethra said. It widened
its broadcast to include the Edenists on both lifeboats. All of you will be
safe.
Gaura met his wife’s
frightened stubborn eyes. I love you, he said for her alone.
The blast light was
fading. He looked out of the port, his mind welcoming inquisitive contacts,
showing the children their solidly real rescuer approaching.
Whoever the pilot was,
he was coming very close. And moving far too fast.
Space directly outside
the lifeboat was filled with the brilliant fusion exhaust. Gaura flinched,
jerking back from the port. It’s going to hit!
There were screams
behind him. Then the exhaust vanished, and a huge spherical starship was a
hundred metres away, small sensor clusters sticking out of its dark silicon
hull like metallized insect antenna. Its equatorial ion thrusters exhaled
fountains of sparkling blue ions, halting its minute drift.
Bloody hell! It was a collective sentiment from the adults.
The starship rolled
towards the lifeboat as though there was a solid surface below it. And its
extended airlock tube was suddenly coming round to clang against the hatch.
Gaura took a moment to
recover his poise. A voidhawk would be very hard put to match that display of
precision manoeuvring.
The lifeboat’s bitek
processors reported the short-range inter-ship channel was picking up a
transmission.
“You people in the
lifeboat, as soon as the hatch opens we want you through the tube and into the
lounge,” commanded the female voice they’d heard earlier. “Make it fast! We’re
running out of combat wasps and we’ve got to pick your friends up as well.”
The hatch seal popped
and it swung back. Little Gatje squealed in alarm as one of the biggest
cosmoniks Gaura had ever seen floated in the airlock tube.
It’s all right, he told his dismayed daughter. He’s a
. . . friend. Really.
Gatje clutched at the
fabric of her mother’s suit. Promise, Daddy?
“Shift your bastard
arses through here now!” Warlow bellowed.
The children gulped
into fearful silence.
Gaura couldn’t help
it, after all the horror they’d been through to be greeted by such utter
normality, he started to laugh. I promise.
“Oh, Jesus, they’ve
cracked it,” Joshua told the three crew-members left on the bridge when Lady
Mac rendezvoused with the second lifeboat. Another combat wasp was curving
round over Aethra’s bulk, accelerating sharply. “I knew they’d work out the
numbers game eventually.” He fired a salvo of three drones in defence. It was a
terrible ratio. One which the Lady Mac could only ever lose. Three
defenders was an absolute minimum to guarantee an attacker didn’t get through.
If he could just have flown evasive manoeuvres, or attacked, or been able to
run, the numbers would have shifted back towards something near favourable.
“Jesus!” The fourth
solo combat wasp appeared from behind Aethra. He had to launch another three
from Lady Mac’s diminishing reserves.
“Fifteen left,” Sarha
said with morbid cheerfulness. The starship’s maser cannons fired at a kinetic
missile that was sixty kilometres away. Five nuclear-tipped submunitions
exploded perilously close to Aethra, reducing the latest attacking combat wasp
to its subatomic constituents.
“Did you have to tell
us that?” Melvyn said laboriously.
“You mean you didn’t
know?”
“Yes. But I could
always hope I was wrong.”
Joshua accessed a
camera on the airlock deck. Warlow had anchored himself to a stikpad beside the
airlock tube. He was grabbing people as they came out and slinging them into
the chamber. Ashly and one of the Edenist men were on a stikpad below the
ceiling hatch, catching then shoving the human projectiles up into the lounge
above.
“How many more to
come, Warlow?” Joshua datavised.
“Six. That makes
forty-one in total.”
“Wonderful. Stand by
for combat acceleration the second the airlock seals.” He sounded the audio
warning so the Edenists would know. The flight computer showed his plot of an
open-ended vector heading away from Murora. At eight gees they could outrun the
other starships easily, and jump outsystem. That kind of prolonged acceleration
would be tough on the Edenists (no sinecure for the crew, either), but it was
one hell of a lot better than staying here.
“Joshua, Gaura has
asked me to say some of the children are very young, they can’t possibly
survive high gees,” Warlow datavised. “Their bones aren’t strong enough.”
“Jesus shit! Kids? How
old? How many gees?”
“One girl was about
three. There were a couple of five-year-olds as well.”
“Fuck it!”
“What is it?” Sarha
asked, real concern darkening her sea-green eyes for the first time since
they’d entered the Lalonde system.
“We’re not going to
make it.”
The fifth solo combat
wasp appeared from behind Aethra. Seven of the Lady Mac’s submunition
drones detonated their nuclear explosives in immediate response. Joshua
launched two more.
“Even if we jump
without an alignment trajectory, from here, it’ll take us fifteen seconds to
retract the sensors and prime the nodes,” he said. “We’ll be blind for ten
seconds. It’s not long enough.”
“So run,” Sarha said.
“Fire every last combat wasp at them and go. Lady Mac can make eight
gees even with tube one down. Maranta can’t make more than four gees. We
can get clear.”
“That vector’s already
loaded. But we’ve got kids on board. Shit! Shit! Shit!” He saw the last Edenist
being yanked out of the airlock tube by Warlow. The flight computer was
shutting the hatch before his feet were fully clear.
Do something, and do
it now, Joshua Calvert, he told himself. Because you’re going to be dead in
twenty seconds if you don’t.
His mind ordered the
flight computer to start the fusion tube ignition sequence.
Another whole two
seconds to think in.
There was nothing in
the tactics programs, even Dad had never dug himself a hole this deep in the
shit.
Can’t run, can’t
fight, can’t jump out, can’t hide . . .
“Oh yes I can!” he
whooped.
The fusion drives came
on, and the Lady Mac accelerated down the vector plot that sprang from
Joshua’s mind even as the idea unrolled. Three gees, heading straight in
towards the gas giant.
“Joshua!” Dahybi
complained. “We can’t jump if you take us inward.”
“Shut up.”
Dahybi settled back
and started into a recital of a scripture he remembered from his youth. “Yes,
Captain.”
“Warlow, activate the
three zero-tau pods we’ve got in capsule C, and cram the children in. You’ve
got four minutes maximum before we start accelerating properly.”
“Right, Joshua.”
The sensors reported
that four combat wasps were pursuing them. Joshua fired an answering salvo of
five. He could hear Dahybi muttering something that sounded like a prayer, it
had the right dirge-like resonance.
“They’re coming after
us,” Melvyn said a minute later.
Maranta and its cohort were accelerating away from
Aethra.
“That’s the Gramine,”
Sarha said after studying the image. “Look at the angle its drive is deflected
through. There isn’t another starship that can do that. Wissler was always
boasting about their combat agility.”
“Just wonderful,
Sarha, thanks,” Joshua proclaimed. “You got any other morale boosters for us?”
Warlow climbed the
ladder into the lounge deck, boosted muscles lifting him easily against the
heavy gravity. Carbon composite rungs creaked in dismay under his tripled
weight. There were Edenists packed solid across the lounge floor, none of the
acceleration couches had been activated—not that there were enough anyway. They
didn’t have neural nanonics, the cosmonik realized. And because of it their
children whimpered and snivelled in wretched distress without any cushioning
below them.
He walked over to the
smallest girl, who was lying wide-eyed and terribly pale beside her mother.
“I’m putting her into zero-tau,” he announced shortly, and bent down. He had
plugged a pair of cargo-handling arms into his elbow sockets before coming up
the ladder, they had wide metal manipulator forks which would act as a good
cradle. The girl started crying again. “There will be none of this acceleration
in the pod. Explain to her. She must not squirm when I pick her up. Her spine
will break.”
Be brave, Tiya told her daughter. He will take you to
a safe place where you won’t hurt so.
He’s horrible, Gatje replied as the metal prongs slid
underneath her.
You will be all
right, Gaura said, reinforcing
the pacific mental subliminal Tiya was radiating.
Warlow took care to
keep Gatje’s spine level, supporting her head with one set of forks while the
other three arms were positioned under her torso and legs. He lifted gingerly.
“Can I help?” Gaura
asked, levering himself onto his elbows. His neck felt as though it was being
slowly compressed in a hydraulic vice.
“No. You are too
weak.” Warlow clumped out of the lounge, an outlandish faerie-legend figure
walking amongst the prone hurting bodies with a grace completely at variance with
his cumbersome appearance.
There were seven
children under ten years old. It took him nearly five minutes to shift them
from the lounge to the zero-tau pods. His neural nanonics monitored their
flight on a secondary level. The attacking starships were matching Lady Mac’s
three-gee acceleration. Combat-wasp submunitions produced a continual astral
fire of plasma between them.
Lady Mac swept over the fringes of the ring, two
thousand kilometres above the ecliptic as Warlow lowered the last child into
the zero-tau pod.
“Thank Christ for
that,” Joshua said when the pod was enveloped by the black field. “OK, people,
stand by for high acceleration.”
Lady Mac’s thrust increased to seven gees, tormenting
the Edenists in the lounge still further. For all the stamina of their geneered
bodies they had never been supplemented to withstand the onerous burden of
combat spaceflight.
Maranta and Gramine began to fall behind.
Sensors showed three more combat wasps eating up the distance.
“Jesus, how many of
the fucking things have they got left?” Joshua asked as he launched four of the
Lady Mac’s remaining six drones in response.
“I estimate ten,”
Melvyn datavised. “Possibly more.”
“Wonderful.” Joshua
angled the Lady Mac down sharply towards the rings.
The slow moving pack
of dusty ice chunks reflected an unaccustomed radiance as the three starships
streaked past. After millennia of stasis, stirred only by the slow heartbeat of
the gas giant’s magnetosphere, the ring’s micrometre dust was becoming aroused
by the backwash of electromagnetic pulses from the fusion bombs exploding above
it. Dark snowflake-crystal patterns rippled elegantly over its surface. The
temperature rose by several fractions of a degree, breaking up the unique and
fantastically delicate valency bonds between disparate atoms which free fall
and frigidity had established. Behind the starships, the rings quivered like a
choppy sea before the storm was unleashed.
Those on board the Lady
Macbeth able to receive the sensor images watched with numbed fascination
as the ring particles grew larger, changing from a grainy mist to a solid plain
of drifting mud-yellow boulders. It took up half of the image; they were close
enough now to make it seem like the floor of the universe.
The penultimate combat
wasp darted out of the Lady Macbeth’s launch-tubes. Submunitions ejected
almost at once, scattering like a shoal of startled fish. A hundred kilometres
behind her, twenty-seven fusion bombs arrayed in an ammonite maculation
detonated simultaneously, throwing up a temporary visual and electronic
barrier. She turned, unseen by her pursuers, triple drive exhausts scoring vast
arcs across the stars. Then the three barbs of superenergized helium were
searing into the ice and rock of the ring. No physical structure was capable of
withstanding that starcore temperature. The agitated surface cratered and
geysered as though a depth charge had been set off far below.
Lady Macbeth dived straight into the rings, decelerating at
eleven gees.
Chapter 10
The watchers were
there when Alkad Mzu arrived at the shoreline of Tranquillity’s circumfluous
salt-water sea. As always they remained several hundred metres behind,
innocuous fellow hikers enjoying the balmy evening, even a couple on horses
trekking along the wilder paths of the habitat. She counted eight of them as
she walked along the top of the steep rocky escarpment to the path which led
down to the beach. This cove was one of the remoter stretches of the northern
shoreline; a broad curve of silver-white sand two kilometres long, with jutting
headlands of polyp-rock cliffs. Several small islands were included within the
bay’s sweeping embrace, tenanted by willowy trees and a fur of colourful wild
flowers. A river emptied over the escarpment two hundred metres from the path
where she stood, producing a foaming waterfall which fell into a rock pool
before draining away over the sands. Overhead, the giant habitat’s light-tube
had languished to an apricot ember strung between its endcap hubs. Vitric water
caught the final rays to produce a soft-focus copper shimmer across the
wavelets.
Alkad picked her way
carefully along the shingle-strewn path. An accident now would be the ultimate
irony, she thought. There was the familiar nagging ache in her left leg,
exacerbated by the rough incline.
Her retinal implants
located a pair of adolescent lovers in the dunes at the far end of the beach.
Craving solitude amid the deepening shadows, their dark entwined bodies were
oblivious to the world, and nearly invisible. The girl’s baby-blonde hair
provided a rich contrast to her ebony skin, while the boy reminded Alkad of
Peter as he stroked and caressed his willing partner. An omen, though Alkad Mzu
no longer really believed in deities.
She reached the warm,
dry sands and adjusted the straps of her lightweight backpack. It was the one
she had brought with her to the habitat twenty-six years ago; it contained the
cagoule and flask and first aid kit which she carried unfailingly on every
ramble through the interior. By now the routine of her hike was scribed in stone.
If she hadn’t worn it, the Intelligence agencies would have been suspicious.
Alkad cut across the
dunes at an angle, aiming for the middle of the beach, her feet leaving light
imprints in the powdery sand. Three watchers made their way down the path behind
her, the rest carried on walking along the top of the escarpment. And—a recent
development, this—a couple of Tranquillity serjeants stood impassively at the
foot of the escarpment beside the waterfall. She only saw them against the
craggy polyp because of their infrared emission. They must have been positioned
there in anticipation of her route.
It wasn’t entirely
unexpected. Tranquillity would have informed Ione Saldana about all those
agency-teasing meetings with starship captains. The girl was erring on the side
of caution, which was quite acceptable. She did have the rest of the population
to think about, after all.
Alkad peered ahead,
out over the huge grey valley of water to the southern shore, searching. There,
to the right, twenty degrees up the curve. The Laymil project campus was a
unique splash of opal light on the darkened terraces of the southern endcap.
Such a shame, really, she thought with a tinge of regret. The work had been an
interesting challenge, interpreting and extrapolating xenoc technology from
mere fragments of clues. She had made friends there, and progress. And now the
whole campus was animated with the discovery of the Laymil sensorium memories
that young scavenger had found. It was an exciting time to be a project
researcher, full of promise and reward.
In another life she
could easily have devoted herself to it.
Alkad reached the
water’s edge as the light-tube cooled to a smirched platinum. Ripples sighed
contentedly against the sand. Tranquillity really was a premium place to live.
She shrugged out of her backpack, then touched the seal on her boots and
started to pull them off.
Samuel, the Edenist
Intelligence operative, was six metres from the foot of the scarp path when he
saw the lone figure by the water bend over to take her boots off. That wasn’t
part of the humdrum formula which governed Mzu’s activities. He hurried after
Pauline Webb, the CNIS second lieutenant, who had reached the beach ahead of
him. She dithered in the grove of palm trees which huddled along the base of
the escarpment, debating whether to break cover and walk openly on the sands.
“It looks like she’s
going for a swim,” he said.
Pauline gave him a
cursory nod. The CNIS and the Edenists cooperated to a reasonable degree in
their observation.
“At night?” she said.
“By herself?”
“The doctor is a
solitary soul, but I concede this isn’t the most sensible thing she’s ever
done.” Samuel was thinking back to that morning when the news of Omuta’s
sanctions being lifted had appeared in the AV projection at Glover’s
restaurant.
“So what do we do?”
Monica Foulkes, the
ESA operative, caught up with them. She increased the magnification factor of
her retinal implants just as Alkad Mzu pulled her sweatshirt off over her head.
“I don’t know what you two are panicking over. Nobody as smart as Dr Mzu would
choose drowning as a method of suicide. It’s too prolonged.”
“Maybe she is just
going for a quick swim,” Pauline suggested, without much hope. “It’s a pleasant
enough evening.”
Samuel kept watching
Mzu. Now her boots and clothes were off she was removing the contents of her
backpack and dropping them on the sand. It was the casual way she did it which
bothered him; as if she was without a care. “I somehow doubt it.”
“We’re going to look
particularly stupid charging over there to rescue her if all she’s doing is
taking a dip to cool off,” Monica groused.
The middle-aged
Edenist’s lips pursed in amusement. “You think we don’t look stupid anyway?”
She scowled, and
ignored him.
“Does anyone have any
relevant contingency orders?” Pauline asked.
“If she wants to drown
herself, then I say let her,” Monica said. “Problem solved at long last. We can
all pack up and go home then.”
“I might have known
you’d take that attitude.”
“Well, I’m not
swimming after her if she gets into trouble.”
“You wouldn’t have
to,” Samuel said, without shifting his gaze. “Tranquillity has affinity-bonded
dolphins. They’ll assist any swimmers that get into difficulties.”
“Hoo-bloody-rah,”
Monica said. “Then we can have another twenty years of worrying about who the
daft old biddy will talk to and what she’ll say.”
Alkad datavised a code
to the processor in her empty backpack. The seal around the bottom opened, and
the composite curled up revealing the hidden storage space. She reached in to
remove the programmable silicon spacesuit which had lain there undisturbed for
twenty-six years.
Ione, Tranquillity said urgently. We have a
problem developing.
“Excuse me,” Ione said
to her cocktail party guests. They were members of the Tranquillity Banking
Regulatory Council, invited to discuss the habitat’s falling revenue which the
massive decrease in starship movements was causing. Something needed to be done
to halt the stock market’s wilder fluctuations, so she had thought an informal
party was the best way of handling it. She turned instinctively to face her
apartment’s window wall and the shoals of yellow and green fish nosing round
the fan of light it threw across the dusky sand. What?
It’s Alkad Mzu.
Look.
The image fizzed up
into her mind.
Samuel frowned as Mzu
drew some kind of object from deep inside her backpack. It looked ridiculously
like a football, but with wings attached. Even with his retinal implants on
full magnification he couldn’t quite make it out. “What is that?”
Mzu fastened the
collar round her neck, and bit down on the nozzle of the respirator tube. She
datavised an activation code into the suit’s control processor. The black ball
flattened itself against her upper chest and started to flow over her skin.
Both the other
Intelligence operatives turned to look at the sharpness in Samuel’s voice. The
two serjeants began to walk forwards over the beach.
Ione! Tranquillity’s thoughts rang with surprise,
turning to alarm. I can sense a gravitonic-distortion zone building.
So? she asked. Every starship emerging above
Mirchusko registered in the habitat’s mass-sensitive organs. There was no
requirement for the usual network of strategic warning grav-distortion-detector
satellites which guarded ordinary asteroid settlements and planets,
Tranquillity’s perception of local space was unrivalled, making threat response
a near-instantaneous affair. Is the starship emerging too close? Arm the
strategic-defence platforms.
No use. It’s—
At first Samuel
mistook it for a shadow cast by an evening cloud. There was still enough pearly
radiance coming from the light-tube to give the circumfluous sea a sparse
shimmer, a cloud would produce exactly that patch of darkness. But there was
only one patch of darkness; and when he glanced up the air was clear. Then the
noise began, a distant thunderclap which lasted for several seconds, then
chopped off abruptly. A brilliant star shone at the centre of the darkness,
sending long radials of frigid white light into the habitat.
Mzu was silhouetted
perfectly against the white blaze reflected off the sea, encased in the black
skin of the spacesuit, a consummate monochrome picture.
Shock immobilized
Samuel’s body for a precious second. Out of the centre of the fading star a
blackhawk came skimming silently over the sea towards Mzu; a compressed ovoid
one hundred and thirty metres long, with a horseshoe life-support section
moulded round the rear dorsal bulge. Its blue polyp hull was marbled with an
imperial-purple web.
“Jesus wept!” Pauline
said in an aghast whisper. “It jumped inside. It’s come right into the fucking
habitat!”
“Get her!” Monica
cried. “For Christ’s sake stop the bitch!” She ran forwards.
“No, stop! Come back,”
Samuel yelled. But Pauline was already charging out of the trees after the ESA
agent, boosted muscles accelerating her to a phenomenal speed. “Oh, shit.” He
started to run.
Meyer saw the small
spacesuited woman standing at the water’s edge, and Udat obligingly
angled round towards her. Tension had condensed his guts into a solid lump.
Swallowing inside a habitat, it had to be the craziest stunt in the
history of spaceflight. Yet they’d done it!
We are in, Udat observed sagely. That’s halfway.
And don’t I know
it.
WHAT ARE YOU DOING?
Tranquillity’s outraged
broadcast thundered into the blackhawk’s mind.
Meyer winced. Even Udat’s
calm thoughts fluttered.
The woman is a
political dissident being persecuted by the Kulu ESA, Meyer replied with shaky bravado. Of all
people, Ione Saldana should sympathize with that. We’re taking her where she
will be safe.
STOP IMMEDIATELY. I
WILL NOT PERMIT THIS. UDAT, SWALLOW OUT NOW. The force of the mental compulsion which the
habitat personality exerted was incredible. Meyer felt as though someone had
smashed a meat hook into his skull to pull his brain out by the roots. He
groaned, clutching at the cushioning of his acceleration couch, heart pounding
in his ears.
STOP!
“Keep going,” he
gasped. His nose started to bleed. Neural nanonics sent out a flurry of
metabolic overrides.
Alkad waded through
the shallows as the blackhawk descended, gliding fastidiously round one of the
cove’s small islands. She hadn’t grasped how big the bitek creature was. To see
that almighty bulk suspended so easily in the air was an uncanny marvel. Its
rounded nose was streaked with long frost rays as the sea’s humidity gusted
over polyp which was accustomed to the radiative chill of deep space. A huge
patch of water below the hull began to foam and churn as the distortion field
interacted with it. She suddenly felt as though the horizontal was rolling. Udat
turned through ninety degrees, and tilted sharply, bringing the portside
wing of its life-support horseshoe down towards the water. An airlock slid
open. Cherri Barnes stood inside, wearing her spacesuit. Orange silicon-fibre
straps tethered her securely to the sides of the small chamber. She threw a
rope-ladder down.
On the beach five
figures were racing over the dunes.
Ione said: Kill
her.
The serjeants pulled
laser pistols from their holsters. Alkad Mzu already had her foot on the first
rung.
Udat’s maser cannon fired.
Monica Foulkes pounded
hard across the sand, neural nanonics commands and boosted muscles meshing so
that her body ate the distance effortlessly, a hundred and fifty metres in nine
seconds. The prime order of the ESA’s Tranquillity operation was to prevent Mzu
from leaving, that took precedence over everything. It didn’t look like Monica
was going to get to the blackhawk in time, Mzu had started to claw her way up
the rocking ladder. She reviewed which of her weapon implants would have the
best chance; the trouble was most of them were designed for unobtrusive
close-range work. And that bloody Lunar SII spacesuit didn’t help. It would
have to be a microdart, and hope the tip penetrated. She was aware of the
serjeants off to her left pulling out their laser pistols.
A metre-wide column of
air fluoresced a faint violet, drawing a line from a silver bubble on the
blackhawk’s lower hull to a serjeant. The bitek servitor blew apart in an
explosion of steam and carbon granules. Fifteen metres behind it, where the
beam struck the beach, a patch of sand became a puddle of glass, glowing a
vivid rose-gold.
Over-hyped nerves sent
Monica diving for cover the instant the beam appeared. She hit the loose sand,
momentum ploughing a two and a half metre long furrow. There were two
near-simultaneous thuds behind her as Samuel and Pauline flung themselves down.
The second serjeant erupted into a black-grain mist with a loud burping sound
as the maser hit it. Monica’s mind gibbered as she waited, head buried in the sand.
At least with that power rating it’ll be quick . . .
A wind began howling
over the dunes.
Samuel raised his head
to see his worst expectation confirmed. A wormhole interstice was opening
around the nose of the blackhawk. Alkad Mzu was halfway up the rope-ladder.
You must not take
her from here, he pleaded with
the starship. You must not!
The interstice
widened, a light-devouring tunnel boring through infinity. Air streamed in.
“Hang on!” Samuel
shouted to the two women agents.
COME BACK! Tranquillity commanded.
Meyer, his mind
twinned with the blackhawk, quailed under the habitat’s furious demand. It was
too much, the storm voice had raged inside his skull for what seemed like days,
bruising his neurons with its violence. Welcome surrender beckoned—to hell with
Mzu, nothing was worth this. Then he felt local space twisting under the
immense distortion which Udat’s energy patterning cells exterted. A
pseudoabyss leading into freedom opened before him. Go, he ordered. The
cold physical blackness outside invaded his mind, plunging him into glorious
oblivion.
A small but ferocious
hurricane set Alkad spinning like a runaway propeller at the end of her
precarious silicon-fibre ladder. “Wait!” she datavised in mounting terror.
“You’re supposed to wait till I’m in the airlock.” Her digitalized vehemence
made no impression on Udat. The air buoyed her up as though she had
become weightless, swinging her round until the ladder was horizontal.
Oscillating gravity was doing terrible things to her inner ears. Screaming air
tried to tear her from the ladder. Neural nanonics pumped muscle-lock orders
into her hands and calves to reinforce her grip. She could feel ligaments
ripping. Collar sensors showed her the fuzzy rim of the wormhole interstice
sliding inexorably along the hull towards her. “No. In the name of Mary, wait!”
And then Dr Alkad Mzu was suddenly presented with every physicist’s dream
opportunity: observing the fabric of the universe from the outside.
Monica Foulkes heard
Samuel’s shouted warning and instinctively grabbed a tuft of reedy dune grass.
The wind surged with impossible strength. Gravity shifted round until the beach
was above her. Monica wailed fearfully as sand fell up into the sky. She felt
herself following it, feet pulled into the air and sliding round to point at
the interstice surrounding the blackhawk’s nose. The grass clump made an awful
slow tearing sound. Her hips and chest left the ground. Sand was blasting
directly into her face. She couldn’t see, couldn’t breathe. The grass clump
moved several centimetres. “OhdearGodpreservemeee!”
A long-fingered hand
clamped around her free wrist. The grass clump left the sand with a sharp
sucking noise, its weight wrenching her arm out towards the blackhawk. For an
eternal second Monica hung splayed in the air as the sand scudded around her.
Someone groaned with pained effort.
The wormhole
interstice closed behind Udat.
Sand, water, mangled
vegetation, and demented fish cascaded down out of the sky. Monica landed flat
on her belly, breath knocked out of her. “Oh my God,” she wheezed. When she
looked up, the haggard Edenist was crouched on his knees, panting heavily as he
clutched his wrist. “You”—the words were difficult to form in her throat—“you
held on to me.”
He threw her a nod. “I
think my wrist is broken.”
“I would have
. . .” She shuddered, then gave a foolish jittery laugh. “God, I
don’t even know your name.”
“Samuel.”
“Thank you, Samuel.”
He rolled onto his
back and sighed. “Pleasure.”
Are you all right? Tranquillity asked the Edenist.
My wrist is very
painful. She’s heavy.
Your colleagues are
approaching. Three of them are carrying medical nanonic packages in their aid
kits. They will be with you shortly.
Even after all this
time spent in Tranquillity, he couldn’t get used to the personality’s lack of
empathy. Habitats were such an essential component of Edenism. It was
disconcerting to have one treat him in this cavalier fashion. Thank you.
“I didn’t think
voidhawks and blackhawks could operate in a gravity field,” Monica said.
“They can’t,” he told
her. “This isn’t gravity, it’s centrifugal force. It’s no different to the
docking-ledges they use outside.”
“Ah, of course. Have
you ever heard of one coming inside a habitat before?”
“Never. A swallow like
that requires phenomenal accuracy. From a strictly chauvinistic point of view I
hate to say this, but I think it would be beyond most voidhawks. Even most
blackhawks, come to that. Mzu made an astute choice. This was a very well
thought out escape.”
“Twenty-six years in
the making,” Pauline said. She climbed slowly to her feet, shaking her cotton
top, which had been soaked by the falling water. A fat blue fish, half a metre
long, was thrashing frantically on the sand by her shoes. “I mean that woman
had us fooled for twenty-six goddamn years. Acting out the role of a flekhead
physics professor with all the expected neuroses and eccentricities slotting
perfectly into place. And we believed it. We patiently watched her for
twenty-six years and she behaved exactly as predicted. If my home planet had
been blown to shit, I’d behave like that. She never faltered, not once. But it
was a twenty-six-year charade. Twenty-six goddamn years! What kind of a person
can do that?”
Monica and Samuel
exchanged an anxious look.
“Someone pretty
obsessive,” he said.
“Obsessive!” Pauline’s
face darkened. She leant over to pick the big fish up, but it squirmed out of
her hands. “Keep bloody still,” she shouted at it. “Well, God help Omuta now
she’s loose in the universe again.” She finally succeeded in grabbing hold of
the fish. “You do realize that thanks to our sanctions they haven’t got a
defensive system which can even fart loudly?”
“She won’t get far,”
Monica said. “Not with this Laton scare closing down all the starship flights.”
“You hope!” Pauline
staggered off towards the waterline with her wriggling burden.
Monica clambered to
her feet and brushed the sand off her clothes, shaking it out of her hair. She
looked down at the lanky Edenist. “Dear me, CNIS entrance standards have really
gone downhill lately.”
He grinned weakly.
“Yeah. But you know she’s right about Mzu. The good doctor had us all fooled.
Clever lady. And now there’s going to be hell to pay.”
She put her hand under
his shoulder and helped him up. “I suppose so. One thing’s for certain, there’s
going to be a mad scramble to catch her. Every government is going to want her
tucked away on their own planet in order to safeguard democracy. And, my new
friend, there are some democrats in this Confederation I don’t ever want to
find her.”
“Us, for instance?”
Monica hesitated, then
gave her head a rueful shake. “No. But don’t tell my boss I said that.”
Samuel watched the two
agents on horseback galloping across the beach toward them. Right now he
couldn’t even remember which services they belonged to. Not that it mattered.
In a few hours they’d all be going their separate ways again. “Damn,
Tranquillity really was the only place for her, wasn’t it?”
“Yes. Come on, let’s
see if these two have got anything for your wrist. I think that’s Onku Noi on
the second horse. The Imperial Oshanko mob are always loaded down with
gadgets.”
According to his
neural nanonics’ timer function it was high noon. But Chas Paske wasn’t sure
how to tell any more. There hadn’t been any fluctuation in the red cloud’s
lambent emission since he started walking—hobbling, rather. The black and red
jungle remained mordantly uninviting. Every laboured step was accompanied by
the incessant hollow rolls and booms of thunder from high above.
He had managed to
splint his leg, after a fashion: five laths of cherry oak wood that stretched
from his ankle to his pelvis, lashed into place by ropy vines. The thigh wound
was still a real problem. He had bound it with leaves, but every time he looked
it seemed to be leaking capacious amounts of ichor down his shin. And it was
impossible to keep the insects out. Unlike what appeared to be every other
living creature, they hadn’t abandoned the jungle. And devoid of other targets,
they massed around him—mosquito-analogues, maggot-analogues, things with legs
and wings and pincers that had no analogue. All of them suckling at his tender
flesh. Twice now he’d changed the leaves, only to find a seething mass of tiny
black elytra underneath. Flies crawled round his skin burns as though they were
the only oases of nourishment in a barren world.
According to his
guidance block he had come two and a half kilometres in the last three hours.
It was hard going through the virgin undergrowth which lay along the side of
the river. His crutch kept getting snagged by the thick cords that foamed over
the loam. Slender low-hanging branches had a knack of catching the splint
laths.
He picked the small
wrinkled globes of abundant vine fruit as he went, chewing constantly to keep
his fluid and protein levels up. But at this rate it was going to take him
weeks to get anywhere.
Durringham was his
ultimate goal. Whatever resources and wealth existed on this misbegotten
planet, they resided in the capital. Scouting it had been his team’s mission.
He saw no reason to abandon that assignment. Sitting waiting to die in the
jungle wasn’t a serious option. Recovery and evacuation was obviously out of
the question now. So, there it was, an honourable solution; one which would
keep him occupied and motivated, and, should he achieve the impossible and make
it, might even accomplish something worthwhile. Chas Paske was going to go down
swinging.
But for all his
determination he knew that he was going to have to find an easier way to
travel. The medical program was releasing vast amounts of endocrines from his
implants, analgesic blocks had been thrown across a good twenty per cent of his
nerve fibres. Boosted metabolism or not, he couldn’t keep expending energy at
this rate.
He accessed his
guidance block and summoned up the map. There was a village called Wryde
fifteen hundred metres downstream on the other bank. According to the LDC file
it had been established nine years ago.
It would have to do.
He plucked another
elwisie fruit, and limped on. One advantage of the thunder was that no one
would hear the racket he made ploughing through the vegetation.
The light was visible
long before the first of the houses. A welcome gold-yellow nimbus shrouding the
river. Snowlilies glinted and sparkled with their true opulence. Chas heard a
bird again, the silly surprised warble of a chikrow. He lowered himself in
tricky increments, and started to slither forward on his belly.
Wryde had become a
thriving, affluent community, far beyond the norm for a stage one colony
planet. The town nestled snugly in a six-square-kilometre clearing that had
been turned over to dignified parkland. It was comprised of large houses built
from stone or brick or landcoral, all of them the kind of elegantly
sophisticated residence that a merchant or wealthy farmer would own. The main
street was a handsome tree-lined boulevard, bustling with activity: people
wandering in and out of the shops, sitting at the tables of pavement cafés.
Horse-drawn cabs moved up and down. An impressive red-brick civic hall stood at
one end, four storeys high, with an ornate central clock tower. He saw some
kind of sports field just outside the main cluster of houses. People dressed
all in white were playing a game he didn’t know while spectators picnicked
round the boundary. Close to the jungle at the back of the park, five windmills
stood alongside a lake, their huge white sails turning steadily even though
there was very little breeze. Grandiose houses lined the riverbank, lawns
extending down to the water. They all had boat-houses or small jetties;
rowing-boats and sailing dinghies were moored securely against the sluggish
tide of snowlilies. Larger craft had been drawn up on wooden slipways.
It was the kind of
community every sane person would want to live in; small-town cosiness, big-city
stability. Even Chas, lying in muddy loam under a bush on the opposite bank,
felt the subtle attraction of the place. By simply existing it offered the
prospect of belonging to a perpetual golden age.
His retinal implants
showed him the sunny, happy faces of the citizens as they went about their
business. Scanning back and forth he couldn’t see anyone labouring in the
pristine gardens, or sweeping the streets; no people, no bitek servitors, no
mechanoids. The nearest anyone came to work was the café proprietors, and they
seemed cheerful enough, chatting and laughing with their customers. All
generals and no privates, he thought to himself. It isn’t real.
He accessed the
guidance block again. A green reference grid slipped up over his vision and he
focused on a jetty at the far end of the town’s clearing. The block calculated
its exact coordinate and integrated it into the map.
When he checked his
physiological status, the neural nanonics reported his haemoglobin reserve was
down to half an hour. His metabolism wasn’t producing it with anything like its
normal efficiency. He ran through the guidance block’s display one last time.
Half an hour ought to be enough.
Chas started to crawl
forwards again, easing himself down the muddy slope and into the water like an
arthritic crocodile.
Twenty minutes later
he judiciously parted a pair of snowlilies and let his rigid moulded face stick
up out of the water. The guidance block had functioned flawlessly, delivering
him right beside the jetty. A trim blue-painted rowing-boat was pulling gently
against its mooring two metres away. There was nobody anywhere near. He reached
up and cut the pannier with his fission blade, grabbing the end as it fell into
the water.
The boat started to
drift with the snowlilies. Chas dropped below the surface.
He waited as long as
he dared. The neural nanonics’ physiological monitor program was flashing dire
warnings of oxygen starvation into his brain before he risked surfacing.
Wryde was out of sight
round a curve, although the ordinary light which clung to its rolling parkland
was spilling round the trees on the bank. When he looked at his prize it had
changed from the well-crafted skiff he had stolen to a dilapidated punt that
was little more than a raft. Tissue-thin gunwales, which had been added in what
must have been a surreal afterthought, were crumbling like rotten cork before
his eyes. They left a wake of dark mushy dust on the snowlilies.
Chas waited a minute
to see if any other drastic changes were going to occur. He rapped experimentally
on the wood which was left. It seemed to be solid enough. So with a great deal
of effort, and coming dangerously near to capsizing, he managed to
half-clamber, half-roll into the shallow bottom of the boat.
He lay there inertly
for a long time, then ponderously raised himself onto his elbows. The boat was
drifting slowly into the bank. Long slippery ribbons of foltwine were trailing
from his splint. River beetles crawled over his thigh wound. Both the medical
nanonic packages were approaching overload trying to screen the blood from the
lower half of his leg.
“Apart from that,
fine,” he said. His grating voice provided a harsh discord to the persistent
fruity rumble of thunder.
He crushed or swept
away as many of the beetles and other insects as he could. Naturally there
weren’t any oars. He cut through the vines holding his splint together, and
used one of the laths to scull away from the bank and back into the main
current. It took a while, with the snowlilies resisting him, but when he was back
in the middle of the river the boat began to move noticeably swifter. He made
himself as comfortable as possible, and watched the tall trees go past with an
increasing sense of eagerness. A keen amateur student of military history, Chas
knew that back on old Earth they used to say all roads led to Rome. Here on
Lalonde, all the rivers led to Durringham.
A bubble of bright
white light squatted possessively over Aberdale. From the air it appeared as
though the village was sheltering below a translucent pearl dome to ward off
the perverse elements assailing the jungle. Octan circled it at a respectable
distance, wings outstretched to their full metre and a half span, riding the
thermals with fluid ease, contemptuous of gravity. The jungle underneath him
was the same discoloured maroon as the sky. But away to the south a single
narrow horizontal streak of bright green shone with compulsive intensity.
Instinctively he wanted to soar towards it, to break out into the cleanliness of
real light.
Tandem thoughts
circulated through the bird’s brain, his kindly master’s wishes directing his
flight away from the purity, and tilting his head so that he looked at the
buildings in the middle of the illuminated clearing. Enhanced retinas zoomed
in.
“It’s virtually the
same as Pamiers,” Pat Halahan said. “They’ve got maybe fifty of those fancy
houses put up. The ground is all lawns and gardens, right out to the jungle. No
sign of any fields or groves.” He leaned forwards blindly. Octan casually
curved a sepia wing-tip, altering his course by a degree. “Now that is odd.
Those trees along the riverbank look like terrestrial weeping willows. But
they’re big, twenty metres plus. Got to be thirty years old.”
“Don’t count on it,”
Kelly muttered in a surly undertone, covering subtler emotions. “In any case,
this is the wrong climate.”
“Yeah, right,” Pat
said. “Switching to infrared. Nope. Nothing. If there’s any installation
underground, Reza, then they’re dug in way deep.”
“OK,” the team
commander said reluctantly. “Have Octan scout further east.”
“If you want. But it
doesn’t look like there are any more inhabited clearings in the jungle that
way. He can see the light from Schuster quite plainly from his altitude.
There’s nothing like that eastwards.”
“They aren’t going to
advertise with hundred-kilowatt holograms, Pat.”
“Yes, sir. East it
is.”
A crucial urge to
explore the as-yet-unseen land beyond the village flowed through Octan’s
synapses, and the big eagle wheeled abruptly, reducing landscape and injured
sky to chaotic smears.
The mercenary team
were also marching eastwards, but they were on the Quallheim’s northern shore,
keeping roughly parallel to the water, a kilometre inland. They had come ashore
west of Schuster where deirar trees covered the ground as thoroughly as though
they were a plantation. Such regularity made the team’s journey much easier
than their first venture ashore when they had bypassed Pamiers.
The deirars’ thick
smooth boles rose straight up for twenty-five metres then opened into an
umbrella of vegetation that formed a near-solid roof. Together they formed a sylvestral
cathedral of enormous proportions. Everywhere the mercenaries looked they could
see sturdy jet-black bark pillars supporting the dovetailing leaf domes. On
this side of the river the usual deluge of vines and undergrowth was little
more than a wispy clutter of straggly sun-starved weeds, long stemmed and pale,
heavy with grey mould.
It was Reza who led
the march, although he had sent Theo scampering across the treetop canopy on
the lookout for hostiles. Few of them had escaped from Pamiers uninjured. He
counted himself among the fortunate, with a burn on the rear of his skull that
had scorched a couple of sensor warts down to the monobonded carbon reinforced
bone; torso scores, and a spiral weal on his right leg. Of all of them, Kelly
had borne the worst injury; but the medical packages had resuscitated her to
mobile status. She walked with a small cylindrical shoulder-bag carrying her
kit; her armour trousers protected her legs from thorns, and an olive-green
T-shirt which the red light had turned a raw umber covered the bulge of medical
packages on her side.
Pamiers had delivered
a deft lesson, bruising their pride as well as their skin. But an important
lesson, to Reza’s mind. The team had learnt to give the sequestrated population
a proper degree of respect. He wasn’t going to risk probing a village again.
Fenton and Ryall
padded tirelessly through the jungle on the southern bank, skirting Aberdale by
a wide margin. Jungle sounds filled their ears in the short gaps between the
red cloud’s perpetual thunder peals. The organic perfume of a hundred different
flowers and ripening vine fruits trickled through the muggy air, a vital living
counterpoint to the stink of dead children.
Reza nudged the hounds
further south, away from the now-foreign village, from the smell of the small
decaying bodies, its voodoo fence, away from the terrible price Lalonde’s
populace had paid under the invaders’ regime. Narrow leaves, mottled with
fungal furs, parted round the hounds’ muzzles. Chilly distaste and shame—almost
inevitably, shame—wormed its trenchant way into their minds along the affinity
bond; they shared their master’s susceptibilities, becoming as keen as he to
leave the heartbreaker calamity behind.
New scents rode the
air: sap dripping from snapped vine strands, crushed leaves, loam ruffled by
footprints and wheel tracks. The hounds raced ahead, guided by primal senses.
People had been this way recently. Some, but not many.
Reza saw a path
through the jungle. An old animal track running north–south, enlarged some time
ago—branches cut back by fission blades, bushes hacked away—only to fall into
disuse again. Almost, but not quite. Somebody still used it. Someone had used
it less than two hours ago.
Nerves and instinct
fired now, Fenton and Ryall loped through the moist grass towards the south.
After two kilometres they found a scent trail branching off into the jungle.
One person, male. His clothes smearing the leaves with sweat and cotton.
“Pat, bring Octan
back. I think we’ve got our man.”
Reza kept the snatch
mission simple. The team activated their hovercraft again when they were back
on the Quallheim east of Aberdale and started searching for a tributary fork on
the south bank. According to the map stored in his guidance block there was a
modest river which ran south through the jungle, coming from the mountains on
the far side of the savannah. It took them five minutes to find it, and the
hovercraft nosed over the clot of snowlilies guarding its mouth. Plaited tree
boughs formed an arched screen overhead.
“After the snatch
we’ll keep going up this river and out onto the savannah,” Reza said when they
had left the Quallheim behind. “I want to get him and us out from under this
bloody cloud as quickly as possible. We should be able to access the
communication satellites as well once we’re clear of it. That way if we can
extract any useful information it can be delivered straight up to Terrance
Smith.”
If Smith is still up
there, Kelly thought. She couldn’t forget what the woman in Pamiers had said
about the starships fighting. But Joshua had promised to stay and pick them up.
She gave a cynical little sniff. Oh yes, the Confederation’s Mr. Dependable
himself.
“You all right?”
Ariadne asked, raising her voice above the steady propeller whine and the
rambling thunder booms.
“My analgesic blocks
are holding,” Kelly said. “It was just the size of the burn which shocked me.”
She resisted the urge to scratch the medical nanonic packages.
“Adds a bit of spice
to the recording, a bit of drama,” Ariadne said. “Speaking of which, you’re not
going to blow us out, are you? I mean, we are the good guys.”
“Yeah. You’re the good
guys.”
“Great, always wanted
to be a sensevise star.”
Kelly accessed her
Lalonde sensevise report memory cell file and turned her head until Ariadne was
in the centre of her vision field (wishing the combat-boosted could produce
some halfway decent facial expressions). “What did you learn from the sample
you took from the houses?”
“Nowt. It was dust,
that’s all. Literally, dry loam.”
“So these ornamental
buildings are just an illusion?”
“Half and half. It
isn’t a complete fiction; they’ve moulded the loam into the shape you see and
cloaked it with an optical illusion. It’s similar to our chameleon circuit, really.”
“How do they do that?”
“No idea. The closest
human technology can come is the molecular-binding generators starships use to
strengthen their hulls. But they’re expensive, and use up a lot of power. Be
cheaper to build a house, or use programmed silicon like you suggested. Then
again”—she tilted her head back to focus her sensors on the cloudband above the
trees—“logic doesn’t seem to be playing a large part in life on Lalonde right
now.”
The hovercraft eased
in against the crumbling loam bank. Ryall was standing among the qualtook trees
above the water, waiting for them. Reza jumped ashore and ruffled the big
hound’s head. It pressed against his side in complete devotion.
“Jalal and Ariadne,
with me,” Reza said. “The rest of you stay here and keep the hovercraft ready.
Pat, monitor us through Octan. If we blow the snatch, I suggest you keep
heading south. There’s a Tyrathca farming settlement on the other side of the
savannah. It’s as good a place as any to hide out. This snatch is our last stab
at completing the mission. Don’t waste yourselves trying to gather further
Intelligence, and don’t attempt a rescue. Got that?”
“Yes, sir,” Pat said.
Jalal and Ariadne
joined Reza on the top of the bank. The big combat-adept mercenary had plugged
a gaussrifle into one elbow socket and a TIP rifle into the other; power cables
and feed tubes looped round into his backpack.
“Kelly?” Reza asked
ingenuously. “Not wanting to come with us this time?”
“It took eight
generations of cousins marrying to produce you,” she told him.
The three mercenaries
on the bank activated their chameleon circuits. Laughter floated down to the
hovercraft out of unbroken jungle.
Fenton watched the
little clearing from under the sloping lower branches of an infant gigantea.
The light here wasn’t the pure solar white of the villages, but the universal
redness had veered into a pale pink shade. A log cabin had been built in the
centre, not the kind of frame and plank arrangement favoured by the colonists
but a rugged affair that could have come straight from some Alpine meadow. A
stone chimney-stack formed almost all of one side, smoke wound drowsily
upwards. A lot of trouble had been taken to transform the clearing; undergrowth
had been trimmed back, animal hides were stretched drying over frames, timber
had been cut and stacked, a vegetable plot planted.
The man who had done
it was a well-built thirty-five-year-old with inflamed ginger hair, wearing a
thick red and blue check cotton shirt and mud-caked black denim jeans. He was
working at a sturdy table outside his front door, sawing up wood with
old-fashioned manual tools. A half-completed rocking chair stood on the ground
behind him.
Fenton moved forwards
surreptitiously out of the shaggy gigantea’s shade, but keeping to the cover
provided by bushes and smaller trees ringing the clearing. Between thunder
broadsides he could hear the regular stifled ripping sound as the man planed a
piece of wood on the table. Then the sound stopped and his shoulders stiffened.
Reza wouldn’t have
thought it possible. The man was a good fifty metres away, with his back to the
hound, and the thunder was unrelenting. Even his enhanced senses would have
difficulty picking out Fenton under such circumstances. He and the other two
mercenaries were still four hundred metres away. Nothing else for it
. . . Fenton cantered eagerly into the clearing.
The man looked round,
bushy eyebrows rising. “What’s this, then? My, you’re a roguish looking brute.”
He clicked his fingers, and Fenton trotted up to him. “Ah, you’ll not be on
your own, then. That’s a shame, a crying shame. For all of us. Your master
won’t be far behind, I’ll warrant. Will you? Came down on the spaceplanes this
morning no doubt, didn’t you? That must have been a trip and a half. Aye, well,
I’ll not be finishing my chair this afternoon then.” He sat down on a bench
beside the table, and started to change, his shirt losing colour, hair fading,
thinning, stature diminishing.
By the time Reza,
Jalal, and Ariadne walked into the clearing he had become an undistinguished
middle-aged man with brown skin and thin features, wearing an ageing LDC
one-piece jump suit. Fenton was noisily lapping up water out of a bowl at his
feet, mind radiating contentment with his new friend.
Reza walked over
cautiously. His retinal implants scanned the man from head to toe, and he
datavised the pixel sequence into his processor block for a search and identify
program. Although the earlier phantom lumberjack image had vanished, Reza saw
the roots of the man’s black hair were a dark ginger. “Afternoon,” he said, not
quite sure how to react to this display of passivity.
“Good afternoon to
you. Not that I’ve seen anything like you before, mind. Not outside a kinema,
and perhaps not even there.”
“My name is Reza
Malin. We’re part of a team employed by the LDC to find out what’s going on
down here.”
“Then with every ounce
of sincerity I own, I wish you good luck, my boy. You’re going to need it.”
An ounce was an
ancient unit of measure, Reza’s neural nanonics informed him (there was no
reference to kinema in any file). “Are you going to help me?”
“It doesn’t look to me
like I’ve got a lot of choice, now does it? Not with your merry gang and their
big, big weapons.”
“That’s true. What’s
your name?”
“My name? Well, now,
that’d be Shaun Wallace.”
“Bad move. According
to the LDC files you’re Rai Molvi, a colonist who settled Aberdale.”
The man scratched his
ear and gave Reza a bashful grin. “Ah now, you’ve got me there, Mr. Malin. I
must admit, I was indeed old Molvi. Charmless soul he is, too.”
“OK, smartarse, game
over. Come on.”
Reza led the way back
to the hovercraft, with Jalal walking right behind their captive, gaussrifle
trained on the back of his skull. A couple of minutes after they left the
clearing the pink light began to dim back into the same lustreless burgundy of
the surrounding jungle. As if immediately aware of the abandonment, playful
vennals slithered into the trees around the edge of the clearing. The more
venturesome among them dared to scamper over the grass to the cabin itself,
searching for titbits. After quarter of an hour the cabin emitted a vociferous
creak. The vennals fled en masse back into the trees.
It was another couple
of minutes before anything else happened. Then, with the tardiness of a sinking
moon, its surface texture leaked away to reveal a starkly primitive mud hut.
Tiny arid flakes moulted from the roof, resembling a sleet of miniature autumn
leaves as they scattered over the grass below; rivulets of dust trickled down
the walls. Within twenty minutes the entire edifice had dissolved like a sugar
cube in soft, warm rain.
Forget discovering
Ione Saldana existed, forget discovering Laton was still alive, this was the
ultimate interview. For this Collins would make her their premier
anchorwoman for the rest of time. For this she would be respected and lionized
across the Confederation. Kelly Tirrel was the first reporter in history to
interview the dead.
And as the dead went,
Shaun Wallace was agreeable enough. He sat on the rear bench of the lead
hovercraft, facing Kelly, and stroking Fenton the whole while. Jalal kept a
heavy-calibre gaussrifle levelled at him. On the front bench beside her, Reza
was listening intently, making the occasional comment.
The trees were
thinning out as they raced for the end of the jungle. She could see more of the
red cloudband through the black filigree of leaves overhead. It too was
becoming flimsier; there were definite fast-moving serpentine currents
straining its uniformity. Strangely, for there was no wind at ground level.
Shaun Wallace claimed
he had lived in Northern Ireland during the early twentieth century. “Terrible
times,” he said softly. “Especially for someone with my beliefs.” But he had
just shaken his head and smiled distantly when she asked what those beliefs
were. “Nothing a lady like yourself would want to know.” He died, he said, in
the mid-1920s, another martyr to the cause, another victim of English
oppression. The reason the soldiers shot him was not volunteered. He claimed he
hadn’t died alone.
“And after?” Kelly said.
“Ah, now, Miss Kelly,
afterwards is the work of the Devil.”
“You went to hell?”
“Hell is a place, so
the good priests taught me. This beyond was no place. It was dry and empty, and
it was cruel beyond physical pain. It was where you can see the living wasting
their lives, and where you drain the substance from each other.”
“Each other? You
weren’t alone?”
“There was millions of
us. Souls beyond the counting of a simple Ballymena lad like myself.”
“You say you can see
the living from the other side?”
“From the beyond, yes.
’Tis like through a foggy window. But you strive to make out what it is that’s
happening in the living world. All the time you strive. And you yearn for it,
you yearn for it so hard, lass, that you feel your heart should be bursting apart.
I saw wonders and I saw terrors, and I could touch neither.”
“How did you come
back?”
“The way was opened
for us. Something came through from this side, right here on this sodden hot
planet. I don’t know what the creature was. Nothing Earthly, though. After
that, there was no stopping us.”
“This xenoc, the
creature you say let you through; is it still here, still bringing souls back
from the beyond?”
“No, it was only here
for the first one. It vanished after that. But it was too late, the trickle was
already becoming a flood. We bring ourselves back now.”
“How?”
Shaun Wallace gave a
reluctant sigh. He was quiet for so long Kelly thought he wasn’t going to
answer; he even stopped stroking Fenton.
“The way the
devil-lovers of yesterday always tried to do it,” he said heavily. “With their
ceremonies and their pagan barbarism. And God preserve me for doing such
things, I used to think what I did before was sinful. But there’s no other
way.”
“What is the way?”
“We break the living.
We make them want to be possessed. Possession is the end of torment, you see.
Even with our power we can only open a small gateway to the beyond, enough to
show the lost souls the way back. But there has to be somewhere waiting for
them, some host. And the host has to be willing.”
“You torture them into
submission,” Reza said bluntly.
“Aye, that we do. That
we do, indeed. And, mark you, there’s no pride in me for saying it.”
“You mean, Rai Molvi
is still there? Still alive inside you?”
“Yes. But I keep his
soul locked away in a dark, safe place. I’m not sure you could call it living.”
“And this power you
mentioned.” Kelly pressed the point. “What is your power?”
“I don’t know for
sure. Magic of a kind. Though not a witch’s magic with its spells and potions.
This is a darker magic, because it’s there at a thought. So easy, it is.
Nothing like that should be given easily to a man. The temptations are too
strong.”
“Is that where the
white fire comes from?” Reza asked. “This power you have?”
“Aye, indeed it is.”
“What’s its range?”
“Ah now, Mr. Malin,
that’s difficult to say. The more of you that fling it, the further it will go.
The more impassioned you are, the stronger it will be. For a cool one such as
yourself, I doubt it would be far.”
Reza grunted and
shifted back on the bench.
“Could you demonstrate
the power for me, please?” Kelly asked. “Something I can record and show
people. Something that will make them believe what you say is true.”
“I’ve never known a
newspaper gal before. You did say you were from a newspaper, now didn’t you?”
“What newspapers
eventually became, yes.” She ran a historical search request through her neural
nanonics. “Something like the Movietone and Pathé reels at the cinema, only
with colour and feeling. Now, that demonstration?”
“I normally prefer
gals with longer hair, myself.”
Kelly ran her hand
self-consciously over her scalp. She had shaved her hair to a blueish stubble
so she could wear the armour’s shell-helmet. “I normally have longer hair,” she
said resentfully.
Shaun Wallace winked
broadly, then leant over the gunwale and scooped up one of the long-legged
insects scampering over the snowlilies. He held it up in the palm of his hand;
a long spindly tube body, dun brown, with a round bulb of a head sprouting
unpleasant pincer mandibles. It was quivering, but stayed where it was as
though glued to his skin. He brought his other hand down flat on top of it,
making a show of pressing them together, squashing the insect. Kelly’s eyes
never wavered.
When he parted his
hands the prince of butterflies was revealed, wings almost the size of his
palms, patterned in deep turquoise and topaz and silver, colours resistant to
the red light of the cloud, shining in their own right. Its wings flexed twice,
then it flew off, only to be kicked about in the air by the wash of the
hovercraft’s powerful slipstream.
“There, you see?”
Shaun Wallace said. “We don’t always destroy.”
Kelly lost sight of
the delightful apparition. “How long will it stay like that?”
“Mortality is not
something you measure out like a pint of ale, Miss Kelly. It will live its life
to the full, and that’s all that can be said.”
“He doesn’t know,”
Reza muttered curtly.
Shaun Wallace
practised a knowing, slightly condescending smile.
It was growing lighter
around the hovercraft. Up ahead, Kelly could see the wonderfully welcome glare
of pure sunlight striking emerald foliage. A colour that wasn’t red! She had
begun to believe that red was all there ever was, all there ever had been.
The hovercraft skimmed
out from under the chafed edge of the cloudband. All of the mercenaries broke
into a spontaneous cheer.
“What is that thing?”
Kelly shouted above the rebel whoops, pointing up at the cloud.
“A reflection of
ourselves, our fear.”
“What do you fear?”
“The emptiness of the
night. It reminds us too much of the beyond. We hide from it.”
“You mean you’re
making that?” she asked, scepticism warring with astonishment. “But it covers
thousands of kilometres.”
“Aye, that it does.
’Tis our will that creates it; we want shelter, so shelter we have. All of us,
Miss Kelly, even me who shuns the rest of them, we all pray for sanctuary with
every fibre of being. And it’s growing, this will of ours, spreading out to
conquer. One day soon it will cover all of this planet. But even that is only
the first chapter of salvation.”
“What’s the second?”
“To leave. To escape
the harsh gaze of this universe altogether. We’ll withdraw to a place of our
own making. A place where there is no emptiness hanging like a sword above the
land, no death to claim us. A place where your butterfly will live for ever,
Miss Kelly. Now tell me that isn’t a worthy goal, tell me that isn’t a dream
worth having.”
Reza watched the last
of the jungle’s trees go past as the hovercraft reached the savannah. The lush
green grassland seemed to unroll on either side of the river as though it was
only just coming into existence. He wasn’t really paying much attention; the
strange (supposed) Irishman was a captivating performer. “A closed universe,” he
said, and the earlier scorn was lacking.
Kelly gave him a
surprised glance. “You mean it is possible?”
“It happens thousands
of times a day. The blackhawks and voidhawks open interstices to travel through
wormholes every time they fly between stars. Technically they’re self-contained
universes.”
“Yes, but taking a
planet—”
“There are twenty
million of us,” Shaun Wallace purred smoothly. “We can do it, together, we can
pull open the portal that leads away from mortality.”
Kelly’s neural
nanonics faithfully recorded the silver chill tickling her nerves at the naked
conviction in his voice. “You’re really planning to generate a wormhole large
enough to enclose the whole of Lalonde? And keep it there?”
Shaun Wallace wagged
his finger at her. “Ah, now there you go again, Miss Kelly, putting your fine,
elegant words in my mouth. Plans, such a grand term. Generals and admirals and
kings, now they have plans. But we don’t, we have instinct. Hiding our new
world from this universe God created, that comes as naturally as breathing.” He
chuckled. “It means we can go on breathing, too. I’m sure you wouldn’t want to
stop me from doing that, would you now? Not a sweet lass like yourself.”
“No. But what about
Rai Molvi? Tell me what happens to him afterwards?”
Shaun Wallace
scratched his chin, looked round at the savannah, shifted the jump-suit fabric
round his shoulders, pulled a sardonic face.
“He stays, doesn’t
he?” Kelly said stiffly. “You won’t let him go.”
“I need the body,
miss. Real bad. Perhaps there’ll be a priest amongst us I can visit for
absolution.”
“If what you’re saying
is true,” Reza said charily, focusing an optical sensor on the cloudband
behind, “then we really don’t want to be staying here any longer than we have
to. Wallace, when is this planetary vanishing act supposed to happen?”
“You have a few days’
grace. But there are none of your starships left to sail away on. Sorry.”
“Is that why you
didn’t resist, because we can’t escape?”
“Oh, no, Mr. Malin,
you’ve got me all wrong. You see, I don’t want much to do with my fellows.
That’s why I live out in the woods, there. I prefer being on my own, I’ve had a
bucketful of their company. Seven centuries of it, to be precise.”
“So you’ll help us?”
He gathered himself up
and threw a glance over his shoulder at the second hovercraft. “I won’t hinder
you,” he announced magnanimously.
“Thank you very much.”
“Not that it will do
you much good, mind.”
“How’s that?”
“There’s not going to
be many places you can run to, I’m afraid. Quite a few of us have sailed away
already.”
“Fucking hell,” Kelly
gasped.
Shaun Wallace frowned
in disapproval. “To be sure, that’s no word for a lady to be going and using.”
Kelly made sure he was
in perfect focus. “Are you telling me that what’s happening on Lalonde is going
to happen on other planets as well?”
“Indeed I am. There’s
a lot of very anguished souls back there in the beyond. They’re all in dire
need of a clean handsome body, every one of them. Something very much like the
one you’ve got there.”
“This is occupied, to
the hilt.”
His eyes flashed with
black amusement. “So was this one, Miss Kelly.”
“And all these worlds
the possessed have gone to, are you going to try and imprison them in
wormholes?”
“That’s a funny old
word you’re using there: wormholes. Little muddy tunnels in the ground, with
casts on top to show the fishermen where they are.”
“It means chinks in
space, gaps you can fall through.”
“Does it now? Well,
then, I suppose that’s what I mean, yes. I like that, a gap in the air which
leads you through to the other side of the rainbow.”
Surreal. The word
seemed to be caught on some repeater program in Kelly’s neural nanonics,
flipping up in hologram violet over the image of a mad, dead Irishman sitting
in front of her, grinning in delight at her discomfort. Worlds snatched out of
their orbits by armies of the dead. Surreal. Surreal. Surreal.
Fenton rose growling to
his feet, fangs barred, hackles sticking up like spikes. Shaun Wallace gave the
hound an alarmed look, and Kelly’s retinas caught the minutest white static
flames twinkle over his fingertips. But Fenton swung his head round to the prow
and barked.
Jalal’s gaussrifle was
already coming round. He saw the huge creature crouched down in the long grass
at the side of the water thirty-five metres ahead of the hovercraft. The
Lalonde generalist didactic memory called it a kroclion, a plains-dwelling
carnivore which even the sayce ran from. He wasn’t surprised, the beast must
have been nearly four metres long, weighing an easy half-tonne. Its hide was a
sandy yellow, well suited to the grass, making visual identification hard
(infrared was, thankfully, a furnace flame). The head—like a terrestrial
shark—had been grafted on, all teeth and tiny killer-bright eyes.
Blue target graphics
locked on. He fired an EE round.
Everyone ducked, Kelly
jamming her hands over her ears. A dazzling explosion sent a pillar of purple
plasma and mashed soil spouting twenty metres into the air. Its vertex
flattened out, a ring of soot-choked orange flame rolling across the river. The
ululate crack was loud enough to drown out the tattoo of thunder chasing them
from the red cloud.
Kelly lifted her head
carefully.
“I think you got him,”
Theo said drily, as he steered the hovercraft away from the quaking water
sloshing round the new crater. A semicircle of grass on the bank was burning.
“They’re vicious
bastards,” Jalal protested.
“Not that one, not any
more, as anyone within five kilometres will tell you,” Ariadne said.
“And you could have
dealt with it better?”
“Forget it,” Reza
said. “We’ve got more important things to worry about.”
“You believe what this
dickhead has been telling us?” Ariadne asked, jerking a thumb at Shaun Wallace.
“Some of it,” Reza
said noncommittally.
“Why thank you, Mr.
Malin,” Shaun Wallace said. He watched the burning crater closely as the
hovercraft sped past. “Fine shooting there, Mr. Jalal. Those old kroclions, they
put the wind up me and no mistake. Old Lucifer was on form the day he made
them.”
“Shut up,” Reza said.
The one optical sensor he had left focused on the edge of the red cloud showed
him a lone tendril starting to swell out, extending along the line of the
narrow river behind them. Too slow to catch them, he estimated, but it was a
graphically disturbing demonstration that the cloud and the possessed
inhabitants were aware of the team’s presence.
He opened a channel to
his communication block and datavised a sequence of orders in. It began
scanning the sky for communication-satellite beacons. Two of the five
satellites the blackhawks had delivered into geosynchronous orbit were above
the horizon and still broadcasting. The block aimed a tight beam at one,
requesting contact with any of Terrance Smith’s fleet. No ship was left in the
command net, the satellite’s computer reported, but there was a message stored
in its memory. Reza datavised his personal code.
“This is a restricted
access message for Reza’s team,” Joshua Calvert’s voice said from the
communication block. “But I have to be sure it is you and only you receiving
it. The satellite is programmed to transmit it on a secure directional beam. If
there is any hostile within five hundred metres of you who can intercept then
do not request access. In order to access the recording, enter the name of the
person who came between me and Kelly last year.”
The tip of the cloud
tendril was a couple of kilometres away. Reza turned to face Shaun Wallace.
“Can any of your friends intercept a radio transmission?”
“Well, now, there’s
some of them living in one of the old savannah homesteads. But they’re a few
miles from here, yet. Is that more than five hundred metres?”
“Yes. Kelly, the name
please.”
She gave him a
stonefaced smile. “Aren’t you glad you didn’t leave me behind at Pamiers?”
Jalal laughed. “She
got you there, Reza.”
“Yes,” Reza said
heavily. “I’m glad we didn’t leave you behind. The name?”
Kelly opened a channel
to his communication block and datavised: “Ione Saldana.”
There was a moment’s
silence while the satellite’s carrier wave emitted a few electronic bleeps.
“Well remembered,
Kelly. OK, this is the bad news: the hijacked starships have started fighting
us and the navy. There’s a real vicious battle going on in orbit right now. Lady
Mac got clear, but we’ve taken a bit of punishment in the process. Another
story for you sometime. I’m about to jump us out to Murora. There’s an Edenist
station in orbit there, and we’re hoping to dock with it to make our repairs.
We estimate the damage can be patched up in a couple of days, after which we’ll
come back for you. Kelly, Reza, the rest of you; we’re only going to make one
fly-by. Hopefully you took my earlier advice and are now heading hell for
leather away from that bloody cloud. Keep going, and leave your communication
block scanning for my transmission. If you want to be picked up then you’ll
have to stay away from any hostiles. That’s about it, we’re battening down to
jump now. Good luck, I’ll see you in two, maybe three days.”
Kelly rested her head
in her hands. Just hearing his voice again was a fantastic tonic. And he was
alive, smart enough to elude a battle. And he was going to come back for them.
Joshua, you bloody splendid marvel. She wiped tears from her cheeks.
Shaun Wallace patted
her shoulder tenderly. “Your young man, is it?”
“Yes. Sort of.” She
sniffed, and brushed away the last of the tears in a businesslike manner.
“He sounds like a fine
boy to me.”
“He is.”
Reza datavised a
summary of events to the second hovercraft. “I’m in complete agreement with
Joshua about keeping clear of the cloud and the possessed. As of now our
original mission is over. Our priority now is just to stay alive and make sure
what information we have gets back to the Confederation authorities. We’ll keep
going up this river to the Tyrathca farmers and hope that we can hold out there
until the Lady Macbeth comes back for us.”
It was the rygar bush
which had brought the Tyrathca farmers to Lalonde.
When they were
searching for their initial backing, the LDC sent samples of Lalonde’s
aboriginal flora to both of the xenoc members of the Confederation; it was
standard practice to try and attract as wide a spectrum of support as possible
for such ventures. The Kiint, as always, declined to participate. But the
Tyrathca considered the small berries of the rygar bush a superlative delicacy.
Ripe berries could be ground up to produce a cold beverage, or mixed with sugar
to form a sticky fudge; LDC negotiators claimed it was the Tyrathcan equivalent
of chocolate. The normally cloistered xenocs were so enamoured at the prospect
of wholesale rygar cultivation they agreed to a joint colony enterprise with
their merchant organization taking a four per cent stake in the LDC. It was
only the third time since joining the Confederation that they had ever
participated in a colony, a fact which lent the hard-pressed LDC considerable
badly needed respectability. Even better for the LDC board: to a human palate the
rygar berries tasted like oily grapes, so there would never be any conflict of
interest arising.
Five years after the
dumpers had dropped out of the sky to form the nucleus of Durringham the first
batch of Tyrathcan breeder pairs arrived and settled in the foothills of the
mountain range which made up the southern border of the Juliffe basin where the
rygar bushes flourished. The LDC’s long-range economic plans foresaw both the
human and Tyrathcan settlements expanding from their respective centres until they
met at the roots of the tributaries. By the time that happened both groups
would have risen above their initial subsidence level and be prosperous enough
to trade to their mutual enrichment. But that date was still many years in the
future. The human villages furthest from Durringham were all as poor as
Aberdale and Schuster, while the Tyrathcan plantations had barely cultivated
enough rygar to fill the holds of the starships their merchants sent twice a
year. Contact had so far been minimal.
It was late afternoon,
and the savannah was already giving way to low humpbacked foothills when the
mercenary team saw their first Tyrathcan house. There was no mistaking it, a
dark cinnamon-coloured tower twenty-five metres high with slightly tapering
walls, and circular windows sealed over with ebony blisters. The design had
evolved on the abandoned Tyrathcan homeworld, Mastrit-PJ, over seventeen
thousand years ago, and was employed on every planet their arkships had
colonized right across the galaxy. They never used anything else.
This one stood like a
border sentry castle overlooking the river. Octan glided round it a couple of
times, seeing the vague outlines of fields and gardens reclaimed by grass and
small scrub bushes. Moss and weeds were growing around the inside of the roof’s
turret wall where soil and dust had drifted.
“Nothing moving,” Pat
reported to Reza. “I’d say it was deserted three or four years ago.”
They had gathered
together on the riverbank just downstream from the tower house, hovercraft
drawn up on the grass. The river was getting narrower, little more than a
stream, down to about eight metres wide, and littered with boulders which made
it virtually unnavigable. For the first time since they had landed that morning
there were no snowlilies in sight, only the broken tips of their stems trailing
limply.
“The Tyrathca do
that,” Sal Yong said. “A house is only ever used once. When the breeders die
it’s sealed up as their tomb.”
Reza consulted his
guidance block. “There’s a plantation village called Coastuc-RT six kilometres
south-east of here. The other side of that ridge,” he pointed, datavising the
map image to them. “Ariadne, can the hovercraft take it?”
She focused her
optical sensors on the rolling land which skirted the mountains. “Shouldn’t be
a problem, the grass is a lot shorter here than the savannah and there isn’t
much stone about.” When she looked west she could see another three of the dark
towers sticking out of the bleak countryside. They were all in shadow; thick
black rain-clouds were surging towards them along the side of the mountains.
The wind had freshened appreciably since they had left the jungle. Looking back
to the north she could see the red cloud over the Quallheim forging the entire
northern horizon; it was almost edge on, they had climbed steadily since
leaving it behind. The sky above it was a perfect unblemished blue.
Kelly felt the first
smattering of the drizzle on her bare arms as she clambered back into the
hovercraft. She dug into her cylindrical kitbag for a cagoule, her burnt
armour-suit jacket had been left behind in the jungle—in that state it wouldn’t
have been any use anyway. “I’m sorry,” she told Shaun Wallace as he sat beside
her. “I’ve only got the one, and the others don’t need them.”
“Ah now, don’t you go
worrying yourself over me, Miss Kelly,” he said. The jump suit he wore turned a
rich indigo, then the fabric became stiffer. He was wearing a cagoule which was
identical to the one in her hands, right down to the unobtrusive Collins logo
on the left shoulder. “There, see? Old Shaun can look after himself.”
Kelly gave him a
flustered nod (thankful her memory cell was still recording), and hurriedly
struggled into her own cagoule as the warm drizzle thickened. “What about food?”
she asked the Irishman as Theo goaded the hovercraft over the summit of the
riverbank and started off towards the Tyrathca village.
“Don’t mind if I do,
thanks. Nothing too rich mind, not for me. I likes me pleasures simple.”
She dug round in the
bag and found a bar of tarrit-flavoured chocolate. None of the mercenaries had
brought any food, with their metabolisms they could graze off the vegetation
indefinitely, potent intestinal enzymes breaking up anything with proteins and
hydrocarbons.
Shaun Wallace chewed
in silence for a minute. “That’s nice,” he said, “reminds me a little of
bilberries on a cold morning,” and he grinned.
Kelly found she was
smiling back at him.
The hovercraft moved a
lot slower over the land than on water. Cairnlike clusters of weather-smoothed
stone and sudden pinched gullies made the pilots’ task a demanding one. The
rain, which was now a solid downpour of heavy grey water, added to the
difficulty.
Pat had sent Octan
northward to avoid the worst of the deluge. Back out on the savannah it was
still dry and sunny, a buffer zone between nature and supernature. Reza
dispatched Fenton and Ryall to survey the ground ahead. Lightning began to
spear down.
“I think I preferred
the river,” Jalal said glumly.
“Ah, Mr. Jalal, buck
up now, this is nothing for Lalonde,” Shaun Wallace said. “A little shower,
that’s all. It was much worse than this before we returned from beyond.”
Jalal ignored the
casual reference to the power of the possessed; Shaun Wallace, he thought, was
playing a subtle war of nerves against them. Sowing the seeds of doubt and
despondency.
“Hold it,” Reza
datavised to Theo, and Sal Yong, who was piloting the second hovercraft.
“Deflate the skirts.”
The hovercraft sank onto
their hulls with flagging whines, crushing the sturdy grass tufts, settling at
awkward angles. Rain had reduced visibility to less than twenty-five metres
even with enhanced sight. Kelly could just make out Ryall up ahead. The hound
was shifting about uneasily in front of a big sandy-brown boulder.
Reza took off his
magazine belt, and left the TIP carbine he’d been carrying with it. He hopped
over the gunwale and started to trudge towards the restive animal. Kelly had to
wipe a slick film of water from her face. The rain was worming its way round
her cagoule hood to run down her neck. She toyed with the idea of putting on
her shell-helmet again—anything to stop this insidious clammy invasion.
Reza stopped five
metres short of the brown lump, and slowly opened his arms, rain dripping from
his grey-skinned fingers. He shouted something even Kelly’s studio-grade
audio-discrimination program couldn’t catch above the wind and rain. She
squinted, the rain suddenly chilling inside her T-shirt. The boulder rose up
smoothly on four powerful legs. Kelly gasped. Her Confederation generalist
didactic memory identified it immediately: a soldier-caste Tyrathca.
“Oh bugger,” Jalal
muttered. “They’re clan creatures, it won’t be alone.” He started to scan
around. It was hopeless in the rain, even infrared was washed out.
The soldier-caste
Tyrathca was about as big as a horse, although the legs weren’t as long. Its
head, too, was faintly equine, tilted back at a shallow angle at the end of a
thick muscular neck. There were no visible ears, or nostrils; the mouth had a
complex double-lip arrangement resembling overlapping clam shells. The sienna
hide, which Kelly had thought solid like an exoskeleton, was actually scaled,
with a short-cropped chestnut-brown mane running along its entire spine. Two
arms extended from behind the base of its neck, ending in nine-fingered
circular hands. A pair of slender antennae also protruded from its shoulder
joints, swept back along the length of its body.
Although it had a
strong animal appearance, it was holding a large very modern-looking rifle. A
broad harnesslike belt hung round its neck, with grenades and power magazines
clipped on.
It held out a
processor block, and a slim AV projection pillar telescoped out. “Turn your
vehicles around,” a synthetic voice clanged through the rain. “Humans are no
longer permitted here.”
“We need somewhere to
shelter for the night,” Reza replied. “We can’t go back north; you must have
seen the red cloud.”
“No humans.”
“Why not? We must have
somewhere to stay. Tell me, why?”
“Humans have become—”
The block gave a melodic cheep. “No direct translation available; similarity
to: elemental. Coastuc-RT has suffered damage, merchant spaceplane has
been stolen. Breeders and other castes have been killed by amok humans. You are
not permitted entry.”
“I know about the
disturbances in the human villages. I have been sent by the Lalonde Development
Corporation to try and restore order.”
“Then do that. Go to
your own race’s villages and bring order.”
“We have tried, but the
situation was beyond our capability to resolve. There has been a major invasion
of an unknown origin.” He just couldn’t bring himself to say possession. The
processor block was quiet; he guessed he was talking to a breeder, the soldier
caste were only marginally sentient—not that he’d like to go up against one. “I
would like to discuss what can be done to protect you from further attack. My
team are combat trained and well equipped, we should be able to augment
whatever defences you have.”
“Acceptable. You may
enter Coastuc-RT by yourself to view the situation. If you believe you are able
to increase our defences your team will be allowed to enter and stay.”
“Reza,” Kelly
datavised. “Ask if I can come with you, please.”
“I will need to bring
two others to assess the area around Coastuc-RT with any degree of accuracy
before nightfall,” he said out loud, then datavised: “That makes us quits now.”
“Absolutely,” she
replied.
“Two only,” the
synthetic voice agreed. “None may carry weapons. Our soldiers will provide
protection.”
“As you wish.” He
turned and walked back to the first hovercraft, feet sinking up to his ankles
in slimy puddles. The processor block AV projection pillar began to emit the
reverberative whistles and hoots which were the Tyrathcan speech. Answering
calls shrilled through the rain, causing the mercenaries to up their sensor
resolution to the maximum in a vain attempt to locate the other soldier castes.
“Ariadne, you come
with me and Kelly,” Reza said. “I’ll need someone who can review the area
properly. The rest of you wait here. We’ll try and get back before dusk. I’ll
leave Fenton and Ryall on picket duty for you.”
Two seemingly tireless
soldiers ran alongside the hovercraft all the way to the village, antennae
whipping back and forth (they were tail-analogues, helping with balance,
according to Kelly’s didactic memory). Kelly wasn’t sure whom they were
supposed to be protecting. The guns still appeared incongruous; for creatures
that had evolved during the pre-technology tribal era to fight the Tyrathcan
version of rough and tumble against enemy tribe soldiers bows and arrows would
be more suited.
When she reviewed the
entire didactic memory she found that the breeders (the only fully sentient
Tyrathca) secreted what amounted to chemical control programs in specialist
teats. A breeder would think out a sequence of orders—which plants were edible,
how to operate a specific power tool—that would be edited into a chain of
molecules by the teat gland. Once instructions were loaded in the brain of a
vassal-caste species (there were six types) they could be activated by a simple
verbal command whenever required. The chemicals were also used to educate young
breeders, making the process a natural equivalent to Adamist didactic imprints
and Edenist educational affinity lessons.
The rain was easing
off when the hovercraft cleared the crest above Coastuc-RT. Kelly looked down
on a broad, gentle valley with extensively cultivated terraces on both sides.
An area of nearly twenty square kilometres had been cleared of scrub and grass,
rebuilt into irrigated ledges, and planted with young rygar bushes. Coastuc-RT
itself sat on the floor of the valley, several hundred identical dark brown
towers regimented in concentric rings around a central park space.
Reza steered the
hovercraft onto a rough switchback track and set off down the slope. Numerous
farmer-caste Tyrathca were out tending the emerald-green bushes—pruning,
weeding, patching up the shallow drainage ditches. The farmers were slightly
smaller than the soldiers but with thicker arms, endowed with the kind of
plodding durability associated with oxen or shire-horses. They saw one or two
hunter caste skulking among the bushes, about the same size as Reza’s hounds,
but with a streamlined fury that could probably give a kroclion a nasty fright.
The escort soldiers whistled and hooted every time the hunters appeared, and
they turned away obediently.
The first signs of
damage were visible when the hovercraft reached the valley floor. Several
towers in the village’s outer ring were broken, five had been reduced to jagged
stumps sticking up out of the rubble. Scorch marks formed barbarous black
graffiti across the tower walls.
Fields on either side
of the road had been churned up by fresh craters. EE explosives, Reza guessed,
the village soldier caste had put up a good fight. The road itself had been
repaired in several places. An earth rampart had been thrown up around the
perimeter, a hundred metres from the outer turret houses. Farmers were still
working around its base, using shovels which even Sewell would have been hard
pressed to raise.
“Leave your vehicle
now,” the synthesized voice from the processor block told them when they were
twenty metres away from the barricade of raw loam.
Reza cut the fans and
codelocked the power cells. The soldiers waited until they had climbed out,
then walked them into the village.
Up close the tower houses
were utilitarian, each with four floors, their windows arranged at precise
levels. They were made by the builder caste, the largest of all the vassals,
who chewed soil and mixed it with an epoxy chemical extravasated in their mouth
ducts, producing a strong cement. It gave the walls a smooth, extruded feel, as
though the towers had come intact from some giant kiln. There were some modern
amenities, bands of solar cell panels tipped most of the turret walls; metal
water pipes lay bent and tangled among the rubble. The windows were all glazed.
Arable gardens
encircled every tower, trellises and stakes supporting the grasping yellow
confusion of native Tyrathcan vegetation. Fruit trees lined the paved roads,
huge leaves providing ample shade.
Smaller rounded silos
and workshops were spaced between the towers, each with a single semicircular
door. Carts and even small power trucks were parked outside.
“I don’t know who is
jumpier, us or them,” Kelly subvocalized into her neural nanonics memory cell.
“The Tyrathcan soldiers are clearly immensely capable, to say nothing of the
hunter caste. Yet the possessed have hurt them badly. The vassal-caste bodies
you can see half buried in the rubble of the outer towers have been left
untended in the haste to fortify Coastuc-RT. A large breach of the Tyrathcan
internment ritual, they obviously consider the threat humans present to be of
more pressing importance.
“But now we are inside
the village I can see very little activity apart from those vassals working on
the rampart. The roads are empty. No breeder has appeared. The soldiers seem
certain of their destination, leading us deeper into the village. I can now
hear a great many Tyrathca away towards the park at the centre of Coastuc-RT.
Yes, listen, a whistle that rises and falls in a slow regular beat. There must
be hundreds of them doing it in unison to achieve that effect.”
The soldiers led them
out onto one of the village’s radial roads, cutting straight down past the
tower houses into the central park. Right in the middle was a vast impossible
dull-silver edifice. At first glimpse it looked like a hundred-metre-wide disc
suspended fifty metres in the air by a central conical pillar whose tip only
just touched the ground; another, identical, cone rose from the top of the
disc. It was perfectly symmetrical, shining a lurid red-gold under the sinking
sun. Six elaborate flying buttresses arched down from the rim of the disc,
preventing the top-heavy structure from falling over.
The three humans
stared in silence at the imposing artefact. Big builder-caste Tyrathca walked
ponderously along the buttresses and over the surface of the disc. The pinnacle
of the upper cone wasn’t quite finished, showing a geodesic grid of timber
struts which a rank of builder caste clung to as they slowly covered it with
their organic cement. Another team were following them up, spraying the drying
cement with a gelatin mucus that shimmered with oil-slick marquetry until it
hardened into the distinctive silverish hue.
Kelly took the
structure in with one swift professional sweep, then focused on the park. It
had been reduced to a shallow clay quarry in the haste to extract soil for the
disc and its buttresses. This was where the Tyrathca breeders had gathered;
several thousand of them, circling round the outside of the disc. They sat on
their hindquarters in the mud, short antennae standing proud, whistling in a
long slow undulation. It sounded poignant, imploring even. Entities that had
been needlessly hurt questioning the reason, the same the galaxy over.
Kelly’s didactic
memory didn’t have any reference to a Tyrathcan religion. A more comprehensive
search program running through her neural nanonics said the Tyrathca didn’t
have a religion, and there was no explanation for the disc, either.
“If I didn’t know
better, I’d say they were at prayer,” Reza datavised.
“Could be the local
version of the town meeting,” Ariadne suggested. “Trying to decide what to do
about us wild humans.”
“They’re not talking
about anything,” Kelly said. “It’s more like a song.”
“The Tyrathca don’t
sing,” Reza replied.
“What’s that disc for?
There’s no way in at the bottom of the cone pillar, not from this side, but
it’s definitely hollow. Nothing solid like that would be able to stand up, it’s
almost like a mock-up. I can’t find any record of them ever building anything
like it before. And why build it now for Christ’s sake, when they need all the
builder caste to construct defences? Something that size has taken a hell of a
lot of effort to put up.”
He put his hand on her
shoulder. “Looks as if you’ll be able to ask in a minute.”
The soldiers halted
when they came level with the innermost ring of house towers. All of the
buildings had been sealed up, black lids capping the windows, cement slabs
erected over the door arches. Colourful flowering plants swamped their gardens.
A lone breeder was
walking towards them from the park. Male or female, Kelly couldn’t tell, not
even comparing it to the images stored in a memory cell—females were supposed
to be slightly larger. It was bigger than the soldiers by about half a metre,
the scale hide several shades lighter, dorsal mane neatly trimmed. Apart from
its stumpy black antennae, the one physiological aspect which most
distinguished it from the vassal castes was a row of small chemical program
teats dangling flaccidly from its throat like empty leather pouches, although
the long supple fingers intimated it was a sophisticated tool user.
She saw an almost
subliminal hazy film twinkling briefly on the road behind it. Superfine bronze
powder, similar to the dusting on a terrestrial moth, was sprinkling down from
its flanks.
The Tyrathca breeder
stopped beside the soldier carrying the processor block. Its outer mouth hinged
back, allowing it to whistle a long tune.
Flute music, Kelly
thought.
“I am Waboto-YAU,” the
processor block voice translated. “I will mediate with you on behalf of
Coastuc-RT.”
“I’m Reza Malin,
combat scout team leader, under contract to the LDC.”
“Are you able to
assist in our defence?”
“You’ll have to tell
me what happened, first, give us some idea of what we’re up against.”
“Starship Santa
Clara arrived yesterday. Spaceplane landed, bringing new Tyrathca, new
equipment. Much needed. Collect rygar crop. Amok elemental humans
attacked; stole spaceplane. No provocation. No reason. Twenty-three
breeder-caste killed. One hundred and ninety vassal castes killed. Extensive
damage. You can see this.”
Reza wondered how he
would react if it was xenocs who had attacked a human village in a similar
fashion. Allow a group of those same xenocs in afterwards to talk? Oh no, no
way. The human response would be far more basic.
He felt mortally
humbled as the breeder’s glassy hazel eyes stared at him. “How many humans took
part in this attack?” he asked.
“Numbers not known
with accuracy.”
“Roughly, how many?”
“No more than forty.”
“Forty people did all
this?” Ariadne muttered.
Reza waved her quiet.
“Did they use a kind of white fire?”
“White fire. Yes. Not
true fire. Elemental fire. Tyrathca have not been told of human elemental
ability before. Many times witnessed delusion of form on attacking humans. Elemental
changes of colour and shape confused soldier caste. Some amok humans stole
Tyrathca hunter-caste form. Much damage before repelled.”
“On behalf of the LDC
I apologize profoundly.”
“What use apology? Why
not told of human elemental ability? Breeder ambassador family assigned
to Confederation Assembly will be informed. Denouncement of humans in Assembly.
Tyrathca would never have joined Confederation if had known.”
“I’m sorry. But these
humans have been taken over by an invading force. We don’t normally possess
this ability. It’s as foreign to us as it is to you.”
“Lalonde Development
Company must remove all elemental humans from planet. Tyrathca will not
inhabit same planet.”
“We’d love to. But
right now it’s all we can do just to stay alive. These elemental humans
now control the entire Juliffe basin. We need somewhere to stay until a
starship can lift us off and we can inform the Confederation what is
happening.”
“Starships battle in
orbit this day. Double sun in sky. No starships left.”
“One is coming back
for us.”
“When?”
“In a few days.”
“Does starship have
the power to kill elemental cloud? Tyrathca scared of cloud over rivers.
We cannot defeat it.”
“No,” Reza said
forlornly. “The starship can’t kill the cloud.” Especially if Shaun Wallace is
telling the truth. The thought was one he had been firmly suppressing. The
implications were too frightening. Just how would we actually go about fighting
them?
The Tyrathca let out a
clamorous hoot, almost a wail. “Cloud will come here. Cloud will devour us;
breeders, children, vassals. All.”
“You could leave,”
Kelly said. “Keep ahead of the cloud.”
“Nowhere is ahead of
the cloud for long.”
“What are you doing
here?” she asked, raising her arm to point at the park, the congregation of
breeders. “What is that structure you have built?
“We are not strong. We
have no elementals among us. Only one can now save us from elemental humans.
We call to our Sleeping God. We show our belief by our homage. We call and
call, but the Sleeping God does not yet awake.”
“I didn’t know you had
a God.”
“The family of
Sireth-AFL is a custodian of the memory from the days of voyage on flightship
Tanjuntic-RI. He shared the memory with us all after attack by elemental humans.
Now we are united in prayer. The Sleeping God is our hope for salvation from elemental
humans. We build its idol to show our faith.”
“This is it?” she
asked. “This is what the Sleeping God looks like?”
“Yes. This is the
memory of shape. This is our Sleeping God.”
“You mean the Tyrathca
on the Tanjuntic-RI actually saw a God?”
“No. Another
flightship passed the Sleeping God. Not Tanjuntic-RI.”
“The Sleeping God was
in space, then?”
“Why you want to
know?”
“I want to know if the
Sleeping God can save us from the elementals,” she said smoothly. “Or
will it only help Tyrathca?” Christ, this was beautiful, the story to end all
stories; human dead and secrets the Tyrathca had kept since before Earth’s ice
age. How long had their arkships been in flight? Thousands of years at least.
“It will help us
because we ask,” Waboto-YAU said.
“Do your legends
specifically say it will return to save you?”
“Not legend!” the
breeder hooted angrily. “Truth. Humans have legends. Humans lie. Humans become elemental.
The Sleeping God is stronger than your race. Stronger than all living things.”
“Why do you call it “
‘Sleeping’?”
“Tyrathca say what is.
Humans lie.”
“So it was Sleeping
when your flightship found it?”
“Yes.”
“Then how do you know
it is strong enough to ward off the elementals?”
“Kelly!” Reza said
with edgy vexation.
Waboto-YAU hooted
again. The soldiers shifted restlessly in response, eyes boring into the
obsessed reporter.
“Sleeping God strong.
Humans will learn. Humans must not become elemental. Sleeping God will
awaken. Sleeping God will avenge all Tyrathca suffering.”
“Kelly, shut up, now.
That’s an order,” Reza datavised when he saw her gathering herself for more
questions. “Thank you for telling us of the Sleeping God,” he said to
Waboto-YAU.
Kelly fumed in moody
silence.
“Sleeping God dreams
of the universe,” the breeder said. “All that happens is known to it. It will
hear our call. It will answer. It will come.”
“The human elementals
may attack you again,” Reza warned. “Before the Sleeping God arrives.”
“We know. We pray
hard.” Waboto-YAU twittered mournfully, head swinging round to gaze at the
disk. “Now you have heard the fate of Coastuc-RT. Are you able to assist
soldier caste in defence?”
“No.” Reza heard
Kelly’s hissed intake of breath. “Our weapons are not as powerful as those of
your soldiers. We cannot assist in your defence.”
“Then go.”
Vast tracts of
electric, electromagnetic, and magnetic energy seethed and sparked across a
roughly circular section in the outermost band of Murora’s rings, eight
thousand kilometres in diameter. Dust, held so long in equilibrium, exploited
its liberation to squall in microburst vortices around the solid imperturbable
boulders and jagged icebergs which made up the bulk of the ring, their
gyrations mirroring the rowdy cloudscape a hundred and seventy thousand
kilometres below. The epicentre, where the Lady Macbeth had plunged into
the drive-fomented particles, was still glowing a nervous blue as brumal waves
of static washed through the thinning molecular zephyr of vaporized rock and
ice.
The total energy input
from the starship’s fusion drives and the multiple combat-wasp explosions was
taking a long time to disperse. Their full effect would take months if not
years to sink back to normality. Thermally and electromagnetically, the
rippling circle was the equivalent of an Arctic whiteout to any probing
sensors.
It meant the Maranta
and the Gramine knew little of what was going on below the surface.
They kept station ten kilometres above the fuzzy boundary where boulders and
ice gave way first to pebbles and then finally dust; all sensor clusters
extended, focused on the disquieted strata of particles under their hulls. For
the first couple of kilometres the image was sharp and reasonably clear, below
that it slowly disintegrated until at seven kilometres there was nothing but a
sheet of electronic slush.
The possessed who
commanded the starships now had started their search right at the heart, the
exact coordinate where Lady Macbeth had entered. Then Maranta had
manoeuvred into an orbit five kilometres lower, while the Gramine had
raised its altitude by a similar amount. They slowly drifted apart, Maranta edging
ahead of the phosphorescent blue splash, Gramine falling behind.
There had been no sign
of their prey. Nor any proof to confirm the Lady Macbeth had survived
her impact with the rings. No wreckage had been detected. Although it was a
slim chance any ever would. If she had detonated when she hit, the blowout of
her drive tubes’ escaping plasma would probably have vaporized most of her. And
any fragments which did survive would have been flung over a huge area. The
ring was eighty kilometres thick, enough volume to lose an entire squadron in.
They were further
hindered by the way their energistically charged bodies interfered with
on-board systems. Sensors already labouring at the limit of their resolution to
try and unscramble the chaos suffered infuriating glitches and power surges,
producing gaps in the overall coverage.
But the crews
persevered. Debris was virtually impossible to locate, but an operating
starship emitted heat, and electromagnetic impulses, and a strong magnetic
flux. If she was there, they would find her eventually.
The soldier-caste
vassals stayed with them until the hovercraft reached the top of the
Coastuc-RT’s valley. More tumid rain-clouds were approaching fast from the
east, borne by the obdurate breeze. Reza judged they should just about reach
the other hovercraft by the time they arrived. Both land and sky ahead were
grey. Northwards, the red cloud cast a dispiriting corona, looking for all the
world as though magma was floating, light as thistledown, through the air.
“But why?”
Kelly demanded as soon as the soldiers were left behind. “You saw how well
armed they were, we would have been safe there.”
“Firstly, Coastuc-RT
is too close to the Juliffe basin. As your friend Shaun Wallace said, the cloud
is spreading. It would reach the valley long before Joshua gets back. Secondly,
that valley is tactical suicide. Anyone who gets onto the high ground above the
village can simply bombard it into submission, or more likely destruction.
There aren’t enough soldier and hunter vassals to keep the slopes clear. Right
now Coastuc-RT is wide open to anything the possessed care to throw at it. And
all the Tyrathca are doing to defend themselves is building giant effigies of
spacegods and having a pray-in. We don’t need that kind of shit. By ourselves
we stand a much better chance; we’re mobile and well armed. So tomorrow at
first light we start doing exactly what Joshua said: we run for it, through the
mountains.”
Violent rain made a
mockery of the hovercraft’s blazing monochrome headlight beams, chopping them
off after five or six metres. It obscured the moons, the red cloud, it damn near
hid the drooping, defeated grass below the gunwale. The pilots navigated by
guidance blocks alone. It took them forty minutes to retrace their route back
to the first tower house above the river.
Sewell plugged a
half-metre fission blade into his left elbow socket and confronted the
blocked-up doorway. Water steamed and crackled as the blade came on. He placed
the tip delicately against the wind-fretted cement, and pushed. The blade sank
in, sending out a thick runnel of ginger sand which the rain smeared into the
reeds at his feet. Relieved at how easy it was to cut, he started to slice
down.
Kelly was fourth in.
She stood in musty darkness shaking her arms and easing her cagoule hood back.
“God, there’s as much water inside this cagoule as out. I’ve never known rain
like this.”
“ ’Tis a bleak night,
this one,” Shaun Wallace said behind her.
Reza stepped through
the oval Sewell had cut, carrying two bulky equipment packs, TIP carbines slung
over his shoulder. “Pat, Sal, check this place out.” Fenton and Ryall hurried
in after their master, and immediately shook their coats, sending out a
fountain of droplets.
“Great,” Kelly
muttered. The blocks clipped to her broad belt were slippery with water. She
wiped them ineffectually on her T-shirt. “Can I come with you, please?”
“Sure,” Pat said.
She turned the seal
catch on her bag, and searched round until she found a light stick. Shadows
fled away. Collins disapproved of infrared visuals unless absolutely
unavoidable.
They were in a hall
that ran the diameter of the tower. Archways led off into various rooms. A ramp
at the far wall started to spiral upwards. Tyrathca didn’t, or couldn’t, use
stairs, according to her didactic memory.
Pat and Sal Yong
started down the hall, Kelly followed. She realized Shaun Wallace was a pace
behind. He was back in his LDC jump suit. Completely dry, she noticed
enviously. Her armour-suit trousers squelched as she walked.
“You don’t mind if I
tag along, do you, Miss Kelly? I’ve never seen one of these places before.”
“No.”
“That Mr. Malin there,
he’s a right one for doing things by the book. This place has been sealed up
for years. What does he expect us to find?”
“We won’t know till we
look, will we?” she said coyly.
“Why, Miss Kelly, I do believe you’re running
me a ragged circle.”
The house was
intriguing: strange furniture, and startlingly human utensils. But there was
little technology, the builders had obviously been given instructions on how to
utilize wood. They were excellent carpenters.
Rain drummed on the
walls, adding to the sense of isolation and displacement as they mounted the
ramp. Vassal castes had their own rooms; Kelly wasn’t sure if they could be
called stables. Some rooms, for the soldiers, she guessed, had furniture. There
was only a thin layer of dust. It was as though the tower had been set aside
rather than abandoned. Given her current circumstances, it wasn’t the most
reassuring of thoughts. The neural nanonics drank it all in.
They found the first
bodies on the second floor. Three housekeeper castes (the same size as a
farmer), five hunters, and four soldiers. Desiccation had turned them into
creased leather mummies. She wanted to touch one, but was afraid it would
crumble to dust.
“They’re just sitting
there, look,” Shaun Wallace said in a tamed voice. “There’s no food anywhere
near them. They must have been waiting to die.”
“Without the breeders,
they are nothing,” Pat said.
“Even so, ’tis a
terrible thing. Like those old Pharaohs who had all their servants in their
tombs with them.”
“Were there any
Tyrathcan souls in the beyond?” Kelly asked.
Shaun Wallace paused
at the bottom of the ramp to the third floor, his brow crinkling. “Now there’s
a thing. I don’t think there were. Or at least, I never came across one.”
“Different afterworld,
perhaps,” Kelly said.
“If they have one.
They seem heathen creatures to me. Perhaps the Good Lord didn’t see fit to give
them souls.”
“But they have a god.
Their own god.”
“Do they now?”
“Well, they’re hardly
likely to have Jesus or Allah, are they? Not human messiahs.”
“Ah, you’re a smart
one, Miss Kelly. I take my hat off to you. I’d never have thought of that in a
million years.”
“It’s a question of
environment and upbringing. I’m used to thinking in these terms. I’d be lost in
your century.”
“Oh, I can’t see that.
Not at all.”
There were more
vassal-caste bodies on the third floor. The two breeders were together on the
fourth.
“Do they have love,
these beasties?” Shaun Wallace asked, looking down at them. “They look like
they do, to me. Dying together is romantic, I think. Like Romeo and Juliet.”
Kelly ran her tongue
round her cheeks. “You didn’t strike me as the Shakespeare type.”
“Now don’t you go
writing me off so quickly, you with your classy education. I’m a man of hidden
depths, I am, Miss Kelly.”
“Did you ever meet
anyone famous in the beyond?” Pat asked.
“Meeting!” He wrung
his hands together with fulsome drama. “You’re talking about the beyond as if
it’s some kind of social gathering. Lords and ladies spending the evening
together over fine wine and a game of bridge. It’s not like that, Mr. Halahan,
not at all.”
“But did you?” the
mercenary scout persisted. “You were there for centuries. There must have been
someone important.”
“Ah now, there was
that, as I recall. A gentleman by the name of Custer.”
Pat’s neural nanonics
ran a fast check. “An American army general? He lost a fight with the Sioux
Indians in the nineteenth century.”
“Aye, that’s the one.
Don’t be telling me you’ve heard of him in this day and age?”
“He’s in our history
courses. How did he feel about it? Losing like that?”
Shaun Wallace’s
expression cooled. “He didn’t feel anything about it, Mr. Halahan. He was like
all of us, crying without tears to shed. You’re equating death with sanity, Mr.
Halahan. Which is a stupid thing to do, if you don’t mind me saying. You’ve
heard of Hitler now? Surely, if you’ve heard of poor damned George Armstrong
Custer?”
“We remember Hitler.
Though he was after your time, I think.”
“Indeed he was. But do
you think he changed after he died, Mr. Halahan? Do you think he lost his conviction,
or his righteousness? Do you think death causes you to look back on life and
makes you realize what an ass you’ve been? Oh no, not that, Mr. Halahan. You’re
too busy screaming, you’re too busy cursing, you’re too busy coveting your
neighbour’s memory for the bitter dregs of taste and colour it gives you. Death
does not bestow wisdom, Mr. Halahan. It does not make you humble before the
Lord. More’s the pity.”
“Hitler,” Kelly said,
entranced. “Stalin, Genghis Khan, Jack the Ripper, Helmen Nyke. The butchers
and the warlords. Are they all there? Waiting in the beyond?”
Shaun Wallace gazed up
at the domed ceiling partially lost amid a tapestry of shadows thrown by sparse
alien architecture; for a moment his features portraying every year of his true
age. “Aye, they’re all there, Miss Kelly, every one of the monsters the good
earth ever spawned. All of them aching to come back, waiting for their moment
to be granted. Us possessed, we might be wanting to hide from the open sky, and
death; but it’s not paradise we’re going to be making down here on this planet.
It couldn’t be, there’ll be humans in it, you see.”
It wasn’t true
daybreak, not yet. The sun was still half an hour from bringing any hint of
grizzled light to the eastern horizon. But the rain-clouds had blown over, and
night had sapped the wind’s brawn. The northern sky glowed with a grievous
fervour, blemishing the savannah grass a murky crimson.
Octan watched the dark
speck moving along the side of the river, heading upstream towards the Tyrathcan
tower house. Heavy moist air stroked the eagle’s feathers as he dipped a wing,
curving down in a giddy voluted dive. Pat Halahan gazed out at the lonely
nocturnal wanderer through his affinity bonded friend’s narrow peerless eyes.
Kelly came awake at the
touch of a hand on her shoulder, and the sound of feet rapping on the hard dry
floor of the second storey, where the team had rested up for the night. Neural
nanonics accelerated her fatigue-soaked brain into full alertness.
The last of the
combat-boosted mercenaries were disappearing down the ramp.
“Someone coming,”
Shaun Wallace said.
“Your people?”
“No. I’d know if it
was. Not that Mr. Malin asked, mind you.” He sounded cheerful.
“Good heavens, anyone
would think he doesn’t trust you.” She shoved back the foil envelope she’d been
sleeping in. Shaun Wallace offered his hand to help her to her feet. They made
their way down the ramp to the ground-floor hall.
The seven mercenaries
were clustered round the hole in the door, red light shining dully off their
artificial skin. Fenton and Ryall were on their feet, growling softly as they
were caught in the backwash of agitation coming from their master’s mind.
Reza and Sewell
slipped through the hole as Kelly reached them.
“What is it?” she
asked.
“Horse coming,” Pat
told her. “Two riders.”
Kelly peered round him
just as Reza and Sewell activated their chameleon circuits and flicked into the
landscape. For a few seconds she tracked them thanks to the circular medical
nanonic package on the big combat-adept’s leg, but even that was soon lost
amongst the unsavoury coloured grass.
It was one of the
plough horses favoured by the colonists. A young one, but clearly on its last
legs; the neck was drooping as it plodded gamely along, mouth flecked with
foam. Reza worked his way unobtrusively down the slope from the tower house
towards the animal, leaving Sewell to cover him. His optical sensors showed him
the two people on its back; both wore stained poncho capes cut from a canvas
tarpaulin. The man was showing the first signs of age, stubble shading heavy
jowls, temples touched with grey; and he’d recently lost a lot of weight by the
look of him. But he had a vigour animating his frame which was visible even
from Reza’s position across the swaying grass. The young boy behind him had
been crying at some time, he had also been soaked during the ride, and now he
was shivering, clinging to the man in a wearied daze.
They didn’t pose any
threat, Reza decided. He waited until the horse was twenty metres away, then switched
off his chameleon circuit. The horse took a few more paces before the man
noticed him with a start. He reined in the lethargic animal and leaned over its
neck to peer at Reza in bewilderment.
“What manner of
. . . You’re not a possessed, you don’t have their emptiness.” His
fingers clicked. “Of course! Combat boosted, that’s what you are. You came down
from the starships yesterday.” He smiled and whooped, then swung a leg over the
horse and slithered to the ground. “Come on, Russ, down you come, boy. They’re
here, the navy marines are here. I said they’d come, didn’t I? I told you,
never give up faith.” The boy virtually fell off the horse into his arms.
Reza went over to
help. The man was none too steady on his feet, either, and one of his hands was
heavily bandaged.
“Bless you, my son.”
Horst Elwes embraced the surprised mercenary with tears of gratitude and
supreme relief shining in his eyes. “God bless you. These weeks have been the
sorest trial my Lord has ever devised for this weak mortal servant. But now you
are here after all this time spent alone in the Devil’s own wilderness. Now we
are saved.”
Chapter 11
Boston had fallen to
the possessed, not that the rapidly disintegrating convocation of Norfolk’s
martial authorities would admit it.
Edmund Rigby looked
out of the hotel window, across the provincial city’s steep slate rooftops.
Fires were still burning in the outlying districts where the militia troops had
tried to force their way in. The Devonshire market square had been struck by a
navy starship’s maser last Duchess-night. Its granite cobbles had transmuted to
a glowing lava pool in less than a second. Even now, with its surface
congealing and dimming, the heat was enough to barbecue food. Nobody had been
in the square at the time; it was intended as a demonstration only. A show of
naval might: you there, ant folk crawling on the filthy ground far below, we
angels above have the very power of life and death over all of you. As one, the
possessed had laughed at the circling starships, rendered impotent by their
lack of targets. Yes, they had the physical power to destroy, but the fingers
on the trigger were snared in the perpetual dilemma of the great and the good.
Hostages had always struck a paralysing blow into the heart of governments. The
starships wanted to pour sterilizing fire down from the sky, the officers
yearning to burn the loathsome low-life crop of anarchists and revolutionaries
from the pastoral idyll planet, but the city hadn’t been cleaned of decent
people, the women and children and frail, kindly grandparents. As far as the
planetary authorities and navy officers knew this was just an uprising, a
political revolt, they believed the meek were still mingled with the wolves.
The lofty orbiting angels had been castrated.
Even if they suspected,
believed the rumours of atrocities and massacres flittering from mouth to mouth
through the nearby countryside, they could do nothing. Boston was no longer
alone in its dissent, it was simply the first. Edmund Rigby had planted the
germs of insurgency in every city across the planet’s islands, cabals of
possessed who were already annexing the populace. A captain in the Australian
Marines, he had died from a landmine explosion in Vietnam in 1971; but he had
studied military tactics, had even been sent to the Royal Naval College in
Dartmouth for officer training. And this vast space empire of Confederated
planets, for all its awesome technology, was no different to the Earth upon
which he had once walked. Vietcong insurgency tactics from the past were just
as applicable now, and he knew them by heart. Securing the entire planet had
been his principal objective since the vast merchant fleet had left Norfolk
after midsummer.
Since he arrived he
had been busy indeed. Toiling in the squalor and the horror and the blood which
soiled the heart of every human soul. Those living, and those dead
. . . and the ones trapped between.
He closed his eyes as
if to shut out the memories of recent weeks and what he had become. But there
was no respite. The hotel took on substance in his mind, walls and floors woven
from shadows. People, us and them, glided through it, dopplered laughs and
screams ricocheting through the grand corridors and sumptuous rooms. And,
always, there, on the other side of the shadows, on the other side of
everything: the beyond. Chittering souls clamouring for existence, silky
insidious promises to be his lover, his slave, his acolyte. Anything, anything
at all to be brought back.
Edmund Rigby shuddered
in revulsion. Please, God, when we hide Norfolk from this universe let it also
be hidden from the beyond. Let me have peace, and an end to all this.
Three of his
lieutenants—selected from the more stable among the newly possessed—were
dragging a captive along the corridor outside to his room. He stiffened his
shoulders, letting the power swell within, giving his new body grandeur and
poise, as well as a Napoleonic uniform, and turned to face the door.
They burst in,
cheering and jeering, young turks from the worst of the backstreets, believing
swagger and noise was an easy substitute for authority. But he grinned
welcomingly at them anyway.
Grant Kavanagh was
flung on the floor, bleeding from cuts on his face and hands, smeared in dirt,
his fine militia uniform torn. Even so, he refused to be cowed. Edmund Rigby
respected that, amongst the sadness. This one, with his conviction in God and
self, would be hard to break. The thought pained him. Why oh why can’t they
just give in?
“Present for you,
Edmund,” Iqabl Geertz said. He had assumed his ghoul appearance, skin almost
grey, cheeks sunken, eyeballs a uniform scarlet; thin frame dressed all in
black. “One of the nobs. Got some fight in him. Thought he might be important.”
Don Padwick, in his
lion-man state, growled suggestively. Grant Kavanagh twitched as the big yellow
beast dropped onto all fours and padded over to him, tail whisking about.
“We captured his
troops,” Chen Tambiah informed Edmund quietly. “They were about the last
militia roaming free. Inflicted heavy casualties. Eight of us winged back to
the beyond.” The dapper oriental, in ancient black and orange silks, cocked his
head grudgingly towards Grant Kavanagh. “He’s a good leader.”
“Is that so?” Edmund
Rigby asked.
Iqabl Geertz licked
his lips with a long yellowed tongue. “It doesn’t make any difference in the
end. He’s ours now. To do with as we like. And we know what we like.”
Grant Kavanagh looked
up at him, one eye swollen shut. “When this is over, you mincing shit, and the
rest of your friends have been shot, I will take a great deal of pleasure in
ripping every one of your deviant chromosomes from your body with my own
hands.”
“Now there’s a man’s
man if ever I saw one,” Iqabl Geertz said, putting on an histrionically
effeminate tone.
“Enough,” Edmund Rigby
said. “You put up a good fight,” he told Grant, “now it’s over.”
“Like hell! If you
think I’m going to let you Fascist scum take over the planet my ancestors
sweated blood to build you don’t know me.”
“Nor shall we ever,”
Edmund Rigby said. “Not now.”
“That’s right, takes
bloody four of you.” Grant Kavanagh grunted in shock as Don Padwick put a paw
on his ribs, talons extended.
Edmund Rigby rested
his hand on Grant’s head. There was so much resilience and anger in the man. It
enervated him, sending the pretentious uniform shimmering back into his
ordinary marine fatigues. The souls of the beyond were clamouring as he began
to gather his power, flocking to the beacon of his strength.
“Don’t fight me,” he
said, more in hope than in expectation.
Grant snarled. “Screw
you!”
Edmund Rigby heard the
vile rapturous imploring chorus of the souls beginning. Weariness engulfed him,
there had been so much of this since he had returned. So much pain and torment,
so wilfully inflicted. At first he had laughed, and enjoyed the fear. Now, he
simply wished it over.
He hesitated, and the
captive soul stirred in the prison he had forged for it within his own mind.
“There are ways,” the
other soul said, and showed, obedient as always to his captor. “Ways to make Grant
Kavanagh submit quickly, ways no flesh can withstand for long.”
And the desire was
there, oozing up out of the prison, corrupt and nauseous.
“But it’s a part of
all of us,” the other soul whispered quickly. “We all share the shame of having
the serpent beast in our secret heart of hearts. How else could you have
accomplished what you have the way you have if you did not let it free?”
Trembling, Edmund
Rigby let the desire rise, let it supersede the loathing and revulsion that was
his own. Then it was easy. Easy to make Grant hurt. Easy to commit the
profanities which quietened his lieutenants. Easy to feed the desire. And go on
feeding.
It was good, because
it was freedom. Complete and utter freedom. Desire ruled as it should,
unrestrained. It nurtured the psyche, these heinous abominations Grant Kavanagh
was forced to endure. They were sublime.
Iqabl Geertz and Chen
Tambiah were yelling at him to stop. But they were nothing, less than dirt.
The souls were in
retreat, fearing what was leaking from him into the beyond.
“Weak, they are all
weaker than us. Together we surpass them all.”
Was that his own
voice?
And still the savagery
went on. It was impossible to stop. The other soul had gone too far, it had to
be seen through now. To the terrible end.
Edmund Rigby rebelled
in horror.
“But you did it
yourself,” said the captive soul.
“No. It was you.”
“I only showed you
how. You wanted it. The desire was yours, the yearning.”
“Never! Not for this.”
“Yes. You gave way to
yourself for the first time. The serpent beast is in all of us. Embrace it and
be at peace with yourself. Know yourself.”
“I am not that. I am
not!”
“But you are. Look.
Look!”
“No.” Edmund Rigby
shrank from what he had done. Fleeing, hurtling, away, as though speed alone
was proof of his innocence. Locking out the world and what he had been a party
to, down in that empty vault waiting at the centre of his mind. Where it was
quiet, and dark, and tasteless. Sanctuary without form. It hardened around him.
“And there you will
stay; a part of me for ever.”
Quinn Dexter opened
his eyes. Before him the three possessed, their exotic appearances bleached off
to reveal young men with ashen faces, backed away in consternation; their
confidence in their supremacy jarringly fractured. Grant Kavanagh’s decimated
body quivered amid the blood and piss curdling on the carpet as the soul it now
hosted tried valiantly to repair the colossal tissue damage. Deep inside
himself he heard Edmund Rigby’s soul whimpering quietly.
Quinn smiled
beatifically at his rapt audience. “I have returned,” he said softly, and
raised his hands in invocation. “Out of the half-night; strengthened by
the darkness as only a true believer could be. I saw the weakness in my
possessor, his fright of his serpent beast. He is in me now, weeping and
pleading as he denies form to his true nature. As it should be. God’s Brother
showed me the way, showed me the night holds no dread for those who love their
real selves as He commands us to do. But so few obey. Do you obey?”
They tried then, Iqabl
Geertz, Don Padwick, and Chen Tambiah, combining their energistic strength in a
desperate attempt to blast the deranged usurper out of his body and into the
beyond. Quinn laughed uproariously, steadfast at the calm centre of a fantastic
lightning storm which filled the room. Dazzling whips of raw electricity
slashed at the walls and floor and ceiling like the razor claws of a maddened
gryphon. None of them could touch him, he was held inviolate in a cocoon of
luminous violet silk mist.
The lightning stopped
roaring, ebbing in spits and crackles to disappear behind charred furniture and
back into the bodies of the would-be thunder gods. Smoke hazed the blackened
room, small flames licking greedily at the cushions and tattered curtains.
Quinn wished for
justice.
Their bodies fell,
cells performing the refined perversions he dreamed of, turning against
themselves. He watched impassively as the terrorized, humiliated souls fled
from the glistening deformities he had created, back to the beyond crying in
dire warning. Then the second souls, the ones held captive, abandoned the
macerated flesh.
Grant Kavanagh’s body
groaned at Quinn’s feet, the possessing soul looking up at him in numb
trepidation. The worst of the lacerations and fractures had healed, leaving a
crisscross scar pattern of delicate pink skin.
“What is your name?”
Quinn asked.
“Luca Comar.”
“Did you see what I
performed on them, Luca?”
“Yes. Oh God, yes.” He
bowed his head, bile rising in his throat.
“They were weak, you
see. Unworthy fuck-ups. They had no real faith in themselves. Not like me.”
Quinn took a deep breath, calming his euphoric thoughts. His marine fatigues
billowed out into a flowing priest’s robe, fabric turning midnight black. “Do
you have faith in yourself, Luca?”
“Yes. I do. I have
faith. Really I do.”
“Would you like me to
tell you of the serpent beast? Would you like me to show you your own heart and
set you free?”
“Yes. Please. Please
show me.”
“Good. I think that is
my role now the portents walk abroad. Now the dead are risen to fight the last
battle against the living and the time of the Light Bringer draws near. I have
been blessed, Luca, truly blessed with His strength. My belief in Him brought
me back, me alone out of all the millions who are possessed. I am the one God’s
Brother has chosen as His messiah.”
When the tributary
river finally spilled into the Juliffe it was a hundred and thirty metres wide.
Villages had claimed both banks, buildings gleaming inside their safe enclave
bubbles of white light. By now Chas Paske was used to the striking fantasy
images of halcyon hamlets dozing their life away. He had passed eight or nine
of them during his slow progress down the river. All of them the same. All of
them unreal.
Warned by the twin
coronae ahead he had sculled his little boat back into the middle of the river,
fighting the thick gunge of melding snowlilies every centimetre of the way. Now
he was in a narrow channel of vermilion light which fell between the two pools
of native radiance, crouched down as best he could manage.
His body was in a poor
way. The nanonic medical packages had been exhausted by the demand of
decontaminating his blood some time ago; now it was all they could do to stop
the blood vessels they had knitted with from haemorrhaging again. His neural
nanonics still maintained their analgesic blocks, delivering him from pain. But
that didn’t seem to be enough any more. A cold lethargy was creeping into him
through his damaged leg, syphoning his remaining strength away. Any movement
was a complicated business now, and muscles responded with geriatric infirmity.
Several times in the last few hours he had been stricken by spasms which
vibrated his arms and torso. His neural nanonics seemed incapable of preventing
or halting them. So he lay on the bottom of the boat gazing up at the throbbing
red cloud waiting for the ignominious spastic twitches to run their course.
At these times he
thought he could see himself, a tiny shrivelled black figure, spreadeagled on
the bottom of a rowing dinghy (like the one he thought he had been stealing),
being borne along a sticky white river that stretched out to a terrible length.
There was nothing around the river, no banks or trees, it just wound through a
red sky all by itself, a silk ribbon waving in the breeze, while far, far ahead
a speck of starlight twinkled with elusive, enticing coyness. Skittering voices
on the brink of audibility circled round him. He was sure they talked about him
even though he could never quite make out whole words. The tone was there all
right, dismissive and scornful.
Not quite a dream.
He remembered, as he
sailed on gently, his past missions, past colleagues, old battles, victories
and routs. Half the time never knowing who he was really fighting for or what
he was fighting against. For the right side or the wrong side? And how was he
supposed to know which was which anyway? Him, a mercenary, a whore of violence
and destruction and death. He fought for the ones with the most money, for
companies and plutocrats, and sometimes maybe even governments. There was no
right and wrong in his life. In that respect he had it easy, none of the big
decisions.
So the river carried
him on, that white band flowing through the red sky, ever onwards. The voyage
was his life. He could see where he had come from, and he could see where he
was going. Destination and departure were no different. And there was no way to
get off. Except to jump, to drown in the vast guileful sky.
That will come anyway,
he thought, no need to hurry. The old resolve was still there, among the
superficial self-pity and growing concern over his physical state, still
holding together. He was glad of that. Right to the bitter end, that’s where he
was heading. The star glinted strongly, virtually a heliograph. It seemed nearer.
No, not quite a dream.
Chas jerked up with a
start, rocking the boat hazardously. The twin villages guarding the tributary
mouth were behind him now. He was out on the Juliffe itself. There was no sign
of the Hultain Marsh which made up the northern side. The river could have been
an ocean for all he could tell. An ocean paved with snowlilies as far as his
enhanced eyes could see. This was their meridian, the end of their continental
crusade. They were packed four or five deep, crumpled up against each other;
decaying now, but wadded so tight they formed a serried quilt. It was a perfect
reflector for the carmine light falling from the cloud, turning his world to a
dimensionless red nebula.
The flimsy boat
creaked and shivered as the current forced it deeper into the floating pulp.
Chas gripped the gunwale in reflex. He had a nasty moment when something popped
and splintered up at the prow, but the hull was so shallow it was squeezed up
rather than in. He was sure it was riding on a patina of rotting leaves rather
than actual water.
For all their
stupendous mass, the snowlilies had no effect on the river’s unflagging
current. The boat began to pick up speed, moving further out from the southern
bank with its near-continual chain of villages and towns.
Now he was sure he
wasn’t going to capsize, Chas relaxed his grip, and eased himself down again,
breathing hard at the simple exertion of lifting himself. Up ahead the massive
ceiling of red cloud became a bright tangerine cyclone with a concave heart, its
apex hidden by distance. He could see the gravid billows of stratus being torn
out of their constricted alignment, sucked over the lip to spiral upwards in a
leisurely procession. It must have been twenty kilometres across at the base:
an inverted whirlpool which drained away into the other side of the sky.
He realized its sharp
living tangerine hue came from a fierce light shining down out of its secret
pinnacle. Below it, the city of Durringham gleamed in empyrean glory.
Gaura floated through
the floor hatch into the Lady Macbeth’s bridge. He took care not to move
his neck suddenly, or his arms come to that; his whole body was one giant ache.
He had been lucky not to break anything in that last agonizing burst of
deceleration. Even watching the starships attacking the station he hadn’t felt
as utterly helpless as he had then, lying flat on the groaning decking of the
lounge feeling his ribs bowing in, while blackness tightened its grip on his
vision. Three times he had heard bone splintering, accompanied by a mental
howl—it was impossible to make any sound. Together the Edenists had toughed it
out, their minds embraced, sharing and mitigating the pain.
When it was over he
hadn’t been alone in wiping tears from his eyes. Aethra had followed their
entire heart-stopping plummet into the ring, showing it to them. He had thought
the end had surely come, for the second time in an hour. But the Adamist
starship’s exhaust had obliterated the ring particles as it crashed below the
surface, eliminating any danger of collision; and the captain had matched
velocities perfectly (for the second time in an hour), slotting them neatly
into a circular orbit buried right in the middle of the ring. The swarm of
pursuing combat wasps and their submunitions had impacted seconds behind them,
kinetic explosions tossing out a ragged sheet of fire. None had penetrated more
than a hundred metres below the surface.
It had been an
astounding piece of flying. Gaura was very curious to meet the person who had
such sublime control over a starship. It rivalled the union between a voidhawk
and its captain.
There were three
people standing on a stikpad around one of the consoles, two men and a woman,
talking in low tones. It didn’t help Gaura’s composure to see that it was the
youngest, a man with a flat-featured face, who had the captain’s star on his
ship-suit shoulder. He had been expecting someone . . . different.
Don’t prejudge, Tiya admonished sternly. Most of the Edenists
were using his senses to observe the scene. Voidhawk captains are only
eighteen when they start flying.
I wasn’t going to
say a word, Gaura objected
mildly. He swam past the ring of acceleration couches to touch his toes to a
stikpad on the decking. “Captain Calvert?”
The young man
shrugged. “It’s Joshua, actually.”
Gaura felt his
bottled-up emotions come close to brimming over. “Thank you, Joshua. From all
of us.”
Joshua nodded shortly,
the faintest blush colouring his cheeks. The woman beside him caught his
discomfort and smiled secretively.
There, Tiya said in satisfaction. A perfectly
ordinary young man, if exceptionally talented. I like him.
Joshua introduced
Sarha and Dahybi then apologized for the acceleration. “But I had to stop us
dead inside the ring,” he said. “If we had gone through, south of the ecliptic,
the other starships would have seen us, and come after us. Their drives could
burn through the particles just as easily as Lady Mac did, then we would
have been sitting ducks for their combat wasps.”
“I wasn’t complaining.
In fact, we’re really all rather surprised that we’re still alive.”
“How are your people
holding out?”
“Liatri, our doctor,
says none of us have acquired any fatal internal injuries. Melvyn Ducharme is
helping her review my people in your surgery cabin. Metabolic scanning has
revealed several broken bones and a lot of pulled muscles. She was most
concerned about internal membrane damage, it could prove a problem unless
treated swiftly. But Melvyn Ducharme is rigging up a processor block that can
interface her with your medical nanonic packages.”
Joshua blinked,
nonplussed.
“Our own medical
packages all use bitek processors,” Gaura explained.
“Ah, right.”
“Liatri says we’ll
pull through. Mind you, it’s going to take a long fortnight for the bruising to
fade.”
“You’re not the only
one,” Sarha grimaced. “And you should take a look at where my bruises are.”
Joshua leered.
“Promises, promises.”
“That was an awesome
piece of flying you pulled off back there, Joshua,” Gaura said. “Eluding two
starships . . .”
“It’s in the blood,”
he said, not quite nonchalantly. “Glad to be of help, really. We certainly
haven’t been much use to anybody else since we arrived in this star system.”
Go on, Tiya urged. Ask.
But suppose it’s an
illegal flight? He was carrying combat wasps, don’t forget. We’d have to give
evidence.
Then the law is an
ass, and we’ll all develop amnesia. Ask.
Gaura smiled
awkwardly. “Joshua, exactly who are you? I mean, why come to Lalonde?”
“Er . . .
Good question. Technically, Lady Mac is part of the Lalonde government’s
starship fleet, helping to restore civil order. The Confederation Navy squadron
has other ideas, and according to them we’re under arrest.”
“Navy squadron?”
Joshua sighed
theatrically, and started to explain.
The Edenists crowding
the cabin in life-support capsule D, which doubled as the surgery, listened
with a mixture of gloomy dismay and confusion.
“This sequestration
ability sounds appalling,” Gaura said, summarizing the Edenists’ unified
feelings.
“You should see the
red cloud,” Joshua told him. “That really gives me the creeps. It’s an instinct
thing with me, I know it’s wrong.”
Gaura gestured to the
console they had been consulting; its holoscreen was alive with blue and yellow
data displays. “What is our current situation?”
“I’m playing a waiting
game,” Joshua said, and datavised an order into the console processor. The
holoscreen switched to an image from an external sensor cluster, showing a very
dark expanse of crinkled rock. Scale was impossible to gauge. “See that? That’s
the largest ring particle I could find at such short notice, near-solid stone
about two hundred and fifty metres in diameter. It’s twenty-five kilometres
inward from the northern surface. We’re keeping station directly underneath it,
and I do mean directly; Lady Mac’s forward hull is about three metres
away. Right now Warlow and Ashly are outside drilling load pins into the rock
so we can tether Lady Mac in place with silicon fibre. That way I won’t
have to use the thrusters to hold our position. Maranta and Gramine would
be able to spot any ion plumes easily when the rings calm down. Our on-board
electronic systems are designed for minimal emission anyway, but with that rock
as a shield we’ll make absolutely sure we’re undetectable to their sensors. It
can also absorb our thermal output as well; I’ve deployed the thermo-dump
panels so that they’re radiating all our excess heat directly at the rock, it
will take months to seep through. All the drive tubes and the five main fusion
generators have been powered down, so our magnetic flux is negligible. We’re
operating on one auxiliary fusion generator which is well screened by the hull.
All in all, it’s a very reasonable position. As long as Maranta and Gramine
stay north of the ring we’ll be invisible to them.”
“And if one of them
moves to a southern inclination?”
“There is fifty-five
kilometres’ worth of particles between us and the southern surface. It’s a risk
I’m prepared to take, especially with the ring so electrically and thermally
active right now.”
“I see. How long do
you think we’ll be here?”
Joshua pulled a face.
“Hard to say. Right now we’re only a hundred and seventy thousand kilometres
above Murora, Lady Mac needs to be at least two hundred thousand out
before she can jump. So if we want to leave, we either wait until Maranta and
Gramine decide to call it a day and quit, or hang on until their search
pattern carries them far enough away to allow us to make a dash for a jump
coordinate. Whichever one it is, I think we’ll be here for some time. Weeks at
least.”
“I understand. Do you
have enough fuel and supplies to last that long?”
“Yes, fuel’s down to
forty-seven per cent, those high-gee manoeuvres use up cryogenics at a hell of
a rate, but what’s left can supply our present consumption rate for years. So
that’s no problem. But we’ll have to monitor our environmental systems closely
given there’s thirty-six of you. The limiting factor is going to be food;
that’ll have to be rationed pretty carefully. All of which means I really don’t
want you to take your children out of zero-tau just yet.”
“Of course. They will
be much better off in the pods anyway. But what about your mercenary scout
team?”
Joshua exchanged a
significant glance with Sarha. “Not a damn thing we can do about that. They’re
tough and they’re mean. If anyone can survive down there, they can.”
“I see. Well if the
opportunity arises to go back, then please do not hesitate on our account.”
“We’ll see. It would
be difficult jumping to Lalonde with Maranta and Gramine following
us. Ideally I’d like to hang on until they leave Murora. Our major problem is
going to be tracking them. When you came in we were discussing mounting a
sensor cluster on the other side of the rock. Before we started hiding we
caught a glimpse of their ion thrusters, so we know they’re still out there.
But we have the same problem as them, this ring is pure hell to see through.
Without reliable data we’re at a nasty disadvantage.”
“Ah,” Gaura smiled
happily. “I think I may be able to help there.” Aethra? Can you see the two
starships which attacked us?
Yes, the habitat replied. They are orbiting
slightly above the ring’s northern surface.
An image formed in his
mind, the dusky plain of the ring slicing across Murora, blanched of most
colour. The habitat’s external sensitive cells could just sense a broad zone
agitated by heat and electricity. Two dull specks were poised slightly above
it, ion thrusters firing intermittent tattoos to maintain their attitude.
Excellent. “Aethra can see them.”
Joshua brightened.
“Jesus, that’s great news. They’re both still here, then?”
“Yes.”
“How is Aethra?” he
asked belatedly.
“The shell was
extensively damaged. However, there is no catastrophic internal injury, its
main organs remain functional. It is going to require a considerable amount of
repair work before it can resume its growth. My colleagues, the ones who were
killed in the attack, their memories have been stored by the personality.”
“That’s something,
then.”
“Yes.”
“Can Aethra work out
the exact spacial locations of the other starships for me? If we can keep
updated I’ll know when we can risk breaking cover and flying for a jump
coordinate.”
“I can go one better
than that.” Gaura slipped a processor block from his breast pocket. The slim
palm-sized plastic rectangle had produced a spectacular gold and blue bruise on
his pectoral muscle during the flight. “Aethra can communicate through the
bitek processor, and if you can interface this with your flight computer you’ll
be able to receive the images directly. And the starships hunting us will never
know, affinity is undetectable.”
“Wonderful.” Joshua
accepted the block. It was slightly smaller than the Kulu Corporation model he
used. “Sarha, get to work on an interface. I want Aethra tied in to our
navigation processor array pronto.”
“Consider it done.”
She plucked it from his fingers and datavised her systems memory core for
appropriate electronic module specifications and adaptor programs.
Joshua thought the
Edenist station chief still looked wrecked. “You know, we come from
Tranquillity,” he said. “It’s Lady Mac’s home port.”
Gaura looked at him, a
surprised light showing in his worn eyes. “Yes?”
“Yeah. I’ve lived
there all my life, I was born there, so I know how beautiful habitats are, and
I don’t just mean their physical structure either. So I suppose I can empathize
with what you’re feeling more than most Adamists. Don’t worry. We’ll get out of
this and bring help back for Aethra, and Lalonde too. All we need now is time,
and we’re home free. Fortunately time is one thing we have plenty of.”
“So you’re not
Confederation Navy marines then?” Horst asked, trying to hide his
disappointment.
“No, I’m sorry, Father,”
Reza said. “The LDC hired us to scout round the Quallheim Counties and find out
what was going on down here. I believe you can say we’ve certainly done that.”
“I see.” Horst looked
round the simplicity of the Tyrathcan tower house’s hall, its smooth curves
illuminated by the light stick, solid shadows blending seamlessly with
dark-grey arches. The red light outside was kept at bay, silhouetting the hole
sliced into the doorway. In spite of the warmth he felt chilled.
“How did you know we
were here?” Pat asked.
“I didn’t, not that
you were in this particular tower. We saw the starships arrive yesterday
morning, of course. Then in the afternoon there was an explosion on the river.”
“The kroclion,”
Ariadne said.
“Could be,” Reza said.
“Go on.”
“Young Russ saw it,”
Horst said. “I thought it best that we keep a watch on the savannah; that
morning was the first time the red cloud appeared, and with the starships as
well—it seemed sensible. By the time I got my optical intensifier band on there
was only the smoke left. But it didn’t look like anything the possessed do, so
I rode out to see. I thought—I prayed—that it might have been the marines. Then
that bedamned kroclion was skulking about in the grass. I just kept going up
the river to keep ahead of it. And here we are. Delivered up to you by God’s
hand.” He lifted his lips in a tired victorious smile. “Mysterious ways His
wonders to perform.”
“Certainly does,” Reza
said. “That kroclion was probably the mate of the one we killed.”
“Yes. But tell me of
the starships. Can they take us off this terrible planet? We saw an almighty
battle in orbit before the red cloud swelled over the sky.”
“We don’t know much
about the events in orbit. But that was a fight between some of our starships
and a Confederation Navy squadron.”
“Your starships? Why
did they fight the navy?”
“Some of them. The
possessed got into orbit on the spaceplanes which brought us down, they
hijacked the starships and took over the crew.”
“Merciful Lord.” Horst
crossed himself. “Are there any starships left now?”
“No. Not in orbit.”
Horst’s shoulders
sagged. He sipped listlessly at the carton of hot coffee they had given him.
This was the cruellest blow of all, he thought wretchedly, to be shown
salvation shining so close and then to have it snatched away as my fingers
close around it. The children cannot be made to suffer any more, merciful Lord
hear me this once, they cannot.
Russ was sitting in
Kelly’s lap. He seemed shy of the combat-boosted mercenaries, but was content
to let her spray a salve on his saddle sores. She smoothed down the damp hair
on his forehead, and grinned as she offered him one of her chocolate bars. “You
must have been through a lot,” she said to Horst.
“We have.” He eyed
Shaun Wallace, who had kept to the back of the hall since he had arrived. “The
Devil has cursed this planet to its very core. I have seen such evil, foul,
foul deeds. Such courage too. I’m humbled, the human spirit is capable of quite
astonishing acts of munificence when confronted by fundamental tests of virtue.
I have come to believe in people again.”
“I’d like to hear
about it some time,” she said.
“Kell’s a reporter,”
Sewell said mockingly. “Someone else who makes you sign contracts in blood.”
She glared at the big
mercenary. “Being a reporter isn’t a crime. Unlike some people’s occupation.”
“I shall be happy to
tell you,” Horst said. “But later.”
“Thank you.”
“You’ll be safe enough
now you’re hooked up with us, Father,” Reza said. “We’re planning to head
south, away from the cloud. And the good news is that we’re expecting a
starship to come back for us in a couple of days. There’s plenty of room for
you and Russ on our hovercraft. Your ordeal’s over.”
Horst let out an
incredulous snort, then put the coffee carton down ruing his slowness. “Oh, my
Lord, I haven’t told you yet, have I? I’m sorry, that ride must have addled my
brain. And I’ve had so little sleep these last days.”
“Told us what?” Reza
asked edgily.
“I gathered what
children I could after the possession began. We are all living together in one
of the savannah homesteads. They must be terrified. I never intended to be away
all night.”
There was complete
silence for a second, even the red cloud’s hollow thunder was hushed.
“How many children?”
Reza asked.
“Counting young Russ
here, twenty-nine.”
“Fucking hell.”
Horst frowned and
glanced pointedly at Russ who was staring at the mercenary leader with
apprehensive eyes over his half-eaten chocolate. Kelly held him a fraction
tighter.
“Now what?” Sal Yong
asked bluntly.
Horst looked at him in
some puzzlement. “We must go back to them in your hovercraft,” he said simply.
“I fear my poor old horse can travel no further. Why? Have you some other
mission?”
The combat-adept
mercenary kept still. “No.”
“Where exactly is this
homestead?” Reza asked.
“Five or six
kilometres south of the jungle,” Horst replied. “And forty minutes’ walk east
from the river.”
Reza datavised his
guidance block for a map, and ran a search through LDC habitation records,
trying to correlate. “In other words, under the red cloud.”
“Yes, that abomination
spread at a fearsome rate yesterday.”
“Reza,” Jalal said.
“The hovercraft can’t possibly carry that many people. Not if we’re going to
keep ahead of the cloud.”
Horst looked at the
hulking combat adept in growing amazement. “What is this you are saying? Can’t?
Can’t? They are children! The eldest is eleven years old! She is alone under
that Devil’s spew in the sky. Alone and frightened, holding the others to her
as the sky turns to brimstone and the howling demon horde closes in. Their
parents have been raped by unclean spirits. They have nothing left but a single
thread of hope.” He stood abruptly, clamping down on a groan as his
ride-stiffened muscles rebelled against the sharp movement, face reddening in
fury. “And you, with your guns and your mechanoid strength, you sit here
thinking only of saving your own skin. You should run to embrace the possessed,
they would welcome you as their own. Come along, Russ, we’re going home.”
The boy started
sobbing. He struggled in Kelly’s grip.
She climbed to her
feet, keeping her arms protectively around his thin frame. Quickly, before she
lost all courage, she said: “Russ can have my place on the hovercraft. I’ll
come with you, Father.” Retinas switched to high resolution, she looked at
Reza. Recording.
“I knew you’d be
trouble,” he datavised.
“Tough,” she said out
loud.
“For a reporter you
have very little understanding of people if you think I’d desert his children
after all we’ve seen.”
Kelly pouted her lips
sourly and switched her visual focus to Jalal. That exchange would have to be
edited out.
“Nobody is going to
leave the children behind, Father,” Reza said. “Believe me, we have seen what
happens to children driven away by the possessed. But we are not going to help
them by rushing in blindly.” And he stood, rising a good thirty centimetres
higher than the priest. “Understand me, Father?”
A muscle twitched on
Horst’s jaw. “Yes.”
“Good. Now they
obviously can’t stay at the savannah homestead. We have to take them south with
us. The question is how. Are there any more horses at the homestead?”
“No. We have a few
cows, that’s all.”
“Pity. Ariadne, can
the hovercraft carry fifteen children apiece?”
“Possibly, if we ran
alongside. But it would put a hell of a strain on the skirt impellers. And it
would definitely drain the electron matrices inside of six or seven hours.”
“Running like that
would drain us too,” Pat said.
“I can’t even recharge
the matrices, not under this cloud,” Ariadne said. “The solar-cell panels don’t
receive anything like enough photonic input.”
“We might be able to
build some kind of cart,” Theo suggested. “Hitch it up to the cows. It would be
better than walking.”
“It would take time,”
Sal Yong said. “And there’s no guarantee it would work.”
“Tow them,” Sewell
said. “Slap together a couple of rafts, and tow them back up the river. All you
need is planks, we can get them from the homestead itself if need be.”
Ariadne nodded her
rounded head. “Might just work. The hovercraft could handle that. We could
certainly get back here by the middle of the afternoon.”
“Then what?” Jalal
said. “Look, I’m not being a downer. But just getting them back here isn’t the
solution. We have to keep going. Wallace says the cloud is going to cover the
whole planet, we have to find a way to outrun it, or this will all be for
nothing.”
Reza turned to look at
the possessed man who had kept silent and unobtrusive up until now. “Mr
Wallace, will your kind know if we return to the homestead?”
“Aye, Mr. Malin,” he
said sorrowfully. “That they will. The cloud and the land are becoming one with
us. We can feel you moving inside us. When you pass back under the cloud the
sensation will be like treading on a nail.”
“How will they react?”
“They’ll come after
you, Mr. Malin. But then they’ll do that anyway if you stay on this world.”
“I think he’s speaking
the truth,” Horst said. “One of them came to the homestead two days ago. She
wanted me and the children. Our bodies, anyway.”
“What happened?” Kelly
asked.
Horst forced a vapid
smile. “I exorcised her.”
“What?” Kelly blurted
in greedy delight. “Really?”
The priest held up his
bandaged hand. The dark strips of cloth were stained with blood. “It wasn’t
easy.”
“Shit Almighty. Shaun,
can you be exorcised?”
Shaun Wallace had
locked his gaze to that of the priest. “If it’s all the same to you, Miss
Kelly, I’d be obliged if you didn’t try.”
“He can,” she
subvocalized into her neural nanonics memory cell, “he really can! You can see it
in his eyes. He fears the priest, this ageing worn-out man in shabby clothes. I
can barely believe it. A ceremony left over from medieval times that can thwart
these almost-invincible foes. Where all our fantastic technology and knowledge
fails, a prayer, a simple anachronistic prayer could become our salvation. I
must tell you of this, I must find a way to get a message out to the
Confederation.” Damn, that sounded too much like Graeme Nicholson’s recording.
For a moment she
wondered what had happened to the old hack.
“Interesting,” Reza
said. “But it doesn’t help our present dilemma. We have to find a way of
keeping ahead of the cloud until Joshua comes back for us.”
“Christ, we don’t even
know when he’s coming back,” Sal Yong said. “And taking a bunch of children
through these mountains isn’t going to be easy, Reza, there are no roads, no
detailed map image. We’ve got no camping equipment, no boots for them, no food
supplies. It’s going to be wet, slippery. I mean, God! I don’t mind giving it a
go if there’s even a remote chance of pulling it off, but this . . .”
“Mr Wallace, would
your kind consider letting the children go?” Reza asked.
“Some would, I would,
but the rest . . . No, I don’t think so. There are so few living
human bodies left here, and so many souls trapped in the beyond. We hear them
constantly, you know, they plead with us to bring them back. Giving in is so
easy. I’m sorry.”
“Shit.” Reza flexed
his fingers. “OK, we’ll take it in stages. First we bring the children back
here, get them and us out from under that bloody cloud today. That’s what is
important right now. Once we’ve done that we can start concentrating on how to
get them through the mountains. Maybe the Tyrathca will help.”
“No chance,” Ariadne
said flatly.
“Yeah. But all of you
keep thinking. Mr. Wallace, can you tell me what sort of opposition we’ll be
facing? How many possessed?”
“Well now, there’s a
good hundred and fifty living in Aberdale. But if you race in on those fancy
hover machines of yours you ought to be away again before they reach you.”
“Great.”
Shaun Wallace held up
his hand. “But there’s a family of ten living in one of the other homesteads
not far from the children. They can certainly cause you problems.”
“And you believe him?”
Sewell asked Reza.
Shaun Wallace put on a
mournfully injured expression. “Now then, Mr. Sewell, that’s no way to be
talking about someone who’s only doing his best to help you. I didn’t stick out
my thumb and hitch here, you know.”
“Actually, he’s right
about the homestead family,” Horst said. “I saw them a couple of days ago.”
“Thank you, Father.
There now, you have the word of a man of the cloth. What more do you want?”
“Ten of them on open
ground,” Reza said. “That’s nothing like as bad as Pamiers. I think we can take
care of them. Are you going to add your fire-power to ours, Mr. Wallace?”
“Ah now, my fire-power
is a poor weak thing compared to yours, Mr. Malin. But even if it were capable
of shifting mountains, I would not help you in that way.”
“That makes you a
liability, Mr. Wallace.”
“I don’t think much of
a man who asks another to kill his cousins in suffering, Mr. Malin. Not much at
all.”
Horst took a pace
forwards. “Perhaps you could mediate for us, Mr. Wallace? Nobody wants to see
any more death on this world, especially as those bodies still contain their
rightful souls. Could you not explain to the homestead family that attacking
the mercenaries would be foolhardy in the extreme?”
Shaun Wallace stroked
his chin. “Aye, now, I could indeed do that, Father.”
Horst glanced
expectantly at Reza.
“Suits me,” the
mercenary leader said.
Shaun Wallace grinned
his wide-boy grin. “The priests back in Ireland were all wily old souls. I see
nothing’s changed in that department.”
Nobody had noticed the
balmy smile growing on Kelly’s face during the exchange. She let go of Russ,
and slapped her hands together with surefire exultation. “Yes! I can get Joshua
back here. I think. I’m sure I can.”
They all looked at
her.
“Maybe even by this
afternoon. We won’t have to worry about going through the mountains. All we’ll
have to do is get clear of the red cloud so that Ashly can land.”
“Spare us how
wonderful you are, Kelly,” Reza said. “How?”
She dived into her bag
and pulled out her communication block, brandishing it as though it were a
silver trophy. “With this. The LDC’s original geosynchronous communication
platform had a deep-space antenna to keep in touch with the Edenist station
orbiting Murora. If the platform didn’t get hit in the orbital battle, we can
just call him up. Send a repeating message telling him how badly we need him.
Murora is about nine hundred million kilometres away, that’s less than a
light-hour. If he leaves as soon as he receives it, he could be here inside
three or four hours. Lady Mac might not be able to jump outsystem, but
if she can jump to Murora she can jump back again. At least we’d be safely off
Lalonde.”
“Can you get the
platform computer to send a message?” Reza asked. “Terrance Smith never gave us
any access codes for it.”
“Listen, I’m a bloody
reporter, there’s nothing I don’t know about violating communication systems.
And this block has quite a few less than legal chips added.”
She waited for an
answer, her feet had developed a life of their own, wanting to dance.
“Well, get on with it
then, Kelly,” Reza said.
She ran for the hole
in the door, startling Fenton and Ryall lying on the grass outside. The sky
over the savannah was split into two uneven portions of redness as the cloud
band clashed with the dawn sun. She datavised an instruction into the block and
it started scanning across the dissonant shades above for the platform’s
beacon.
Joshua dozed fitfully
in his cabin’s sleep cocoon. The envelope was a baggy lightweight spongy
fabric, big enough to hold him without being restrictive. Sarha had offered to
sleep with him, but he’d tactfully declined. He was still feeling the effects
of that eleven-gee thrust. Even his body hadn’t been geneered with that much
acceleration in mind. There were long bruise crinkles on his back where the
creases on his ship-suit had pressed into his skin, and when he looked into the
mirror his eyes were bloodshot. He and Sarha wouldn’t have had sex anyway, he
really was tired. Tired and stressed out.
Everyone had been so
full of praise for the way he had flown Lady Mac. If only they knew the
emotional cold turkey that hit him once the danger was over and he stopped
operating on nerve energy and arrogance. The fear from realizing what one—just
one—mistake would have spelt.
I should have listened
to Ione. What I had before was enough.
He held her image in
his mind as he fell asleep, she made it a lot easier to relax, floating away on
the rhythm of night. When he woke, drowsy, warm, and randy, he accessed a
memory of their time back in Tranquillity. Out in the parkland, lying on the
thick grass beside a stream. The two of them clinging together after sex; Ione
on top, sweaty and dreamily content, light glinting an opulent gold off her
hair, skin warm and soft against him, kissing him oh so slowly, lips descending
along his sternum. Neither spoke, the moment was too perfect for that.
Then her head lifted
and it was Louise Kavanagh, all trusting and adoring in that way only the very
innocent can achieve. She smiled hesitantly as she rose up, then laughed in
rapturous celebration as she was impaled once again, luscious dark hair tossed
about as she rode him. Thanking him. Praising him. Promising herself for ever
his.
And loving a girl
hadn’t been that sweet since he was her age.
Jesus! He cancelled
the memory sequence. Even his neural nanonics were playing him dirty.
I do not need
reminding. Not right now.
The flight computer
datavised that Aethra was requesting a direct channel. Joshua acknowledged the
distraction with guilty relief. Space warfare was easy.
Sarha had done a good
job interfacing the bitek processor to Lady Mac’s electronics. He had
talked to the habitat yesterday, which was engrossing; it came across as a
mixture of child and all-knowing sage. But it had been very interested in
hearing about Tranquillity. The images he received from its shell’s sensitive
cells were different to the Lady Mac’s sensor clusters. They seemed more
real, somehow, bestowing a texture of depth and emptiness which space had
always lacked before.
Joshua unsealed the
side of the sleep cocoon and swung his legs out. He opened a locker for a fresh
ship-suit. There were only three left. Sighing, he started to pull one on.
“Hello, Aethra,” he datavised.
“Good morning, Joshua.
I hope you slept well.”
“Yeah, I got a few
hours.”
“I am picking up a
message for you.”
He was instantly
alert, without any stimulus from his neural nanonics. “Jesus. Where from?”
“It is a microwave
transmission originating from the civil communication platform orbiting Lalonde.”
He was shown the
starfield outside. The sun was a white glare point, nine hundred and
eighty-nine million kilometres distant; to one side Lalonde shone steadily, if
weakly, a sixth-magnitude star. It had now become a binary, twinned with a
violet glint.
“You can see
microwaves?” he asked.
“I sense, eyes see. It
is part of the energy spectrum which falls upon my shell.”
“What is the message?”
“It is a voice-only
transmission to you personally from a Kelly Tirrel.”
“Jesus. Let me hear
it.”
“ ‘This is Kelly
Tirrel calling Captain Joshua Calvert. Joshua, I hope you’re receiving this OK;
and if not, could someone at Aethra’s supervisory station please relay this to
him immediately. It’s really important. Joshua, I’m not sure if the possessed
can overhear this, so I won’t say anything too exact, OK? We got your message
about returning. And the time-scale you mentioned is no use to us. Joshua,
virtually everyone down here has been possessed. It’s like the worst of the
Christian Bible gospels are coming true. Dead people are coming back and taking
over the living. I know that sounds crazy to you; but believe me it isn’t
sequestration, and it isn’t a xenoc invasion. I’ve talked to someone who was
alive at the start of the twentieth century. He’s real, Joshua. So is their
electronic warfare ability, only it’s more like magic. They can do terrible
things, Joshua, to people and animals. Truly terrible. Shit, I don’t suppose
you believe any of this, do you? Just think of them as an enemy, Joshua.
That’ll help make them real for you. And you saw the red cloud-bands over the
Juliffe basin, you know how powerful that enemy is.
“ ‘Well, the red cloud
is swelling, Joshua, it’s spreading over the planet. We were heading away from
it. Just like you said we should, remember? But we’ve found someone who has
been in hiding since the possession started, a priest. He’s been looking after
a bunch of young children. There’s twenty-nine of them. And now they’re trapped
under that cloud. They’re near the village that was our original target, so
that gives you a rough idea where we are. We’re going back for them, Joshua,
we’ll be on our way by the time this message reaches you. They’re only
children, for Christ’s sake, we can’t leave them. The trouble is that once
we’ve got them we won’t be able to run far, not with our transport. But we’re
pretty sure we can get the children out from under the cloud by this afternoon.
Joshua . . . you have to pick us up. Today, Joshua. We won’t be able
to hold out for long after sunset. I know your lady friend wasn’t feeling too
well when you left, but bandage her up as best you can, as soon as you can.
Please. We’ll be waiting for you. Our prayers are with you. Thank you, Joshua.’
”
“It is repeating,”
Aethra said.
“Oh, Jesus.”
Possession. The dead returned. Child refugees on the run. “Jesus fucking wept.
She can’t do this to me! She’s mad. Possession? She’s fucking flipped.” He
stared aghast at the ancient Apollo computer, arms half in his sleeves. “No
chance.” His arms were rammed into the ship-suit sleeves. Sealing up the front.
“She needs locking up for her own good. Her neural nanonics are looped on a
glitched stimulant program.”
“You said you believed
the red cloud effect was fundamentally wrong,” Aethra said.
“I said it was a
little odd.”
“So is the notion of
possession.”
“When you’re dead,
you’re dead.”
“Twelve who died when
the station was destroyed are stored within me. You make continual references
to your deity, does this not imply a degree of belief in the nature of
spirituality?”
“Je—Shit! Look, it’s
just a figure of speech.”
“And yet humans have
believed in gods and an afterlife since the day you gained sentience.”
“Don’t you fucking
start! Your lot are supposed to be atheists, anyway.”
“I apologize. I can
sense you are upset. What are you going to do about rescuing the children?”
Joshua pressed his
fingers to his temple in the vain hope it would halt the dizzy sensation.
“Buggered if I know. How do we know there really are any children?”
“You mean it is just a
bluff to trick you into returning to Lalonde?”
“Could be, yeah.”
“That would imply that
Kelly Tirrel has been possessed.”
Very calmly, he
datavised: “Sequestrated. It implies she has been sequestrated.”
“Whatever has befallen
her, you still have a decision to make.”
“And don’t I know it.”
Melvyn was alone on
the bridge when Joshua came gliding through the hatch from his cabin.
“I just heard the
message,” the fusion expert said. “She can’t mean it.”
“Maybe.” Joshua
touched his feet to a stikpad beside his acceleration couch. “Call the crew in,
and Gaura as well. I suppose the Edenists are entitled. It’s their arses on the
line as well.”
He tried to think in
the short time it took for them to drift into the bridge, make some kind of
sense out of Kelly’s message. The trouble was she had sounded so convincing,
she believed what she said. If it was her. Jesus. And it was a very strange
sequestration. He couldn’t forget the chaos in orbit.
He accessed the
navigation display to see just how practical any sort of return flight was. It
didn’t look good. Maranta and Gramine had confined their search
to the section of ring which was electrically charged, which meant one of them
was always within three thousand kilometres of Lady Mac. The jump
coordinate for Lalonde was a third of the way round the gas giant, over two
hundred and seventy thousand kilometres from their present position. Out of the
question. He started to hunt round for options.
“I think it’s a load
of balls,” Warlow said when they were all assembled. “Possession! Kelly’s
cracked.”
“You said it
yourself,” Ashly said. “It’s a bad form of sequestration.”
“Do you believe in the
dead coming back?”
The pilot grinned at
the huge ochre cosmonik clinging to a corner of an acceleration couch. “It would
make life interesting. Admit it.”
Warlow’s diaphragm
issued a sonic boom snort.
“It doesn’t matter
what name we choose to call the process,” Dahybi said. “The sequestration
ability exists. We know that. What we have to decide is whether or not Kelly has
been taken over by it.” He glanced at Joshua and offered a lame shrug.
“If she hasn’t then
we’re all in a great deal of trouble,” Sarha said.
“If she hasn’t?”
Melvyn asked.
“Yes. That will mean
there are twenty-nine children we have to get off that planet by this
afternoon.”
“Oh, hell,” he
mumbled.
“And if she has been
sequestrated then she knew we were coming back anyway. So why try and get us to
come back earlier? And why include all that crap about possession, when all it
would do was make us more cautious?”
“Double bluff?” Melvyn
said.
“Come on!”
“Sarha’s right,” Ashly
said. “We always planned to go back; as far as Kelly knew, in a couple of days.
There’s no logical reason to hurry us. And we know they try and hijack the
spaceplanes which land. It’s not as if we wouldn’t have taken precautions. All
this has done is make us even more cautious. My vote says she is in trouble,
and they have found these stray children.”
“And me,” Dahybi said.
“But it’s not our decision. Captain?”
It was the kind of
oblique compliment about his status Joshua could really have done without.
“Kelly would never call unless she really was desperate,” he said slowly. “If
she has managed to avoid sequestration, or whatever, she would never have
mentioned possession unless it was true. You all know what she’s like: facts no
matter what it costs. And if she had been possessed, she wouldn’t tell us.” Oh,
Jesus, be honest, I know she’s in deep shit. “They need to be picked up. Like
she said: today.”
“Joshua, we can’t,”
Melvyn said. He looked desperately torn. “I don’t want to abandon a whole bunch
of kids down there any more than you. Even if we don’t know exactly what’s
going on below those bloody cloudbands, we’ve seen and heard enough to know it
ain’t good. But we’re never going to get past the Maranta and the Gramine.
And I’ll give you good odds they’ve picked up Kelly’s message as well. They’ll
be extra vigilant now. Face it, we’ve got to wait. They’ll spot us the second
we turn our drive on.”
“Maybe,” Joshua said.
“Maybe not. But first things first. Sarha, can our environmental systems cope
with thirty kids and the mercenaries as well as the Edenists?”
“I dunno how big the
kids are,” Sarha said, thinking out loud. “Kelly did say young. There’s
probably room for four more in the zero-tau pods if we really cram them in. We
can billet some in the spaceplane and the MSV, use their atmospheric filters.
Carbon dioxide build-up is our main problem, the filters could never scrub the
amount seventy people produce. We’d have to vent it and replace it from the
cryogenic oxygen reserve.” Neural nanonics ran a best and worst case
simulation. She didn’t like the margins on the worst case, not one bit. “I’ll
give you a provisional yes. But thirty is the absolute limit, Joshua. If the
mercenaries run into any other worthy cause refugees, they’re just going to
have to stay down there.”
“OK. That leaves us
with picking them up. Ashly?”
The pilot gave one of
his engaging grins. “I told you, Joshua, I promised them I’d go down again.”
“Fine. That just leaves
you, Gaura. You’ve been very quiet.”
“It’s your ship,
Captain.”
“Yes, but your
children are on board, and your friends and family. They’ll be exposed to a
considerable risk if Lady Mac attempts to go back to Lalonde. That
entitles you to a say.”
“Thank you, Joshua. We
say this: if it was us stranded on Lalonde right now, we would want you to come
and pick us up.”
“Very well. That’s
settled then. We’ll try and rescue the mercenaries and the children.”
“One small point,
Joshua,” Melvyn said loudly. “We’re stuck in the rings, with one combat wasp
left, forty thousand kilometres from the edge of Murora’s gravity field. If we
stick our heads up, they’ll be shot to buggery.”
“I was in a similar
situation to this a year ago.”
“Joshua!” Sarha
chided.
He ignored her. “It
was the Ruin Ring, when Neeves and Sipika were coming after me. Look at where
the Maranta and the Gramine are right now.”
They all accessed the
navigational display, neon-sharp graphics unfurling in their minds. The two
searching starships extruded curved yellow orbital trajectory plots paralleling
the thick gauzy green slab of the ring which filled the bottom half of the
projection. Lady Macbeth lurked below the ring surface like some
outlandish slumbering marine creature.
“Maranta and Gramine
are now six thousand kilometres apart,” Joshua said. “They’ve got a
reasonable idea of the general area where we have to be hidden, and they’ve
changed altitude twice in the last fifteen hours to cover different sections of
the ring. If they stick to that pattern they’ll change again in another four
hours.” He ordered the display to extrapolate their positions. “Gramine will
be about three hundred kilometres from us, she actually passes over us in
another ninety minutes; and Maranta is going to be right out at the
extreme, about seven and a half thousand kilometres away. After that they’ll
swap orbital tracks and begin a new sweep.
“So if we can break
out when Maranta is seven and a half thousand klicks away, we’ll be far
enough ahead of it to escape.”
“And Gramine?”
Melvyn asked. He didn’t like Joshua’s quiet tone, as if the young captain was
afraid of what he was going to say.
“We know where it’s
going to be, we can leave one of the megaton nukes from the combat wasp waiting
for it. Mine the ring where it will pass overhead, attach the nuke to a large
rock particle. Between them, the emp pulse, the plasma wave, and the rock
fragments should disable it.”
“How do we get it
there?” Melvyn asked.
“You know bloody well
how we get it there,” Sarha said. “Someone’s got to carry it using a
manoeuvring pack, right Joshua? That’s what you did in the Ruin Ring, isn’t
it?”
“Yeah. They can’t
detect one person fifteen kilometres deep in the ring, not using cold gas to
manoeuvre.”
“Wait a minute,”
Dahybi said. He had been running flight trajectory simulations in the
navigation display. “Even if you did knock out the Gramine, and that’s a
bloody long shot, we’re still no better off. Maranta will just launch
her combat wasps straight at us. There’s no way we can out-run them, they’ll
get us before we’re halfway to the edge of Murora’s gravity field, let alone
Lalonde’s jump coordinate.”
“If we accelerate at
eight gees, we’ll have seven minutes fifteen seconds before the Maranta’s
combat wasps will catch us,” Joshua said. “Distance-wise that works out at
about sixteen thousand kilometres.”
“That still won’t get
us outside Murora’s gravity field. We couldn’t even jump blind.”
“No, but there is one
place we can jump from. It’s only fifteen thousand kilometres away; we would
have a twenty-second safety margin.”
“Where?” Melvyn
demanded.
Joshua datavised an
instruction into the flight computer. The navigational display drew a violet
trajectory line from the Lady Mac towards the edge of the ring, sliding
round in a retrograde curve to end at one of the four tiny ring-shepherd
moonlets.
“Murora VII,” Joshua
said.
A terrible realization
came to Dahybi; his balls retracted as though he’d dived into an icy lake. “Oh,
Christ, no, Joshua. You can’t be serious, not at that velocity.”
“So give me an
alternative.”
“An alternative to
what?” Sarha asked petulantly.
Still looking at
Joshua, Dahybi said: “The Lagrange point. Every two-body system has them. It’s
where the moonlet’s gravity is balanced by Murora’s, which means you can
activate a starship’s nodes inside it without worrying about gravitonic stress
desynchronization. Technically, they’re points, but in practice they work out
as a relatively spherical zone. A small zone.”
“For Murora VII, about
two and a half kilometres in diameter,” Joshua said. “Unfortunately, we’ll be
travelling at about twenty-seven kilometres per second when we reach it. That
gives us a tenth of a second to trigger the nodes.”
“Oh, shit,” Ashly
grunted.
“It won’t be a problem
for the flight computer,” Joshua said blandly.
“But where will the
jump take us?” Melvyn asked.
“I can give us a rough
alignment on Achillea, the third gas giant. It’s on the other side of the
system now, about seven billion kilometres away. We’ll jump a billion
kilometres, align Lady Mac properly on one of its outer moons, then jump
again. No way will Maranta be able to follow us through those kind of
manoeuvres. When we get to Achillea we slingshot round the moon onto a Lalonde
trajectory and jump in. Total elapsed time eighty minutes maximum.”
“Oh, God
. . . well, I suppose you know what you’re talking about.”
“Him?” Sarha
exclaimed. “You must be joking.”
“It has a certain
degree of style,” Dahybi said. He nodded approvingly. “OK, Joshua, I’ll have
the nodes primed. But you’re going to have to be staggeringly accurate when we
hit that Lagrange point.”
“My middle name.”
Sarha studied the
bridge decking. “I know another one,” she muttered under her breath.
“So who’s the lucky
one that gets to EVA in the rings and blow up the Gramine?” Melvyn
asked.
“Volunteers can draw
lots,” Joshua said. “Put my name in.”
“Don’t be stupid,”
Sarha said. “We all know you’re going to have to fly the Lady Mac, no
one else could hit that moonlet, let alone its Lagrange point. And Ashly has to
take the spaceplane down, I expect that flight’s going to need a professional.
So the rest of us will draw for it.”
“Kindly include twenty
of us,” Gaura said. “We are all qualified in EVA work, and we have the added
advantage of being able to communicate with Aethra in case the starship should
alter course.”
“Nobody is
volunteering, nobody is drawing lots,” Warlow said, using excessive volume to
obliterate any dissent. “This is my job. It’s what I’m designed for. And I’m
the oldest here. So I qualify on all counts.”
“Don’t be so bloody
morbid,” Joshua said, annoyance covering his real concern. “You just plant the
nuke on a rock particle and come straight back.”
Warlow laughed, making
them all wince. “Of course, so easy.”
Now, finally, under
the slowly spinning inferno and looking up into a glaring formless void.
Journey’s end. Chas Paske had to turn down his optical sensors’ receptivity,
the light was so bright. At first he had thought some kind of miniature sun
lurked up there at the centre of the flaming vortex of cloud, but now the boat
had carried him faithfully under the baleful cone he could see the apex had
burst open like a malignant tumour. The rent was growing larger. The cyclone
was growing larger, deeper and wider.
He knew its purpose at
last, that knowledge was inescapable where he was, pressed down in the bottom
of the flat boat under the sheer pressure of the light. It was a mouth, jaws
opening wide. One day—soon—it would devour the whole world.
He gave a wild little
giggle at the notion.
That heavy, heavy
light was migrating from whatever (wherever?) lay on the other side. Weighty
extrinsic photons sinking slowly downwards like snow to smother the land and
river in their own special frost. Whatever they touched, gleamed, as though lit
from within. Even his body, shoddy, worthless thing it was now, had acquired a
dignified lustre.
Above the gashed cloud
was a sheer plane of white light, a mathematical absolute. The ocean into which
his white silk dream river emptied. A universal ocean into which Lalonde was
destined to fall like a pearl droplet, and lose itself for evermore. He felt
himself wanting to rise up towards it, to defy gravity and soar. Into the
perpetual light and warmth which would cleanse him and banish sorrow. It would
ripple once as he penetrated the meniscus, throwing out a polished wave crown,
a single ephemeral spire rising at the centre. After that there would be no
trace. To pass through was to transcend.
His remoulded face was
incapable of smiling. So he lay there gladly on the boat, mind virtually
divorced from his body, looking up at his future, awaiting his moment of
ascension. His physical purpose long since abandoned.
Even though the red
cloud’s thunder had retreated to a muffled rumbling he never heard the starting
gun being fired, so the first cannonball shattered his serenity with shocking
abruptness.
They had known he was
there, the possessed, they had been aware of him all along. From the moment
he’d passed under the aegis of the red cloud he had registered in their
consciousness, as an orbiting gnat might impinge upon a man’s peripheral
vision. His hapless journey down the river was of no consequence to them; in
his miserable degenerative state he was simply not worth their attention nor a
moment’s effort. The river was bringing him surely to their bosom, they were
content to let him come in his own time.
Now he was here, and
they had assembled down by the docks to provide a maliciously frolicsome
reception. It was a black-hearted jamboree suitable to celebrate the last
possession before Lalonde escaped the universe for good.
The iron ball whistled
low over Chas’s boat with a backlash crack that set the insecure craft rocking,
then splattered into the snowlily mush thirty metres away. Purple smoke and
ten-metre magnesium flames squirted joyously into the air like a jumbo Roman
candle.
Chas shunted round on
his elbows, looking in disbelief at the chromatic blaze. The snowlilies started
to melt away around his boat, lowering it into sparkling clear blue water.
Whoops and catcalls wafted over the river from the shore. He twisted round.
Durringham with all of
its white towers and onion-dome spires and lofty castles and lush hanging
gardens formed a magnificent backdrop to the armada racing to collect him.
There were Polynesian war canoes with flower-garlanded warriors digging their
paddles into the clear water; rowing eights with lean young men sweating under
the cox’s bellowed orders; triremes, their massed oars flashing in immaculate
unison; Viking marauders sporting resplendent scarlet and gold sun-god sails;
dhows whose lateens strained ahead of the fresh breeze; junks, sampans,
ketches, sloops . . . and riding fast and proud out in front was a
big three-masted buccaneer, its crew in striped shirts scrambling over the
rigging. A quarter of the city’s population crowded the circular harbours (now
ancient solid stone) cheering on their chosen team in a boisterous rollicking
carnival atmosphere.
Chas gagged at the
sight of it all; the nightmare dormant in every human brain the entire world
is out to get me. The whole city was chasing him, wanted him, hated him. He
was their new toy, the day’s amusement.
His body spasmed in
massive quakes, implants faltering. Intolerable waves of pain from his leg
crashed past the crumbling analgesic blocks. “Bastards!” he roared. “You
shit-eating bastards. You don’t play with me. I am your enemy. I am not a joke.
Fear me. Fear me, God damn you!”
A dainty ring of smoke
puffed out of the buccaneer’s forward gun. Chas screamed, fury and terror in
one incoherent blast of sound.
The cannon-ball hit
the water ten metres away, sending up a sheet of steaming white water. Wavelets
rushed out, slapping his boat.
“Bastards.” It wasn’t
even a whisper. Adrenalin and nerves could do nothing more for him, he was
devoid of strength. “I’ll show you. Freaks. Zoo people. I am not a joke.”
Somewhere far away a soprano chorus was singing black canticles.
Chas datavised the
activation code into the kiloton bomb strapped in its harness at his side. Good
old faithful bomb. Stuck to him the whole time. That’ll wipe the smile off
their faces.
Nothing happened, his
neural nanonics had shut down. Pain was burning through him, leaving only
numbness in its wake. Fingers scrabbled feebly at the bomb’s small manual
control panel, prising open the cover. His head flopped to one side to follow
the movement. He eventually managed to focus an optical sensor. The panel
keyboard was dark, inert. It had failed. He had failed.
Almost forgotten
natural tear glands squeezed out their very last drops as he slowly knocked a
fist on the wooden planking in utter futility.
A couple of the
triremes were gaining on the buccaneer. It was developing into a three-boat
race, though one of the war canoes refused to give up, warriors pounding the
water with their paddles, skin gleaming as though they were sweating oil. Back
on the harbours the elated cheering mixed with songs and chants from across
five millennia.
The buccaneer crew
fired another cannon to terrorize their crushed victim.
“You won’t have me!”
Chas cried in defiance. He put a hand on each gunwale and started to rock the
boat as the cannon-ball’s wavelets broke against the hull. “Never. Never. I
won’t be a part of it, not of you.”
Pain and numbness had
gorged on his torso. His arms began to fail as the swaying reached a peak.
Water slopped in over the narrow gunwale. The flimsy boat turned turtle,
dumping him into the Juliffe. He saw bubbles churning past. The rumpled silver
foil of the surface receded. Neural nanonics told him his lungs were filling
with water. Pain diminished. His implants were working again. They couldn’t
reach him under water, he was beyond them here. He focused every sensor he had
on the bomb whose weight was dragging him down.
On shore the audience
had stopped cheering when their prey (so unsportingly) capsized himself. A
groan went up. He’d pay for that.
Boat crews stopped
rowing and slumped over their oars, exhausted and angry. The buccaneer’s sails
calmly rolled themselves up as the sailors hung like listless spiders in the
rigging. They stared morosely at the tiny half-sunken boat bobbing about ahead
of them.
Together Durringham’s
possessed exerted their power. The river around the hull of Chas Paske’s boat
began to ripple energetically.
“Hey look, it’s
Moses!” someone yelled from the harbour wall. A laugh ran along the spectators.
They clapped their hands and stomped their feet, a stadium crowd demanding
their sporting hero appear. “Moses! Moses! Moses!”
The waters of the
Juliffe parted.
Chas felt it
happening. His surroundings were getting lighter, pressure was reducing. Below
his fingers the bomb’s keyboard was a glowing ruby chessboard. He typed in the
code, refusing to hurry, watching the numbered squares turn green. There was a
loud gurgling sound building all around. Fast-conflicting currents sucked at
him, twisting his lifeless legs about. Then the rucked surface came rushing
down to seek him out. Too late.
The kiloton nuke
detonated at the bottom of a twenty-metre crater in the river. Its initial
blast pulse was punched straight up into the core of the transplanarity ferment
raging above. A solar fireball arose from the water with splendid
inevitability, and the entire river seemed to lift with it. Energy in every
spectrum poured outwards, smashing solid matter apart. None of those lining the
harbour wall really knew what was happening. Their stolen bodies disintegrated
before the nerve impulses could reach the brain. Only after annihilation, when
the possessing souls found themselves back in the bestial beyond, did the truth
dawn.
Two seconds after the
bomb exploded, a forty-metre wall of water moving at near-sonic speed slammed
into Durringham. And the dead, ensconced in their beautiful new mansions and
fanciful castles, died again in their tens of thousands beneath the usurping
totem of the radiant mushroom cloud.
Chapter 12
With his enhanced
retinas switched to full sensitivity it appeared as though Warlow was flying
through a dry iridescent mist. Ring particles still crawled with wayward spurts
of energy; micrometre dust flowed in slow streams around the larger boulders
and ice chunks. Despite the shimmering phosphorescence he was basically flying
blind. Occasionally he could catch a glimpse of stars flickering past his feet,
short-lived embers skipping from an invisible bonfire.
After leaving the Lady
Macbeth he had moved twelve kilometres out from Murora, an orbit which saw
him falling behind the sheltering starship. The big dark sphere, upper hull
glinting in the livid red glow from its own thermo-dump panels, had been lost
from sight in three minutes. Isolation had tightened its bewitching fingers
almost immediately. Strangely enough, here, where he could barely see ten
metres, a realization of the universe’s vastness was all too strong.
The ten-megaton bomb
was strapped to his chest, a fat ovoid seventy-five centimetres high.
Weightless, yet weighing heavily in his heart—titanium and composite device
though it was.
Sarha had given him
one of the Edenist bitek processor blocks which she had modified with
augmentation modules. The idea was to provide him with a link to Aethra in case
the Gramine should unexpectedly alter track.
Makeshift, like this
whole mission.
“Can I speak with you
alone?” he datavised.
“Of course,” the
habitat answered. “I would be glad to keep you company. Yours is a fraught
task.”
“But it is mine
alone.”
“You are the best
qualified.”
“Thank you. I wanted
to ask you a question on the nature of death.”
“Yes?”
“It involves a small
story.”
“Go on. I am always
interested to hear of human events. I understand very little of your species so
far, even though I have inherited a wealth of data.”
“Ten years ago I was a
crew-member in the starship Harper’s Dragon. It was a line cargo ship,
nothing special, although the pay was comfortingly regular. We had a new cadet
lieutenant join us on Woolsey, called Felix Barton. He was only twenty, but he
had assimilated his didactic courses well. I found him competent, and a
reasonable messmate. He was no different to any other young man starting his
career. Then he fell in love with an Edenist woman.”
“Ah; this is, perhaps,
a Shakespearian tragedy?”
Warlow saw thin
ribbons of orange dust winding corkscrew fashion around an ice chunk straight
ahead; a bird-kite’s tail, he thought. They sparked pink on his carbotanium
space armour as he splashed through. Then he was past them and curving round a
mealy boulder, guidance and optical interpretation programs operating in tandem
to steer him automatically around obstacles. “Not at all. It is a very
straightforward story. He simply became besotted. I admit she was beautiful,
but then every geneered human seems to be. Harper’s Dragon had a regular
contract to supply her habitat with specialist chemicals for one of their
electronics manufacturing stations. After four trips, Felix declared he could
not bear to be parted from her. And he was lucky, she felt the same way about
him.”
“How fortunate.”
“Yes. Felix left Harper’s
Dragon and became an Edenist. He had neuron symbionts implanted to give him
general affinity, and underwent specialist counselling to help him adapt. The
last time Harper’s Dragon visited, I spoke with him, and he was
extremely happy. He said he had fitted in perfectly and that she was expecting
their first child.”
“That is nice. There
are something like a million and a half Adamists who become Edenists every
year.”
“So many? I didn’t
know.”
“Seventy per cent are
love cases similar to your friend, the rest join because it attracts them
intellectually or emotionally. Over half of the love cases are Adamists who
form relationships with voidhawk crew-members, which is only to be expected
given that they have the most contact with Adamists. It leads to many jokes
about the voidhawk families having wild blood.”
“So tell me, is the
conversion absolute, do these newfound Edenists transfer their memories into
the habitat when they die?”
“Of course.”
His neural nanonics
displayed a guidance plot, updating his position. Purple and yellow vectors
slithered through his head, temporarily displacing his view of the irradiated
dust. He was on course. His course. “Then my question is this. Is it possible
to transfer a person’s memories into a habitat if that person has neural
nanonics rather than affinity?”
“I have no record of
it ever having been done. Although I can see no reason why not; the process
would take longer, however, datavising is not as efficient as affinity.”
“I want to become an
Edenist. I want you to accept my memories.”
“Warlow, why?”
“I am eighty-six, and
I am not geneered. My shipmates do not know, but all that is left of my real
body is the brain and a few nerve cords. The rest of me perished long ago. I spent
far too much time in free fall, you see.”
“I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be. It has been
a full life. But now my neurons are dying at a rate which is beyond even
Confederation gene therapy’s ability to replace. So, understandably, I have
come to think a lot about death recently. I had even considered downloading my
memories into a processor array, but that would simply be an echo of myself.
You on the other hand are a living entity, within you I too could continue to
live.”
“I would be happy and
honoured to accept your memories. But, Warlow, the transference must take place
at death, only that way can continuity be achieved. Anything less would be that
echo of self which you spoke of. Your personality would know it was not
complete because its conclusion was missing.”
He flew along a cliff
of charcoal-textured rock. A virtual mountain of a particle, worn and abraded
by aeons of murmuring dust, the lethal knife-blade spires unsheathed by its
fractured formation now a moorland landscape of undulations, barrows of its
youthful virility. “I know.”
“Are you worried then
that Captain Calvert will not be able to escape through the Lagrange point?”
“No. Joshua will be
able to fly that manoeuvre with ease. My concern is that he is given the chance
to fly it.”
“You mean eliminating
the Gramine?”
“I do. This mission to
mine the rings is the weakest link in Joshua’s plan to escape. It assumes the Gramine
will not deviate its orbit by more than five hundred metres in the next two
hours. It assumes too much. I propose to position the warhead accurately on Gramine’s
orbital track, and detonate it while it passes. That way I can be sure.”
“Warlow, neither Gramine
nor Maranta have deviated their track by more than a hundred metres
since the search began. I urge you to reconsider this action.”
“Why? I have only a
few years to live at best. Most of those would be spent with my memories and
rationality slipping away. Our medical science has achieved too much in that
direction. My synthetic body can keep pumping blood through my comatose brain
for decades yet. Would you wish that on me when you know you yourself can
provide me with a worthwhile continuance?”
“That is, I believe, a
loaded question.”
“Correct. My mind is
made up. This way I have two chances of cheating death. There are few who can
say that.”
“Two? How so?”
“Possession implies an
afterlife, somewhere a soul can return from.”
“You believe that is
the fate which has befallen Lalonde?”
“Do you know what a
Catholic is?” A solid glacier wall of ice appeared out of the dust. The
cold-gas nozzles of his manoeuvring pack fired heavily. For a moment he saw the
splay of waxen vapour shiver as it was siphoned away into the blue and emerald
phosphenes of dust.
“Catholicism is one of
the root religions which made up the Unified Christian Church,” Aethra said.
“Almost. Officially,
by decree of the Pope, Catholicism was absorbed. But it was a strong faith. You
cannot modify and dilute such an intense devotion simply by compromising
prayers and services to achieve unity with other Christian denominations. My
home asteroid was Forli, an ethnic-Italian settlement. It kept the faith,
unofficially, unobtrusively. Try as I might, I cannot throw away the teachings
of my childhood. Divine justice is something I think all living things will
have to face.”
“Even me?”
“Even you. And Lalonde
looks to confirm my belief.”
“You think Kelly
Tirrel was telling the truth?”
Warlow’s manoeuvring
pack was nudging him gingerly round the rimed iceberg, loyally following the
ins and outs of its gentle contours. Its surface was true crystal, but
eventually it sank into total blackness, as though a wormhole interstice had
frozen open at its core. When his armour-suit sensors scanned round they showed
him the constellations returning to their full majesty through the attenuating
dust. “I do. I am convinced of it.”
“Why?”
“Because Joshua
believes her.”
“A strange rationale.”
“Joshua is more than a
superlative captain. In all my years I have never come across anyone quite like
him. He behaves execrably with women and money, and even his friends on
occasion. But, if you will excuse my clumsy poetry, he is in tune with the
universe. He knows truth. I put my faith in Joshua, I have done so ever since I
signed on with the Lady Macbeth, and I will continue to do so.”
“Then there is an
afterlife.”
“If not, I will live
on as part of your multiplicity. But Kelly Tirrel has been convinced that there
is. She is a tough, cynical person, she would take a lot of convincing such a
thing could be. And, as now appears likely, if there is an afterlife, I have an
immortal soul and death is not to be feared.”
“And do you fear
death?”
He rose out of the
iceberg’s umbra cloak. It was similar to emerging from a dark layer of
rain-cloud into clear evening sky, there was only a remote diaphanous shimmer
of dust left above him. Gramine shone like a second-magnitude star,
forty kilometres away and drifting towards him. “Very much.”
The hovercraft slewed
and bucked on the river, tossed about by white-water waves swelling over
semi-submerged stones. Theo was concentrating hard on keeping them straight and
level, but it was tough going. Kelly didn’t remember yesterday’s journey up
this same river as being so difficult. She and Shaun Wallace were sitting on
the rear bench, clinging on grimly as they were slung about. The propeller
droned behind her.
“Already I feel
wearied by the journey, daunted by what we are attempting. This is not even
snatching victory from the jaws of defeat, although it might be termed a last
vain attempt to salvage the team’s dignity. We came to this planet with such
confidence and high ideals; we were going to vanquish the evil invader and
restore order and stability to twenty million people, give them their lives
back. Now all we dare hope for is to escape with thirty children. And even that
will tax us to the limit.”
“Such a worrier, Miss
Kelly.” Shaun smiled congenially.
The hovercraft
swerved, pushing her against him—for the briefest second the channel to her
sensorium flek recorder block dropped out—and he smiled politely as they
righted themselves. “You mean I shouldn’t be worrying?”
“Now I never said
that. But worry is the Devil’s disciple, it rots the soul.”
“Well, you’d certainly
be the one to know all about souls.”
Shaun chuckled softly.
Kelly glanced up at
the red cloud. They had been under it for half an hour now. It was thicker than
it had been yesterday, its constituent tresses twirling sluggishly. Somehow she
was aware of its weight, a heaviness necessary to blot out not just the sight
of space but the physical laws governing existence. A complex intertwining of
associated emotions defeated her, as though she was sensevising some obscure
xenoc ceremony. “That cloud means a lot to you, doesn’t it?” she asked.
“Not the cloud itself,
Miss Kelly, that’s nothing, but what it represents, yes. That’s like seeing
your aspirations take form. To me, to all of us damned souls, it means freedom.
A precious commodity when you’ve been denied it for seven hundred years.”
Kelly switched her attention
to the second hovercraft, with Horst Elwes and Russ sitting on the bench behind
Ariadne, faces ploughed up against the biting slipstream wind. Cannonades of
thunder thrashed overhead, as if the cloud was the taut skin of some gigantic
drum. She saw Russ push himself closer against the priest. The simple act of
trust was immensely poignant.
The privation dropped
upon Shaun Wallace without the slightest warning. He experienced the dreadful
exodus, the flight of souls expelled from the universe exerting a tidal force
on his own precarious possession. Their lamentations and enmity spilled back
from the beyond in that eerily pervasive chorus, and then came venomous anger
of those who accompanied them on their expulsion, those they had possessed. All
of them, preying on each other, hating each other. The conflict permeated his
skull, wrenching at his thoughts. He gagged, eyes widening in shock. His face
betrayed an emotion of uttermost despair, then he flung his head back and
howled.
Reza never wanted to hear
a cry like it again. The outpouring of anguish compressed into that one
cataclysmic bawl spoke for an entire planet. Grief paralysed him, and loss,
loss so profound he wanted the universe to end so he could be spared.
It finished as Shaun
ran out of breath. Unsteadily, Reza twisted round on the front bench. Tears
were streaming down the possessed man’s cheeks. He drew breath and howled
again.
Kelly’s hands were
clasped against her puckered lips. “What?” she wailed. “What is it?” Her eyes
shut instinctively at the next outburst.
Reza tried to block it
all out and project some comfort to Fenton and Ryall. “Pat?” he datavised. “Can
Octan see anything happening?”
“Not a thing,” the
second-in-command answered from the other hovercraft. “What’s going on? Wallace
frightened the shit out of us.”
“I’ve no idea.”
Kelly shook Shaun’s
arm imploringly. “What’s wrong? What is it? Speak to me!” Panic was giving her
voice a shrill edge. “Shaun!”
Shaun gulped down a
breath, his shoulders shivering. He lowered his head until he was staring at
Reza. “You,” he hissed. “You killed them.”
Reza looked at him
through a cross-grid of yellow target graphics, his forearm gaussrifle was
aimed directly at the possessed man’s temple. “Killed who?”
“The city, the whole
city. I felt them go, thousands upon thousands blown back to the beyond like so
much ash. Your devil bomb, it went off. No, it was set off. What kind of
creatures are you to slaughter so indiscriminately?”
Reza felt a grin
reflex coming on, which his restructured face portrayed as a moderate widening
of his mouth slit. “Someone got through, didn’t they? Someone hit back.”
Shaun’s head sagged
brokenly. “One man. That’s all, one bloody man.”
“So you’re not so
invincible, after all. I hope it pains you, Mr. Wallace, I hope it pains all
your kind. That way you may begin to know something of the horror we felt when
we found out what you did to this planet’s children.”
The flash of guilt on
the man’s face proved the barb had hit home.
“Oh, yes, Mr. Wallace,
we know. Even if Kelly here is too tactful to mention it. We know the barbarism
we are dealing with.”
“What bomb?” Kelly
asked. “What are you two talking about?”
“Ask him,” Shaun said,
and sneered at Reza. “Ask him how he was intending to help the poor people of
this planet he was hired to save.”
“Reza?”
The mercenary leader
swayed as the hovercraft banked around a boulder. “Terrance Smith was concerned
we might not get all the fire support we needed from the starships. He gave
each team leader a nuke.”
“Oh, Christ.” Kelly
looked from one man to the other. “Do you mean you’ve got one as well?”
“You should know,
Kelly,” Reza said. “You’re sitting on it.”
She tried to jump to
her feet, only to have Shaun grab her arm and keep her sitting.
“Have you learned
nothing of him yet, Miss Kelly? There’s no human part left in that mockery of a
body.”
“Point to your body,
Mr. Wallace, the one you were born with,” Reza said. “After that I’ll talk
morality and ethics with you all day long.”
They stared at each
other.
Darkness began to
fall. Kelly looked up to see the red light bleeding from the cloud, leaving
behind a swollen slate-grey mantle massing sinisterly low overhead. A blade of
purple-white lightning screwed down on the savannah to the east.
“What’s happening?”
Kelly shouted as thunder crashed over the hovercraft.
“You are happening,
Miss Kelly. They sense you. They fear and hate you now your true nature and
power has been exposed. This is the last mercenary team left, you see. None of
the others survived.”
“So what will they
do?”
“Hunt you down,
whatever the cost below the muzzles of your weapons.”
Two hours after Warlow
had left Lady Mac Joshua was accessing the flight computer’s memory
cores, looking for records of starships jumping from inside a Lagrange point.
He and Dahybi had gone through the small amount of available data on Murora
VII, using it to refine their computations of the Lagrange point’s size and
position, locking the figures into the trajectory plot. He could pilot Lady
Mac right into its heart—no doubt about that: now he wanted to know what
would happen when the energy patterning nodes were activated. There was a lot
of theory in the physics files about how it should be possible, but no actual
verified ZTT jump.
Who’s going to be
stupid enough to take part in an experiment like that? he asked himself. But he
was lying on his acceleration couch, and Dahybi, Ashly, and Sarha were on the
bridge with him, so he kept any qualms to himself. He was just wondering if
there would be a reference in a history file, surely the ZTT pioneers would
want to know the limits of their craft, when Aethra datavised him.
“Warlow wants to talk
with you,” the habitat said.
He cancelled the link
to the memory cores. “Hello, Warlow. How’s it going?”
“Superbly,” Warlow
said.
“Where are you?” The
cosmonik ought to be back on board in another twenty minutes if everything was
running on schedule. Joshua had helped draw up the flight vector through the
ring.
“Twenty kilometres
from Gramine.”
“What?”
“I can see it.”
“Jesus shit, Warlow.
What the fuck are you playing at? The schedule doesn’t have any margin for
error.”
“I know. That’s why
I’m here. I’m going to make certain that Gramine is destroyed by the
blast. I shall detonate it when the ship is in an optimum position.”
“Oh, Jesus, Warlow,
get your iron arse back here now!”
“Sorry, Captain. Maranta
will only be seven thousand three hundred kilometres away when Gramine is
eliminated. But that will still give you an eighteen-second lead on the combat
wasps. That’s easily enough time.”
“Warlow, stop this. We
can wait until the end of the next sweep and position the bomb again. That’s
only another five hours. We’ll still be at Lalonde before Amarisk’s evening.”
“Joshua, you have six
minutes before I detonate. Make sure everyone is strapped down, please.”
“Don’t do it. Jesus,
Warlow, I’m begging you.”
“You know this has to
be done properly. And I can ensure it is.”
“Not like this.
Please, come back.”
“Don’t worry about me,
Joshua. I’ve thought it out, I will be quite all right.”
“Warlow!” Joshua’s
face was crushed into a mask of anger and desperation. He jerked round to look
at Ashly. The pilot was moving his lips silently, eyelashes sticky with tears.
“Say something,” Joshua commanded. “Get him back.”
“Warlow, for Heaven’s
sake come back,” Ashly datavised. “Just because you can’t navigate properly
there’s no need for this. I’ll do it next time, and do it right.”
“I would like you to
do me a favour, Ashly.”
“What?”
“Next time you come
out of zero-tau, in fifty years or so, I want you to come back here and visit
me.”
“Visit you?”
“Yes. I am
transferring my memories to Aethra. I’m going to become one of the
multiplicity. I won’t die.”
“You crazy old
bastard.”
“Gaura!” Joshua
shouted. “Can he do that? He’s not an Edenist.”
“The datavise has
already begun,” Gaura replied. “He is doing it.”
“Oh, Jesus wept.”
“Is everyone in their
acceleration couches?” Warlow asked. “I’m giving you the chance you really need
to escape the rings. You’re not going to waste that, are you, Joshua?”
“Shit.” A hot steel
band was constricting Joshua’s chest, far worse than any gee force. “They’re
getting onto the couches, Warlow.” He datavised the flight computer for an
image from the cabin cameras, watching Edenists tighten the webbing around
themselves. Melvyn was swimming about, checking they had done it properly.
“And what about the
thermo-dump panels, have you retracted them? There’s only five minutes left.”
Joshua datavised the
flight computer to retract the thermo-dump panels. Systems schematics appeared
as he prepped the generators and drive tubes; mostly green, some amber. The old
girl was in good shape. Sarha started to help him with the checklist.
“Please, Warlow?”
“Fly the bastards into
the ground, Joshua. You can do it.”
“Jesus, I don’t know
what to say.”
“Promise me
something.”
“Yes.”
“Gotcha. You should
have asked me what it was first.”
Joshua coughed.
Laughed painfully. It made his vision all blurred for some unfathomable reason.
“What is it?”
“Hard luck, you
committed. I want you to be more considerate to your girls. You never see the
effect you have on them. Some of them get hurt, Joshua.”
“Jesus, cosmonik and
social worker.”
“Promise?”
“I promise.”
“You were a good
captain, Joshua. Lady Macbeth was a great way to finish. I wouldn’t have
had it any other way.”
Sarha was sobbing on
her acceleration couch. Ashly was clenching and unclenching his fists.
“I would,” Joshua said
silently.
Aethra showed them Gramine.
The starship was traversing the ring surface with the suavity of a maglev
train, straight and sure. Three thermo-dump panels were extended to the full,
shining a dull vermilion. A long, narrow flame of blue ions flickered for an
instant.
“Who’d have thought
it,” Warlow datavised. “Me, an Edenist.”
Joshua had never felt
so pathetically worthless as he did then. He’s my crewman.
The bomb exploded. It
sent a flat circle of sheer white light flaring out across the ring surface. Gramine
was a tiny dark speck above its centre.
Joshua fired the
restraint bolts. Taut silicon-fibre cables tethering the Lady Macbeth to
its rock shield recoiled from the hull, writhing in serpentine coils. Lights
inside the four life-support capsules dimmed and sputtered as the one active
auxiliary generator powered up the four remaining primary generators. Ion
thrusters fired, hosing the dark rock with unaccustomed turquoise luminosity.
A sphere of plasma
inflated at the centre of the white shroud thrown across the ring, fast at
first, then slowing when it was five kilometres across, diminishing slightly.
Black phantoms migrated across its surface. Gramine’s lower hull shone
brighter than a sun as it reflected the diabolical corona seething four
kilometres below.
Thousands of fragmented
rock splinters flew out of the heart of the fusion blast, overtaking the
disbanding plasma wave. They had the same riotous glow of doomed meteorites
caught by an atmosphere. Unlike the plasma they left behind, their velocity
didn’t fall off with distance.
“Generators on-line,”
Sarha called out. “Power output stabilizing.”
Joshua closed his
eyes. Datavised displays filled his head with technicolour dragonfly wings. Lady
Mac cleared the rock. Her radar started to fire hard microwave pulses at
the loose shoal of ring particles, evaporating snowflakes and inflaming
carbonaceous motes. Beams of blue-white radiance shone out of the secondary
reaction-drive nozzles, rigid as lasers.
They started to rise
up through the ring. Dust currents splashed over the monobonded-silicon hull,
producing short-lived surf-bloom patterns. Pebbles and larger stones hit and
bounced. Ice splattered and stuck, then slipped downwards to fall away in the
turbulent glare of the drive exhaust.
A rock chunk crashed
into the Gramine, shattering its hull open and decimating the internal
systems. Cryogenic tanks ruptured, white gases scintillating from the dying
fusion bomb’s energy barrage. Four life-support capsules raced out of the
destruction, charred nultherm foam flaking away, emergency beacons blaring.
Lady Mac cleared the ring surface. Fifty kilometres
above her a wave of scarlet meteors streaked across the starfield.
“Stand by for high
gees,” Joshua said. The fusion drives came on, tormenting the abused ring still
further. Lady Mac tilted round, and started chasing down the inside of
the tapering orange vector tube in Joshua’s mind. He monitored the displays to
ensure their course was aligned correctly as the gee forces built, then
datavised an extra order into the flight computer.
“Joshua, what—”
Ashly’s startled voice faded away as the bridge trembled softly.
The last combat wasp
left its launch-tube.
“Watch it coming,
shitheads,” Joshua purred. Jesus, but it felt good to see the vector lines
emerge as the submunitions separated. Purple threads linking Lady Mac with
the tumbling wreckage.
It took eight seconds
for the submunitions to reach the Gramine’s life-support capsules. A
stipple of kinetic explosions boiled above the ring for a few scant seconds
before the vacuum absorbed them as effortlessly as it did all human-born
pollution.
The inside of the
homestead cabin was even worse than Jay Hilton imagined hell must be like. She
wouldn’t let any of the other children go outside, so they had to use buckets
in the small second bedroom when they wanted to go to the toilet. The smell was
atrocious, and it got viler every time they opened the door. To add to their
woes, the heat had reached a zenith which even Lalonde had never matched
before. They had opened all the shutters as well as the door, but the air was
solid, motionless. The cabin’s timber creaked and popped as the frame expanded.
The physical ordeal
was bad enough, but Jay felt so agonizingly lonely too. It was stupid, there
were twenty-seven children crammed in around her so tight you couldn’t move
without nudging someone. But she didn’t want other kids, she wanted Father
Horst. He had never done this before, not leave them alone for a whole day, and
certainly not at night. Jay suspected Father Horst was as scared by the night
as she was.
All this wretchedness
had started when the starships had appeared, and with them the red cloud.
Yesterday, just yesterday. It should have been a wonderful time. Rescue was
here, the navy marines would come and take them all away and make everything
right again. The long dragging miserable days out here on the unchanging
savannah were over.
The idea was a little
bit scary, because there was always some comfort in routine, even one as
difficult as the homestead. But that didn’t matter, she was leaving Lalonde.
And nobody was ever going to make her come back. Not even Mummy!
They had spent a happy
morning outside, keeping watch over the savannah for the first sign of their
rescuers. Though the growing red cloud had been a bit frightening.
Then Russ had seen
what he claimed was an explosion, and Father Horst had ridden off to
investigate.
“I’ll be back in a
couple of hours,” were his last words to her as he’d left.
They had waited and
waited. And the red cloud had slid over the sky above, bringing its horrible
noise with it, as though it was hiding an avalanche of boulders.
She had done what she
could, organizing meals and rotas. Things to do, things to keep them busy. And
still he hadn’t come back.
Her watch had told her
when it was night. She would never have known otherwise. They had closed the
shutters and the door, but red light from the cloud seemed to slide in through
every crack and cranny. There was no escape. Sleep was difficult, the boomy
thunder-noise kept going the whole time, mingling with the higher pitched
sounds of crying.
Even now the youngest
children remained tearful, the older ones subdued. Jay leant on the
window-sill, gazing off in the direction Father Horst had gone. If he didn’t
come back very soon, she knew she wouldn’t be able to hold her own tears back.
Then everything would be lost.
I must try not to.
But she had been badly
shaken by the way the red light had vanished ninety minutes ago. Now ghastly
black clouds swept low and silent over the savannah, turning everything to
funereal greys. At first she had tried to play the shapes game, to make them
less sinister, but her mind’s eye could only conjure up witches and monsters.
Jay turned round from
the window, registering the frightened faces. “Danny, the fridge should have
done some more ice by now. Make everyone some orange juice.”
He nodded, happy to be
given some task. Usually he was a real moaner. “Jay!” Eustice squealed. “Jay,
there’s something out there.” She backed away from her window, hands pressed to
her cheeks.
There was an outbreak
of crying and wails behind Jay. Furniture was kicked and scraped as the
children instinctively made for the rear wall.
“What was it?” Jay
asked.
Eustice shook her
head. “I don’t know,” she said wretchedly. “Something!”
Jay could hear the
cows mooing plaintively, sometimes the bleating of a goat. It might just be a
sayce, she thought. Several had gone by yesterday, driven from the jungle by
the red cloud. She gave the open door a nervous glance, she’d have to shut it.
With shivers in each limb she shuffled back to the window and peeked round the
frame.
Lightning was playing
along the horizon. The savannah’s darkling grass was perfectly still, which
made the movement easy to spot. Two ebony blobs jutting up above the blade
tips. They were growing steadily larger. She heard a humming noise. Mechanical.
It had been so long
since she’d heard any kind of motor that it took a moment to place the sound;
and even longer for her to bring herself to believe. Nobody on this planet had
ground transport.
“Father!” she
shrieked. “He’s back!” Then she was out of the open door and running towards
the hovercraft, heedless of the stiff, dry grass slapping and scratching her
bare legs.
Horst saw her coming
and jumped off the hovercraft as Ariadne slowed to a halt fifteen metres from
the homestead. He had told himself all through the trip that nothing had
happened to them, that they would be all right. Praying and praying that it
would be so. But actually seeing Jay alive and in one piece was too much, and
the repressed guilt and instituted fear burst out, overwhelming him. He fell to
his knees and opened his arms.
Jay hit him as if she
was giving a rugby tackle. “I thought you were dead,” she blubbed. “I thought
you’d left us.”
“Oh, Jay, darling Jay.
You know I never would.” He cradled her head and rocked her gently. Then the
other children came streaming down the homestead’s ramshackle steps, squealing
and shouting. He smiled at them all and held out his arms once more.
“We were scared,”
Eustice said.
“The sky’s gone real
funny.”
“It’s so hot.”
“Nobody collected the
eggs.”
“Or milked the cows.”
Bo narrowed her eyes
as the mercenaries climbed out of the hovercraft. “Are these the marines you
promised?” she asked sceptically.
“Not quite,” Horst
said. “But they’re just as good.”
Danny goggled up at
Sewell. The big combat-adept had gaussrifles plugged into both elbow sockets.
“What is he?” the boy asked.
Horst grinned. “He’s a
special sort of soldier. Very strong, very clever. Everything is going to be
all right now. He’ll look after you.”
Kelly had kept her
retinas on wide-field focus, scanning the whole reunion scene. There was a big
dry lump forming in her throat.
“Holy Jesus, will you
look at it all,” Shaun Wallace said in a small demoralized voice. “What kind of
a God could do this to us? Not the one I was taught about, that’s for sure.
Look at them all, little children. Crying their bloody damn eyes out. And all
for what?”
Kelly turned round at
the unaccustomed savagery and bitterness in his tone. But he was already
striding towards Reza, who was watching Horst and the children impassively.
“Mr Malin?”
“Yes, Mr. Wallace?”
“You have to move these
children away now.”
“I intend to.”
“No, I mean right now.
My kind, they’re over there in the edge of the jungle. There’s a couple of
hundred of them, if not more. They’re meaning to get you, Mr. Malin, to end the
threat once and for all.”
Reza focused his
sensors on the first rank of stunted, scrappy trees four or five kilometres
away. The cloud over the jungle was still glowing a sombre red, giving the
leaves a coral tinge. Heat shimmer and fluttering leaves defeated him, he
couldn’t tell. “Pat, what can Octan see?”
“Nothing much. But
there’s definitely a few people roving round in there, and . . . Oh
my God.”
The pages emerged
first, young boys, ten or twelve years old, holding their heraldic banners
high. Then the drums started up, and the pikemen marched out of the cover of
trees. It was a long solid black line, almost as if the trees themselves were
advancing. Following, and holding a tight formation at the centre, came the
mounted knights. Silver armour shone by its own accord under the unbroken veil
of leaden clouds.
The army assembled
itself in front of the trees to the order of the drummer. Knight commanders
rode up and down, organizing stragglers. Then when the ranks were neatly laid
out, a single bugle note rang across the savannah. They started to tramp over
the uneven grassland towards the homestead.
“OK,” Reza said
equably. “Time to go.”
Along with all the
other children Jay found herself being hurriedly lifted into one of the
hovercraft by a mercenary and told to hang on. Boxes and equipment were being
tossed out to accommodate them. Father Horst was in the other hovercraft; Jay
wanted to be with him, but she didn’t think the mercenaries would listen if she
asked. Shona was plonked down beside her, and Jay smiled timidly, reaching for
the disfigured girl’s hand. Their fingers pressed together urgently.
There was a lot of
shouting going on all around. Everyone was moving at such a rush. One of the
big (really big) mercenaries dashed into the homestead and came out half a
minute later carrying Freya.
“Put her in my
hovercraft,” Horst said. “I’ll look after her.” The limp girl was laid on the
front bench, and he eased a bundle of cloth under her head.
Through all the
confusion and bustle Jay saw one of the mercenaries strap a dark globe to the
neck of a huge dog. A man (who she thought looked a bit like Rai Molvi) and a
lady who had come with the mercenaries were arguing hotly in front of the
cabin. It ended when she made a slashing motion with one arm and climbed into
the pilot’s seat of the second hovercraft. The other mercenaries were
ransacking the ammunition boxes that lay on the ground, slotting magazines into
their backpacks. Then the impellers on Jay’s hovercraft began to spin and the
decking wobbled as it rose up. She wondered where the mercenaries were going to
fit, her hovercraft had seventeen children packed in between the pilot’s seat
and the fan at the rear. But when both vehicles swung round and began to pick
up speed she realized they were jogging alongside.
“Where are we going?”
Shona shouted above the teeth-grating buzz of the fans.
The small hairless
pilot didn’t seem to hear.
Aethra watched the Lady
Macbeth streak across the ring. Triple fusion exhausts twining into a
single braid of near-pure radiation that stretched for over two hundred
kilometres behind the fleeing starship.
Murora VII was a
thousand kilometres ahead of her. A battered sphere of grey-brown rock not
quite a hundred and twenty kilometres in diameter. Along with the other three
shepherd moonlets it brought a certain degree of order to the edge of the ring,
creating a tidy boundary line. Dust, iceflakes, and pebbles extended out across
the gas giant’s ecliptic plane far past the immature habitat’s orbit, although
their density slowly dropped away until at a million kilometres it was no
different to interplanetary space. But none of the larger particles, the flying
mountains and icebergs, were to be found beyond the hundred and eighty thousand
kilometre limit where the shepherds orbited.
Lady Macbeth’s exhaust plume yawed a degree, then
straightened out again, honing her trajectory. Three thousand kilometres behind
her, five combat wasps, arranged in a precise diamond configuration, were
accelerating at twenty gees. It had taken the Maranta a long time to
respond to the break-out, its possessed crew wasting seven expensive seconds
before launching the combat wasps—though they couldn’t know that. Now the
drones could never catch her.
Aethra had never known
emotional tension before. Always, it had reflected the feelings of the
supervisory station staff. Now though, as it watched the starship curving over
the moonlet, it knew—understood—the meaning of trepidation. It willed the
starship to succeed.
The station staff were
lying on their acceleration couches, that wicked gee force squeezing them
relentlessly. Aethra could see the ceiling of the cabin through a dozen sets of
pained eyes, feeling the cushioning give below overstressed back muscles.
Three seconds away
from the Lagrange point. Lady Macbeth’s fusion drives reduced to four
gees as she skimmed eight kilometres above Murora VII, tracing a slight
parabola around its minuscule gravity field. A couple of ion thrusters fired.
The pursuing combat wasps cleared the edge of the ring.
Aethra prepared
thirty-three storage areas in its neural strata. Ready to receive the memories
of the Edenists on board. Although it would be so quick . . .
An event horizon
eclipsed the Lady Macbeth.
Her fusion plume
lingered briefly like a broken-hearted wraith before melting away. Then there
was no physical evidence left of her ever having existed.
Five combat wasps
converged on the Lagrange point. Their courses intersected, drive exhausts a
dazzling asterisk, and they sped outwards on divergent vectors, electronic brains
crashing in program overload confusion.
“I told you Joshua
could fly that manoeuvre,” Warlow said.
Aethra tasted smugness
in the subsidiary mentality’s thoughts. It wasn’t used to that, but then the
last twenty-four hours had contained a lot of unknowns. “Yes, you did.”
“You should have more
faith.”
“And you’re the one to
teach me?”
“About faith? Yes, I
could try. I think we both have the time now.”
The hovercraft
battered its way through the tall, heavy savannah grass. It had never been
designed with this particular terrain in mind. The grass was too high, too
resilient for the skirt to surmount; it all had to be ridden down. That took
power, and they were overladen with the children as well.
Kelly datavised the
vehicle’s electron-matrix-management processor for a status review. Reserves
were down to thirty-five per cent; not nearly enough to make it past the end of
the cloud. Impeller monitor programs were flashing amber cautions into her
brain as they struggled to maintain skirt inflation. Burnout wasn’t imminent,
though it was something she’d have to watch for.
A long mound arose out
of nowhere, and she tilted the joystick exactly right to veer round its base.
The piloting program Ariadne had datavised to her was operating in primary
mode, enabling her to steer with the same consummate skill the mercenary had
owned. Her weight—or rather lack of it—made her the ideal choice. Theo piloted
the other hovercraft, and the priest was sitting behind her, but apart from
them the team ran alongside. Even Shaun Wallace, though the few times she
glimpsed him he was as red faced as a marathon runner on the home straight.
The mounted knights
were pushing them hard, keeping a steady three kilometres behind, just enough
to put them beyond the range of the gaussrifles. One or two would occasionally
break rank for a charge. Then Sewell or Jalal would fire a few EE rounds to
ward them off. Thankfully the sturdy pikemen were unable to match the boosted
mercenaries’ physical endurance (so how come Shaun could?); they had been left
nearly seven kilometres behind. So far so good, but the situation couldn’t hold
stable for long.
Fenton was racing
ahead of the hovercraft, scouting the land, his mass and brawn making easy work
of the bristling grass blades. Reza looked through the hound’s eyes, leaving a
locomotion program to guide his own body down the trail left by the two
hovercraft. He was developing a feel for the land beneath the rhythmic pounding
of the hound’s paws, anticipating the folds and abrupt rises which belied the
savannah’s facade of interminable mellow ground.
There was a small but
certain change in the texture of the grass whipping against Fenton’s blunt
muzzle. The dead mat of decaying blades covering the flinty soil becoming
thicker, springier. Water, and close by. Fenton slowed to smell the air.
“Kelly,” Reza
datavised. “There’s a small stream two hundred metres ahead, steep gully sides.
Head for it. Part of the bank has collapsed, you can take the hovercraft down.”
A guidance plot filled
her mind, all close-packed brown and blue contour lines, a computer image of
how the earth would look stripped of vegetation. Neural nanonics integrated it
with the piloting program, and she tweaked the joystick.
“Where does it lead?”
she asked. So far all they had done was build distance between them and the
homestead cabin, heading due south without any attempt to get back on the river
which led to the mountains.
“Nowhere. It’s cover
for us, that’s all. The knights are trying to wear us down; and the bastards
are succeeding. We can’t keep this pace going for ever, and the hovercraft
electron matrices are being drained. Once we’re immobile the pikemen will catch
up, and it’ll all be over. They know we can’t fight off that many of them. We
have to regain the initiative.”
Kelly didn’t like the
implications leaping round inside her skull at that statement. But she did her
best to ignore them. Hunted beasts couldn’t afford scruples, especially ones
that knew exactly what lay in store if they were caught.
She datavised a query
at her communication block. Since they left the homestead cabin it had been
broadcasting a continuous signal up to the geosynchronous platform and the
secure satellites Terrance Smith had brought with him. There was no need for
secrecy now. But the darkened cloud was still blocking the directional beam
very effectively.
Theo’s hovercraft
slowed as it neared the stream, then the nose fell and it went into a controlled
slither down the scree of crumbling earth. The gully was three metres deep,
with tall reed-grass growing along the top. Smooth grey stones filled the flat
bottom, with a trickle of water running down the middle. A muddy pool had built
up behind the scree.
Kelly followed the
first hovercraft down, juggling the fan deflectors frantically to stop them
from sliding into the opposite bank. She turned upstream keeping ten metres
behind Theo. He reached the deepest part of the gully and killed the lift.
The mercenaries were
jumping down from the top of the bank.
“Everybody out of the
hovercraft,” Reza said. “And sit with your backs to the gully here.” He
pointed.
Northern side, Kelly
thought. She stood up—don’t think about it—and helped to hand the
children over the gunwale. They looked round in bewilderment, young faces lost
and doleful. “It’s all right,” she kept saying. “Everything’s all right.” Don’t
think about it. She kept smiling too, so they wouldn’t catch her anxiety.
Octan glided down into
the gully, and perched himself on Pat Halahan’s broad shoulder, wings folding
tightly. Fenton was already nosing round Reza’s legs.
Don’t think about it.
Kelly sat beside Jay. The little girl obviously knew something terrible was
about to happen. “It’s all right,” Kelly whispered. “Really.” She winked,
though it was more like a nervous tic. Flints in the gully wall were sharp on
her back. Water gurgled round her boots.
“Joshua,” Kelly
datavised into her communication block. “Joshua, answer me, for Christ’s sake.
Joshua!” All she was given in reply was the oscillating ghost-wind of static.
There was a scuttling
sound as the mercenaries sat down on the stones. Several children were
sniffling.
“Shut your eyes, and
keep them shut,” Reza said loudly. “I shall smack anyone who I see with open
eyes.”
The children hurriedly
did as they were told.
Kelly closed her eyes,
took a breath, and slowly folded her shaking arms over her head.
As soon as the event
horizon collapsed, Joshua accessed the image supplied by the short-range combat
sensors. Lady Mac had emerged from her jump six thousand kilometres
above Lalonde. There was nothing within two thousand kilometres. He datavised
the full sensor-suite deployment, and triggered the fusion drives. They moved
in at a cautious two gees, aiming for a thousand-kilometre orbit.
No starships were left
in orbit, the sensors reported, even the inter-orbit craft from Kenyon had
vanished. Victim of a combat wasp, Joshua assumed. There was a lot of metallic
wreckage, most of it in highly eccentric elliptical orbits, and all of it
radioactive.
“Melvyn, access the
communication satellites, see if there’s any data traffic for us. And Sarha,
see if there are any low-orbit observation satellites left, their memories might
hold something useful.”
They both acknowledged
their orders and datavised instructions to the flight computer. The starship’s
main dish found one of the secure communication satellites, and beams of
microwave radiation sprang up to enmesh the planet in a loose web. Lady
Macbeth started to receive data from the various observation systems left
functional.
Everybody seemed to be
working smoothly. Their flight to Achillea and the slingshot round its moon had
passed off flawlessly. Jubilation at the successful jump from Murora had
temporarily balanced out the loss of Warlow. Certainly Joshua experienced none
of the sense of accomplishment which should have accompanied the Lagrange-point
stunt. The most fantastic piece of flying in his life.
Gaura said he wasn’t
sure, but he thought the transference had worked, certainly a large quantity of
the old cosmonik’s memories had been datavised successfully into Aethra. The
habitat had been integrating them when Lady Mac jumped.
The prospect of him
living on as part of the multiplicity helped ease the grief—to a degree. Joshua
felt a lot of regrets bubbling below his surface thoughts; things he’d said,
things he should have said. Jesus, did Warlow have a family? I’ll have to tell
them.
“Nothing from the
communication satellites, Joshua,” Melvyn said heavily. “Thanks.” The idea that
Kelly and the mercenaries had been caught was unbearable. That would mean their
own flight had been for nothing, and Warlow—“Stand by to broadcast a message
from Lady Mac’s main dish, we’ll see if we can break through the cloud
with sheer power. Sarha, what have you got?”
“Not much. There are
only seven low-orbit observation satellites left. They took a real pounding in
the battle yesterday. But, Joshua, someone detonated a nuke down there earlier
this morning.”
“Jesus. Where?”
“I think it was at
Durringham. The satellite only saw the blast as it fell below the horizon.”
Joshua accessed the
main sensor image. The red cloudbands over the tributaries had expanded
dramatically. Individual strands had blended together producing a homogenized
oval smear that covered the entire Juliffe basin. He realized the bright
flame-glimmer Durringham had produced before was missing.
Then he noticed a
large circular section of cloud in the south-east had lost its red nimbus
altogether, becoming a malaised grey. Interest stirred at the back of his mind;
it almost looked as if the red cloud was being ruined by some cancerous growth.
He datavised the flight computer for a guidance grid.
“It’s south of the
Quallheim villages,” he said with a sense of growing confidence.
“That grey patch?”
Sarha asked.
“Yeah. Exactly where
Kelly said they were going.”
“Could be,” Dahybi
said. “Maybe the mercenaries have found a way of damaging the cloud.”
“Perhaps. Melvyn,
focus our dish on it, and start transmitting. See if you can punch through and
raise Kelly directly.” Joshua centred an optical sensor on the area and upped
the magnification. The hoary amorphous cloudscape rushed out to fill his mind.
It wasn’t giving any clues away, there were no breaks, no glimpses of the
ground below. “Ashly, have you been following this?”
“Yes, Joshua,” the
pilot answered from the spaceplane cabin.
“We’ll be in orbit in
another three minutes. I want you to launch as soon as we finish decelerating.
Loiter above those mountains in the south, and we’ll see if the mercenary team
can get out from under the cloud. Under no circumstances are you to go under
it.”
“No fear.”
“Good.” He datavised
the flight computer to open the spaceplane hangar doors. “Anything from Kelly,
yet?”
“Sorry, Joshua, only
static.”
“She said they
wouldn’t be out from under the cloud until the afternoon,” Sarha pointed out.
“It isn’t quite noon there yet.”
“I know. But that
cloud is still growing, even the grey section. If it reaches the mountains
they’ll be in serious trouble. The hovercraft won’t be able to handle that sort
of country. They’ll be trapped between the two.”
“We can wait,” Dahybi
said. “For a week if we have to.”
Joshua nodded vaguely,
eyes tight shut as he flipped through sensor inputs, desperate for any sort of
hint. “Come on, Kelly,” he murmured. “Show us you’re there.”
Ryall padded
stealthily through the long grass. The scent of humans was strong in the air.
Many had passed by very recently. But none were near him now.
After leaving his
master he had run swiftly east, the big weight fastened round his neck jouncing
about uncomfortably. After a couple of kilometres the masterlove thoughts in
his brain had guided him to one side. He had traced a wide curve over the
savannah, now he was heading back to his starting point.
When he reached a wide
swath of grass, beaten down by many tramping feet, Ryall waited at the edge for
a moment—listening, sniffing. Instinct told him he was alone. Satisfied, the
masterlove thoughts urged him out. The swath led all the way back to the
jungle, he turned the other way. Five hundred metres ahead of him, the homestead
cabin jutted up out of the grassland. He hurried towards it, a hungering
sensation racing through his blood.
The grass was beaten
down all around the cabin. Fences had been broken. Cows wandered about, grazing
placidly, paying no attention to him. Goats saw him coming and ran jerkily
until they realized he wasn’t chasing them. Chickens escaped from their smashed
pen were scratching in the dirt; they scattered squawking when he trotted up to
the cabin.
Height. The masterlove
thoughts wanted him to have height. Ryall swung his big head from side to side,
viewing the back wall of the cabin; then loped over to a pile of composite pods
stacked at one corner. He jumped, bounding up the pods, then sprang for the
eaves. Paws skated unsteadily on the solar-cell panels nailed to the roof, but
he found his footing on the ginger qualtook-bark tiles and scampered his way up
to the apex.
His master used his
eyes to peer out across the savannah. The line of men carrying pikes were a
kilometre away. And almost lost in the gloaming ahead of them the band of
knights on horseback galloped after their prey.
Ryall felt a curious
mix of excitement and sorrow. But the masterlove thoughts were full of gentle
praise. He thumped his tail on the qualtook tiles in response.
Then the masterlove
thoughts were guiding his left forepaw to the heavy weight hanging from his
neck. He bent his head round and watched attentively as his extended nails
caught the edge of a small hinged panel and eased it open. Glowing squares were
revealed.
Masterlove adoration
flowed through him. Very carefully his nail touched one of the squares. Once.
Twice. Thrice—
The spaceplane stopped
shaking as it dropped to subsonic velocity. It had been a fast, steep descent,
Ashly had made the little craft stand almost on its tail to aerobrake. Now he
levelled out and datavised the wings into their forward-sweep position.
Nose-mounted sensors showed him the mountains rolling past below; the fringe of
the cloud was fifty kilometres to the north. Short puffy fronds extended out
from the main bulk, snaking through the air like blind searching insect
antennae towards the foothills.
He datavised the
flight computer for a channel up to Lady Macbeth. “Any word yet?”
“Nothing,” Joshua
replied. “Sarha says the observation satellites recorded that patch of cloud
turning grey immediately after the Durringham nuke. We’re not too sure what
that means, but then I don’t think normal logic applies here.”
“Too right. I’ve got
enough power in the electron matrices for a five-hour flight before I have to
come back up and recharge. If you want that extending I could land on one of
these peaks, they’re fairly isolated.”
“No. You keep
airborne, Ashly. Frankly, if they’re not out of there in five hours I don’t
think we’ll see them again. And I’ve already lost one crewman today.”
“You didn’t lose him,
Joshua. Silly old fart. Now I’ve got to come back and wander through Aethra’s
parkland talking to the trees. Hell, he’ll love that. Kill himself laughing I
expect.”
“Thanks, Ashly.”
The pilot loaded a
course into the computer, a patrol circuit along the length of the grey cloud
section, staying at eight thousand metres. Thermals shooting up off the rocky
slopes rocked the wings in agitated rhythms as the spaceplane flew overhead.
Jay thought it was a
lightning bolt. Blackness suddenly and silently turned to bright scarlet. She
sucked in a breath—it must have been frightfully close. But there was no
thunderclap. Not at first.
The redness faded
away. She risked opening her eyes. Everything seemed normal, except it was a
lot lighter than it had been before. As if the sun was finally rising behind
her back. Then the noise started, a dry roar which built and built. She heard
some of the children start to whimper. The ground began to tremble, the gully
wall vibrating her back. And the brightness behind her kept growing. A sheet of
white light sprang across the top of the gully, throwing the floor into deep
shadow. It began to tilt downwards, turning the opposite bank unbearably
bright. Jay could just hear the lady beside her shouting what sounded like a
prayer at the top of her voice. She closed her eyes again, little squeaks of
fear escaping from her throat.
Lady Macbeth was passing over Amarisk’s western coast, a
hundred kilometres north of Durringham, when Reza detonated the nuke. The
sensors caught its initial flash, a concussion of photons turning the grey clouds
momentarily translucent.
“Jesus Christ,” Joshua
gasped. He datavised the flight computer for a secure communication channel to
the spaceplane. “Ashly, did you see that?”
“I saw it, Joshua. The
spaceplane sensors registered an emp pulse equivalent to about a kiloton
blast.”
“Are your electronics
OK?”
“Yes. Couple of
processor drop-outs, but the back-ups are on line.”
“It’s them. It has to
be.”
“Joshua!” Sarha
called. “Look at the cloud.”
He accessed the sensor
image again. A four hundred metre circle of the cloud looked as if it was on
fire below the surface. As he watched it rose up into a lofty ignescent
fleuron. The tip burst open. A ragged beam of rose-gold light shone through.
Lady Mac’s flight computer datavised a priority signal
from one of the communication satellites direct into Joshua’s neural nanonics.
“Joshua?” Kelly
called. “This is Reza’s team calling Lady Mac. Joshua, are you up
there?”
Tactical graphics
immediately overlaid the optical sensor image, pinpointing her communications
block to within fifteen centimetres. Close to the blast point, very close. “I’m
here, Kelly.”
“Oh, Christ, Joshua!
Help us. Now!”
“Spaceplane’s on its
way. What’s your situation, have you got the children?”
“Yes, damn it. They’re
with us, all of them. But we’re being chased to hell and back by the fucking
Knights of the Round Table. You’ve got to get us out of here.”
Vast strips of rank
grey cloud were peeling back from the centre of the blast. Joshua could see
down onto the savannah. It was a poor angle, but a vivid amber fireball was
ascending from the centre of a calcinated wasteland.
“Go,” Joshua datavised
to Ashly. “Go go go.”
Reza stood on top of
the gully, bracing himself against the baked wind driving out from the blast. A
mushroom cloud was roiling upwards from the cemetery of the homestead, alive
with gruesome internal energy surges. It had gouged a wide crater, uneven
curving sides spouting runnels of capricious magma.
He brought a series of
filter programs on-line, and scanned the savannah. A firestorm was raging for
two kilometres around the crater. Pixels from the section of ground where the
marching pikemen had been were amplified. He studied the resulting matrix of
square lenses. There were no remnants, not even pyres; none of them had
survived. He tracked back. Knights and horses had been hurled indiscriminately
across the smouldering grass two and a half kilometres away. Encased in that
metal armour human bodies should have first been triturated by the blast wave then
fried by the infrared radiation.
He watched one silver
figure struggle to its knees, then use a broadsword shoved into the ground to
clamber to its feet.
Ye Gods, what will
kill them?
A horse kicked its
legs and rolled over, surging upwards. It trotted obediently over to its fallen
rider. Slowly but surely the entire band was remounting.
Reza jumped back into
the gully. Children were being packed back into the hovercraft.
“Joshua’s here,” Kelly
yelled over the trumpeting wind. Her tear-stained face framed a radiant smile.
“Lady Mac’s in orbit. The spaceplane’s on its way. We’re safe, we’re out
of here!”
“How long?”
“Ashly says about ten
minutes.”
Not enough, Reza
thought. The knights will be here by then, they’ll hit the spaceplane with
their white fire, if they don’t just switch off its circuitry with that black
magic. “Kelly, you and Theo take off south. The rest of you, with me. We’re
going to arrange a small delay.”
“No, Reza!” Kelly
implored. “You can’t, not now. It’s over. Ashly will get here.”
“That was an order,
Kelly. We’ll catch up with you when we’ve finished off these mounted pricks.”
“Oh, Christ.”
“Hey, Kell, stop
fretting,” Sewell said. “You’ve got the wrong attitude for this game. Win some
or lose some, who cares, you’ve just gotta have fun playing.” He laughed and
vaulted up to the top of the gully.
Horst made the sign of
the cross to Reza. “Bless you, my son. May the Lord watch over you.”
“Get in the bloody
hovercraft, Father, take the kids somewhere they can have a life. Theo, blast
some grass, get them clear.”
“Yes, boss.” The
jungle-rover mercenary fed power into the impellers even as Horst was
scrambling on board. With the skirt bouncing against the gully wall the
hovercraft turned in a tight curve and sped back up the scree.
Reza joined his team
on the top of the bank. Out on the savannah the knights were mustering into a
V-shaped battle phalanx.
“Move out,” Reza said.
There was a strange kind of glee running loose in his mind. Now we’ll show you
babykillers what happens when you face a real enemy, one that can fight back.
See how you like that.
The six mercenaries
started to march over the grass towards the waiting knights.
Sunlight and rain
poured down on the hovercraft, surrounding them with a fantastic exhibition of
rainbows. The clouds were breaking up, losing their supernatural cohesion. They
were just ordinary rain-clouds again.
The rain sprayed
against Kelly’s face as she battled the hovercraft’s inertia against the wind
and damp cloying grass. Speed tossed them about like a dinghy on a
storm-swollen sea.
“How big are the
children?” Joshua asked.
“Small, they’re mostly
under ten.”
“Ashly will probably
have to make two trips. He can bring the children up first then come back for
you and the mercenaries.”
She tried to laugh,
but all that emerged was a gullet-rasping cough. “No, Joshua, there’s only
going to be one flight. Reza’s team won’t be coming. Just the children, and me
and the priest if the spaceplane can handle our mass.”
“The way you diet to
keep your image, you’re into negative mass, Kelly. I’ll tell Ashly.”
She heard the first
fusillade of EE projectiles exploding behind her.
Sewell and Jalal stood
four metres apart, facing the apex of the charging knights. The reverberant
thud of the horses galloping over the savannah rose above the hot squalls
spinning off from the chthonic maelstrom of the blast’s epicentre.
“I make that
forty-nine,” Jalal said.
“The lead is mine, you
take the right flank.”
“Sure thing.”
The knights lowered
their lances, spurring on their horses. Sewell waited until his rangefinder put
the lead knight a hundred and twenty metres away, and fired both heavy-calibre
gaussrifles plugged into his elbow sockets. Feed tubes from his backpack hummed
efficiently. He laid down three fragmentation rounds over the knight’s plumed
helmet, and followed it up with twenty-five EE shells into the ground ahead of
the left flank.
Jalal was laying down
a similar fire pattern across the right flank, his two gaussrifles traversing
the line, guided by a targeting program. Pamiers had shown that the possessed
were capable of defending themselves against almost anything short of a direct
hit by an EE round; he was going for the horses. Kill the mounts, chop the legs
out from under them, slow them down. More fragmentation bursts saturated the
air. The knights were veiled by smoke, fountains of soil, and riotous static
webs.
Streaks of white fire
ripped out of the carnage. Sewell and Jalal leaped aside. Four knights sped
towards them out of the furore. Sewell spun round as he hit the ground, white
fire was gnawing into his left leg. His targeting program locked on to the
first knight; one of his gaussrifles was responding sluggishly, the other fired
ten EE rounds. The knight and his horse vanished inside a tangled screen of
rampaging electrons. Gore spat outwards.
Sewell’s optical
sensors were tracking more knights riding out from the first assault point.
Several bodies were scattered on the crushed grass behind them. His neural
nanonics automatically fired a salvo of fragmentation rounds at the renewed
charge.
He tried to get up,
but there was no response from his leg. One of the gaussrifles had packed up
completely. Some of his sensor inputs were wavering. Horses were charging at
him from three directions. His functional gaussrifle blasted at one. Another
knight aimed a lance at his head, and fire squirted out of its tip.
Sewell rolled
desperately. He flung a grenade as the fire caught him on the shoulder,
punching him round. The grenade went off beneath the horse, lifting it clear of
the ground. It crashed down, the knight tumbling through the air before landing
with a bonebreaker smash.
The horse’s outline
imploded into an amalgam of purple flesh and pumping organs. Eight or nine
sayce had been moulded together, like living dough, into a rough sculpture of
the terrestrial animal. Heads stuck out of its sides and haunches, encased in
thick vein-laced membranes, jaws working silently beneath the naked protoplasm.
Neither of Sewell’s
gaussrifles were working. He swivelled them down, and used them as crutches to
lever himself upright. His medical program was flashing red caution warnings
into his mind. He cancelled it completely, and drew a TIP carbine from its
holster. The fallen knight was rising to his feet, crumpled armour
straightening out. Sewell flicked the TIP carbine to continuous fire with his
thumb, and pulled the trigger. It was like using a battering ram. The energy
pulses kept smacking into the armour with jackhammer blows, knocking him down
and kicking him across the ground. A violet corona seethed around the silver
metal. Sewell pulled a grenade from his belt and lobbed it at the limp figure.
A lance caught him in
the middle of his back, splitting his ribs apart then puncturing his lungs and
an oxygenated-blood-reserve bladder before sliding out of his chest. The blow
flung him three metres across the grass. He landed awkwardly, the lance jarring
round violently and causing more internal damage.
The knight who had
speared him reigned his horse round and dismounted. He drew his broadsword and
walked towards the crippled mercenary.
Sewell managed to
achieve a precarious balance on his knees. His right hand closed on the lance,
boosted fingers exerting their full power, crushing the wood. It snapped off,
leaving a splintered twenty-centimetre stump sticking out of his chest. A huge
quantity of blood coursed down into the grass.
“Not good enough, my
friend,” the knight said. He ran his broadsword through Sewell’s short neck.
Sewell reached out
with his left arm and grabbed the knight’s shoulder, pulling him even closer.
There was a sharp grunt of surprise from the knight. Little crackles of energy
skated over the surface of his armour. The broadsword penetrated up to the
hilt, but Sewell opened his mouth slit wide.
The knight got out one
frantic “No!” before Sewell’s silicon carbide teeth clamped round his neck,
slicing cleanly through the chain-mail.
The northern horizon
was an uncompromising clash of turquoise and red, both colours textured as fine
as silk, pressing smoothly against each other. Both unyielding. Beautiful, from
a distance. Directly in front of the spaceplane, filth and fire was belching
from a widening fissure in the rain-clouds.
Ashly altered the
camber of the wings, and sent the spaceplane on a steep dive through the dank
clouds. Water slicked the pearl-white fuselage, misting the optical sensor
images. Then he was through, levelling out.
It was a small
confined world of darkness and squalor into which he had come. At the centre,
clouds reflected the diseased irradiation of the crater, tarnishing the land
with the flickers of dying atoms. Wildfire scoured the malaised savannah around
its base, eating its way outwards. Twisters roamed the scorched earth,
scattering soot and ash all around to form a greasy crust of embers over the
flattened grass.
But further out the
rain was falling, cleansing the land. Spears of sunlight wrested their way past
the shredding clouds, returning cool natural colours to the fractal wilderness
of greys.
Sensors locked on to
Kelly’s communication block. Ashly banked the spaceplane in a swift high-gee
turn, riding the signal to its source. Ahead and below, two tiny hovercraft
bounced and jerked their way across the uneven countryside.
Reza counted
twenty-one knights escaping from the small holocaust Sewell and Jalal
unleashed. That was good, he had expected it to be more. He and Pat Halahan
were next. His sensors showed him the spaceplane sinking fast out of the sky a
couple of kilometres behind him.
“Five minutes, that’s
all they need.”
“They’ve got it,” Pat
said urbanely.
Reza fired his forearm
gaussrifle. Targeting-program-controlled muscles shifted the barrel round as
his sensors went into a track-while-scan mode. All his conscious thoughts had
to do was designate.
He picked off three
knights with EE rounds, and brought a further two horses down before the
gaussrifle malfunctioned. Some of his processor blocks were glitched as well.
Sensor resolution was falling off. He dumped the gaussrifle and switched to a
ten-millimetre automatic pistol. Chemical bullets which produced a scythe of
kinetic death, and nothing the possessed could do to stop it. Two more knights
were down when he ran out of spare magazines. White fire hit his shoulder,
blowing his left arm off. A two-metre jet of blood squirted out until his
neural nanonics closed artery valves.
Pat was still sluicing
bullets at a pair of knights off to Reza’s left. Stimulant and suppressor
programs were working hard to eliminate shock. Reza saw a mounted knight
thundering towards him, whirling a mace around. A momentum prediction program
went into primary mode. The horse was three metres away when Reza took one step
back. His remaining hand came up inside the slashing arc of the mace. He
grabbed, pulled, twisted. His carbon-fibre skeleton twanged at the severe
loading as the inertia of the spiked iron club yanked him off his feet. Glossy
armour shrieked a metallic protest as the knight was catapulted backwards out
of the saddle, then clanged like a bell as he landed.
They climbed to their
feet together. Reza raised the mace and started to walk forwards, a locomotion
auto-balance program compensating for his lost arm.
The knight saw him
coming and pointed his broadsword like a rifle. White flame raced down the
blade.
“Cheat,” Reza said. He
detonated the fragmentation grenades clipped to his belt. Both of them vanished
inside a dense swarm of furious black silicon micro-blades.
A hurricane squall of
rain stung Kelly’s face as the spaceplane swooped fifteen metres overhead. Its
compressor nozzle efflux nearly overturned the hovercraft. She engaged the fan
deflector and killed the impellers. They skidded to a rumbustious halt.
The spaceplane slipped
round sideways in the air then landed hard, undercarriage struts pistoning
upwards. Rain pattered loosely on its extended wings, dribbling off the flaps.
Kelly turned around in
her seat. The children were huddled together on the hard silicon deck, clothes
soaked, hair straggly. Terrified, crying, peeing in their shorts and pants.
Wide eyes stared at her, brimming with incomprehension. There were no clever
words left to accompany the scene for the recording. She simply wanted to put
her arms round every one of them, pour out every scrap of comfort she owned.
And that was far less than they deserved.
Three kilometres
behind the hovercraft, EE explosions strobed chaotically, while antagonistic
streamers of white fire curled and thrashed above the blood-soaked grass.
We did it, she
thought, the knights can’t reach us now. The children are going to live.
Nothing else mattered, not the hardships, not the pain, not the sickening fear.
“Come on,” she said to
them, and the smile came so easily. “We’re leaving now.”
“Thank you, lady,” Jay
said.
Kelly glanced up as a
figure hiked out of the rain. “I thought you’d left,” she said.
Shaun Wallace grinned.
His sodden LDC one-piece was shrunk round his body, mud and grass clung to his
boots, but the humour in his eyes couldn’t be vanquished. “Without saying
goodbye? Ah now, Miss Kelly, I wouldn’t be wanting you to think the worst of
me. Not you.” He lifted the first child, a seven-year-old girl, over the
gunwale. “Come along then, you rabble. You’re all going on a long, beautiful
trip to a place far away.”
The spaceplane’s outer
airlock hatch slid open, and the aluminium stairs telescoped out.
“Get a move on, Kelly,
please,” Ashly datavised.
She joined Shaun at
the side of the hovercraft and began lifting the exhausted, bedraggled children
out.
Horst stood at the
bottom of the stairs, harrying his small charges along. A word here, a smile,
pat on the head. They scooted up into the cabin where Ashly cursed under his
breath as he tried to work out how on earth to fit them all in.
Kelly had the last boy
in her arms, a four-year-old who was virtually asleep, when Theo started up his
hovercraft. “Oh no, Theo,” she datavised. “Not you as well.”
“They need me,” he
replied. “I can’t leave them. I’m a part of them.”
Great bands of
sunlight were raking the savannah. The fighting was over. Kelly could see three
or four knights on horseback milling about. None of them showed any interest in
the spaceplane now. “But they’re dead, Theo.”
“You don’t know that,
not for sure. In any case, haven’t you heard, there’s no such thing, not any
more.” He stuck his arm up and waved.
“Hell.” She tipped her
head back, letting the sweet rain wash her face.
“Come along now, Miss
Kelly.” Shaun leant over and gave her cheek a platonic kiss. “Time you was
leaving.”
“I don’t suppose it
would do any good asking you to come?”
“Would I ask you to
stay?”
She put a foot on the
bottom rung, the drowsy child heavy in her arms. “Goodbye, Shaun. I wish it
could have been different.”
“Aye, Miss Kelly. Me
too.”
Kelly sat in the cabin
with one eight-year-old boy on her lap and her arms round a pair of girls. The
children squirmed round, fidgeting, excited and nervous, asking her about the
waiting starship. Lalonde was already half-forgotten, yesterday’s nightmare.
If only, she wished.
The compressor whine
permeated the overcrowded cabin as Ashly fed power into the fans. Then they
were airborne, the deck tilting up, a press of acceleration. Kelly closed her
eyes and accessed the spaceplane’s sensor suite. A lone figure was trudging
over the savannah, a well-built man with tousled ginger hair, wearing a thick
red and blue check cotton shirt, collar up against the rain as he headed for
home.
A minute later a
stentorian sonic boom broke across the vast grass plain. Fenton raised his
great head at the sound, but there was nothing in the sky apart from rain and
clouds. He lowered his gaze again, and resumed his earthbound search for his
lost masterlove.
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