DREAMS OF AN UNHOLY NIGHT – ACT II
“My sword is in my hand… and I fear
nothing.”
–
Last words of Ji-Kwang, medieval Korean warlord
David Weathers shook off his
surprise at being pinged and sprang into action. “Helm, give me a course away from that
squadron that keeps us on a heading near the frigate. Max burn,” he said, barely taking the time to
breathe as he turned towards the tactical station, “Lieutenant Schultz, deploy
the stones between us and that squadron, set their targeting window to include
torpedoes.” Weathers then turned to his
XO and spoke quietly over the din of the now scrambling bridge. “Theresa, I need you to keep track of what is
going on, make sure my orders are followed… and if God forbid
anything happens to me, be ready to step up.”
“Sir,” Lieutenant Commander Palmer
shrugged, “if anything happens to you, I doubt I’ll be here either.”
“I’ll explain later, just do as I
asked.”
“Sir, the stones are away.” The stones were a new toy that had recently
been added to the Dickerson’s weapons
suite. The cargo of one of the
freighters they had captured had contained a load of hunter-seeker mines. One of Engineer Bodovsky’s
finer young engineers,
“Excellent, give me a long range
shot on that frigate before they are completely out of range, let’s try and get
lucky.”
“Yes, sir, firing the Grav Laser on a snap shot.”
Weathers then turned his attention
to the fleeing frigate. Who are you? Why was I not able to sense
your presence? Have they figured out I
am different, are you hunting me…
Aboard the Minami Tori Shima the weapons officer screamed out a warning,
“Sai,
they’re firing on us!”
The Grav Laser landed a glancing blow on the aft section of the
fleeing vessels. The hit would have been
inconsequential to a larger vessel, but to a frigate it was cause for concern.
“Damage
report!”
“Sai,
no major damage to report…wait,” the ensign’s breath caught in his throat as he
read the panel, “we’re venting coolant!”
Life on the bridge seemed to stop
for an instant as the same thought registered in every mind. If we
are venting gas, we can’t hide.
“Understood,
ensign. Get damage crews to work on that immediately. Let’s hope we can
keep out of their way until it is… if that’s all right with, your honor.”
he said turning to Beatrix. She, however, was not paying attention to
him.
At that moment Cynthia had found
Weathers. You BITCH, he screamed across space at her as she began to attempt
to probe his mind. She had planned to
carefully dissect his mind as a medical student might a cadaver, but she found
far more than she bargained for. So powerful, she thought, yet his
energy seems completely unfocused. Could
I have found a wild mage?
At that moment, Weathers began to
hammer at her, trying to force her out of his head. The only thing that saved Beatrix
from being completely fried by the force of his rage was her training. While she was unable to make any headway
during the assault, she was able to keep him from damaging her. Like a well seasoned boxer Cynthia was able
to counter each assault. The bridge crew
of the Minami Tori Shima
was given a visual interpretation
of the battle as she unknowingly performed an intricate kata
at her place on the bridge, giving a physical display to the war waging inside
her mind. With each block, the rage within
Weathers grew. Attack after attack with
rising intensity drove the woman backwards until she bumped into a bulkhead at
the rear of the bridge. The Imperial
Regulator might have been finished but then a break occurred in Weather’s
concentration.
“Sir, the enemy
squadron has launched long range torpedoes.”
The information broke
Weathers concentration for a brief moment.
Unlike his adversary, who had learned to channel her concentration
through the martial arts, Weathers had been a statue completely oblivious to
what was going on around him.
“Umm, acknowledged,
are the stones intercepting?”
“Yes, sir they are. Several
are also tracking that cruiser, frigate and their two corvettes.
“Excellent, keep us on
this course and let me know when they are past the stones, if they get past
them,” replied Weathers.
“Roger, sir, will
update.”
The last phrase was
lost on the captain as he had a new problem to deal with. Cynthia Beatrix had sensed his
break in concentration, and the lapse in his assault gave her an opportunity to
counter attack. She probed into the part
of his mind that we all try to keep hidden, that dark place where we store the
memories of our greatest pains and failures.
There Cynthia found the image of young boy named Shintaro. There was a great deal of confusion and shame
surrounding this image. She knew
instantly what had happened. During her
training Beatrix had been given exercises that
allowed her to separate herself from the psyche of her victims. This prevented excess guilt caused by the
unknowing absorption of personal feelings upon a joining of minds. If he
has no training I will use this against him. Cynthia revealed herself to Weathers, only it
was not a woman he saw, but the young Shintaro. Why did
you kill my father?
Captain Weathers was frozen by the
question. He had spent weeks dealing
with the guilt he had received as a result of using a child to kill another
man. Unfortunately for the Regulator,
David had not had the time to look deeper into Weather’s mind. If she had, she might have seen the incident
that had finally given him peace over the incident. One evening he had confided in his son that
he was feeling a great deal of weight with his new command. He included guilt over having to do what it
takes to win. Gordon had risen from his
seat, walked over to Weathers desk and picked up an image of the woman they
both had loved. “Dad,” he had said,
“those slants killed her without batting an eye. We’re just cattle to them, and the day this
universe is rid of their kind, is the day I will forgive them.”
Gordon’s words rose up in Weather’s
mind like a giant hammer. He proceeded
to use it to smash the image of Shintaro, as if to
eradicate it once and for all. In its
place he saw a woman, a white woman. Traitor! He screamed at her with all the
energy his being could gather. Cynthia
was once again on the defensive, her superior training again saving her from
the raw psychic assault.
Inspired by her own use of his
memories, Weathers began to batter with images drawn from his experience. Images of countless atrocities committed by Asiatics against peoples they deemed less-human. The assault was fueled by a life-time of
hatred and was more that the young mage could handle. In order to stop the assault, Beatrix called up all of her skill to build a wall between
her and the rogue-captain. She realized
she would not be able to defeat him, she must report back to her superiors of
this new danger.
Weathers realized immediately that
he had won a sort of victory. David was
no longer able to attack the woman, but apparently she was no longer interested
in attacking him. He seized this as an
opportunity to focus on the situation his ship was currently in. He gazed over to tactical and saw that the
enemy torpedoes had just discovered the stones.
“Sir, the mines worked perfectly,
seven enemy torpedoes have been intercepted…that’s all of them!
Cries of adulation erupted across
the bridge, and Weathers was able to relax for a second. “How many mines does that leave us, Schultz?”
“Sir, we have six left that are
tracking vessels, but the slants have to know something is out there now…Holy
shit… uh, sir. The cruiser just ate one!”
The Akagi-class
vessel suddenly crumpled in on itself as the asteroid smashed into it. The rock, which had reached top speeds
shortly before intercepting the vessel, made contact just behind the port
battery of Fusion Cannons. The asteroid
then exploded into thousands of particles which took separate paths of
destruction, gutting the doomed vessel.
It literally came apart in space.
The smaller vessels following close, and in formation, immediately tried
to take evasive action, but for one of the corvettes, it was too late. The Enforcer-class
corvette shared a similar fate to his larger brother. The rear ship, a very
maneuverable Katana-class frigate and its Enforcer escort, were
able to adjust their course just enough to scrape by the one remaining
mine. A diligent crewman in her top
turret was able to recognize the object as a threat and blew it out of the
sky. Their captain, realizing he was
completely outclassed, altered his course to take up a position closer to the
jump point and sent out a distress call to the military net relay.
Aboard the Dickerson, the bridge crew was ecstatic. Weathers again turned his attention to the
fleeing Amami o Shima-class
frigate. “Tactical, where is that scout?”
“Sir, they’re at 087 mark 023 going
full burn. She’s… she seems to be expelling a coolant of some kind, which
explains why they’re not going to stealth.”
“Excellent. I have unfinished
business with that bitch…er, ship. Plot an intercept course. Since we’re bigger,
we should catch ‘em before they reach the jump gate.
Helm, get me Engineering.”
Soon enough, his friend came on the
screen. “Bridge, this is Bodovsky, what can I do you
for?”
“Paul, I seem to remember reading
about something during my rotation in engineering years ago. Something about drive-less ships able to
enter hyperspace using a fusion explosion.
Do you know what I am talking about?”
“Why, yes, sir, I do. Those were the
first hyperspace ships, before they invented drives. What do you have in mind?”
“We pulled the fusion bombs off
those mines before hooking them up to the stones. Do you think you could ready
us for a quick escape using one of those?”
Bodovsky
looked puzzled. “Sir, our jump engines are five by five, is there some reason
you don’t wanna use ‘em?”
“Since those slopes squawked, we
could have an entire battle fleet on us within minutes. I don’t want to wait thirty
seconds before we jump.”
“Fair enough, sir. I’ll get right on
it.”
The connection was broken suddenly,
as it often did when Bodovsky was given a new,
interesting task to munch on.
“Tactical, I want a firing solution
worked up on that frigate, once we’re in range of our Grav
Cannon I want that ship disabled. Not
destroyed, disabled.”
Schultz was just as confused as
everyone else. “Yes, sir, but… why not cook them?”
“I’ll explain it later, but I want
someone on that ship to tell the Emperor what happened here.”
The chase was long, but the
conclusion had been written as soon as the frigate had lost the ability to
hide. Eventually the Dickerson overtook her, and with an
advantage in range, was able to disable her.
As the cruiser circled the smaller crippled ship, Weathers again used
his mind to search out the woman he had fought with earlier. He hoped she could hear him through her
defenses. I know you’re out there, and I know you realize now what I am. Understand this, you serve a cancer. The Emperor and his followers are bent on one
thing, the total domination of this universe by their people. You may work for him, and because of your
gifts you might even hold a position of some power, but in the end you are
little more than a slave. You have been
taught to exalt the greatness of their culture; I would suggest something new
to you. Seek out the history of our
ancestors. Discover who we are, discover
who you are, discover FREEDOM!
At that moment, another squadron
entered the system and began a sensor sweep to acquire the Dickerson. Weathers realized
it was time to leave and contacted engineering.
Within moments the ships new “fusion engine” opened a hole in space and
the ship disappeared. The massive hyper footprint that was left behind was
nothing short of the glory of a sunset.
*****
Two great armies scrambled across
the ground. They struggled to maintain
dominance, with the right flank of the eastern army struggling to hold its
line. The western army, although
winning, was quickly running out of true soldiers. Conscripts were being forced into battle
now. The eastern army struggled to
defend their ten-year-old queen. She was
too close to the battlefield. The
resources gained would decide the fate of the western army.
Sherif Tien-yi
The farmer continued to watch. The ants struggled, oblivious. It was a shame, really, Sherif thought, the ants, so very organized, struggling
over something as meaningless as resources.
Instead of innovating, they chose to fight.
It wasn’t as if ants had never built
anything important, or invented new technologies. Ants had livestock long before monkeys even
developed the fingers necessary to scratch their collective asses. Sherif continued to
stare. The armies struggled for
something greater than the mass of ants.
The individual ants suffered, fought on without limbs or even segments,
and then died. The suffering was
terrible.
He closed his eyes, and then reached
down with his right hand. He extended
his right forefinger and crushed two struggling ants. Suddenly, as if on cue, all the ants stopped,
and looked at Sherif.
The farmer waved his sweaty hand over all the ants. The ants all stopped their struggle, turned,
and began walking back to their colonies.
Sherif sat
hunched over on the balls of his feet in an alley. It was a mild day. A strong breeze blew past him, sweeping up
the dust on the ground, but not so high as to interfere with his
breathing. He was tracing in the dust at
his feet with the tip of his right index finger. A man in magnificent clothing
stood above him, watching. Sherif continued to trace in the dust. The man standing above him cleared his
throat, but the farmer did not react. "Are you going to talk to me or
not?"
Sherif
continued to trace in the dust. The
silence continued… and continued.
"I know what you want. I can see it.
Did you think that Mary was spoiled?
Gautama gave in. Muhammad destroyed his people before he was
dead. It just took twenty two hundred years."
"I have corrupted more Popes
than can easily be counted. Kamis corrupted themselves for me. Nobler men than you have fallen before
me."
Sherif
opened his hand, and wiped the ground clear.
He stood up, but did not look at the deceiver.
"So, you would not have these
things. I can give you your life
back. Your parents'
life. You can have any woman you
will. You can force the four empresses
to prostitute themselves for you."
The farmer leaned against the
building, and looked at his feet.
"Rich
clothing? Or a
universe? Spell your name in the
stars. Anything you want,
is yours. Just ask for it. Ask yourself for it."
Sherif
sighed.
"I am a part of you, you
know. We are two halves. Ying and Yang. Dark and light. Evil and good. Chaos and order. You cannot exist without me? You know that?"
"All this
goodness. The
cures for disease. The abundance of food, of warmth. You know that without curses, there can be no
blessing. Embrace the truth."
Sherif
stood up straight, and opened up his arms for a hug. He then lifted his leg and put his knee
square in the deceiver's balls. The Lord
of Lies buckled over, and
"Weren't expecting that, were
you? Now, listen up, and listen good. There is no ying yang, ping pong or any other crap. You're not a part of me and you're not
evil. You.
Just. Are. And
you're responsible for your own damned existence. You always have been. There are no great circles, or any other life
defining crap. What is before you is
what lies behind you. Life is, and must
be lived as such. Now get over it and go
do something useful."
Sherif
stood up none too gently, and brushed himself off. He did not once glance at the man he had just
pummeled. A whimper and then the weep of
pain began to emanate from the man who had just been beaten.
*****
“When those troopers get here...drop
your gun.” As Pablo and James looked on
incredulously, Icarus knelt down on the ceramcrete of the runway surface and put his hands behind
his head.
James’ hands were sweating as he
continued to grip the gauss rifle. They
had about ten seconds before the rapidly approaching troopers were right on top
of them. Not much time to come up with a
plan, much less to implement one. But
it’s amazing how fast the brain can work when under pressure.
James jabbed the muzzle of the rifle
into Losada’s back, “Quick, down on the ground beside
the doc.”
The student was incredulous, “What
the hell are—“
Welthammer
didn’t have time to argue, the armored behemoths were only a leap away now. He pushed the younger man down, and
straightened up with the rifle trained on the two men kneeling in front of him,
just as an Imperial Security trooper crashed to the ground a few meters away.
“Stop right there, or I’ll kill ‘em both.” James
called, hoping his voice didn’t sound as shaky as he felt.
Hicks proved himself a quick study,
“Please, he’s serious, he already killed all those people in the bar, oh
god…” Pablo Losada
didn’t need to fake being a nervous wreck.
The troopers, however, only paused
for a moment, before continuing their advance, slowly, on foot. “Drop
the weapon now! Resist and you’re dead!”
Uh oh. These Imps obviously weren’t going to be
fazed out of concern for hostages.
Hicks gave a whimper, “Please don’t
let him kill me…” It was a good show,
but James couldn’t see how it was going to help them now. Then he saw the pair of taser
pistols still gripped in the Doctor’s hands, hidden behind his head. I hope
you’ve got a plan, doc, because I’m certainly out of ideas.
James crouched down, trying to put
the two ‘hostages’ between him and the Imps, “Hell no! You think I don’t know what you’re
doing? I’m dead if you take me in. You
put down your weapons or I kill them, now.”
One man shouting down a pair of soldiers in full battle armor seemed
more than a bit ridiculous, but James swallowed hard and tried to stop himself
from shaking wildly.
But the Imps just kept moving
steadily forward, their weapons leveled at Welthammer. The smuggler unconsciously took a step
backward, realized what he was doing, and slowly began backing up. The armor-clad Imps continued moving slowly
forward, getting closer and closer to the pair of “hostages” still kneeling on
the pavement.
The lead trooper’s amplified voice
sounded out, as he approached to within less than two meters of Dr. Hicks. “M. Welthammer, you have no chance of evasion, you will submit
to arrest immediately, or we will be forced—“ with the trooper’s attention
forced on the rifle-toting smuggler behind him, Icarus
suddenly swung both his hands out from behind his head and pointed one taser at the midsection of each nearby power-suited
Imp. He rapidly sighted down first one
arm, then the other, and plugged each suit with a taser
round squarely in the recharge socket, less than a second apart.
There was a brief shower of sparks
from each suit, and then they stopped moving.
Icarus sprang up from his kneeling position
and leapt right up to the nearest trooper, and hit a series of buttons on a
small panel along the helmet’s neckline.
The entire front half of the suit flew explosively open, spilling the
surprised ImpSec agent inside out of his suit and
onto the pavement...where James Welthammer promptly
put several gauss rounds into him. Icarus then blew open the other ImpSec
power suit, which was also frozen in place as motionless as a statue.
As soon as James had blown away the
second helpless Imp as he spilled out of his immobile suit, the surgeon and the
smuggler gathered up the terrified lab assistant and began running for the
nearest hangar at the edge of the runway.
As they ran, James shouted to his
strange new employer. “Pretty neat trick
there...care to explain how the heck you did that?”
“The Type-22 Mod 0 Powered Armor
suit has a small recharge port about where the belly button should be, for
trickle-charge systems built into vehicles like that pinnace
back there, Hicks offered, holding up the taser
pistol he’d been carrying. “These tasers put out a much higher voltage than the sockets are
designed for. I put a round into the
socket, and the power surge momentarily fooled the suit into going into
maintenance mode and locking up.”
“Why does that sound like too
obvious a flaw for the engineers to leave in?”
James asked between breaths.
“Oh, it was corrected within a few
months of initial operations, fortunately for us, the garrison here isn’t at
the top of the priority lists for new equipment.”
"And you know about this how?"
"I worked at a military hospital. You get to hear a lot of fun stories from
injured soldiers as to how the heck a freak recharge mishap led to their suit
freezing up in mid-step, leading to it falling over and the soldier inside
getting a nasty concussion."
“And that also explains how you knew
the codes to activate the Emergency Medical Override system and blow the
explosive bolts to spill the pilots out like that?”
“Bingo,” the doc answered through his gasps for
breath, as the rounded the side of the nearest hangar and paused to catch their
breaths. “Your shuttle better get here
soon.”
“I don’t think you’ll have to worry about that
one.” Welthammer
gasped, while glancing nervously upward.
Sure enough, the three heard a sonic boom and a
shadow flashed overhead with a roar of retrorockets. The civilian shuttlepod
rapidly decelerated into a hover, and turned back towards them. The side-mounted hatchway slid open to reveal
an armor-suited figure behind a heavy tripod-mounted weapon, which began
spitting bolts of plasma fire toward the four other ImpSec
power suits now charging toward the fugitives from where they had been standing
guarding the grounded pinnace at the other end of the
runway. One by one, the Imps in power
armor were cut down in rapid succession.
But before the shuttle could descend and come to
a vertical landing, a small missile streaked in from the left, trailing smoke,
and impacted near the port-forward landing thruster. The shuttle was rocked by the small
explosion, and fell the last few meters as it lurched downwards to a crash landing
and hit with a colossal THUMP of groaning metal and plastic. The rear hatchway opened up and several more
figures in light boarding armor leapt out, taking up defensive positions around
the crash-landed shuttle, and beginning to exchange fire with the six more
suits of power armor rapidly approaching from the direction of the bar, leaping
over low outbuildings as they came.
“Oh, gosuh,” James muttered to himself. “With that hit to the landing thruster, they
can’t take off again.” He turned to the
doc and spoke up for his benefit. “If
they took as much damage as it looks they did, we’re gonna
have to find some other way off this rock.”
“What’s in this hangar, you think,” Icarus asked.
“Worth a peek,” James said with a shrug, and
blew the nearby personnel door open with a burst from the gauss rifle. The three fugitives dashed inside, and in the
gloomy, cavernous interior, they saw a squat, hulking shape.
“Dammit, I’d half
hoped to see a fully-armed fleet assault pinnace in
here,” Hicks said with a shrug of his own.
“It’s just some sort of ground maintenance vehicle.”
“Yeah, but it’s the next best thing,” James
replied, “it’s a crash recovery vehicle.” When Dr. Hicks looked at him quizzically,
James amplified his response. ”That means it’s tough
enough to get close to flaming starship crash sites.” He walked up and patted the metallic side of
the vehicle. “That means the walls of
this thing are thick enough to count as armor.”
Hicks looked over the vehicle with a
reappraising eye. “Yeah, those side
panels look like they can stand up to a light anti-personnel round, or
shrapnel”.
James opened up the cab and climbed inside. “It’s fire-resistant, so will even be some
protection from plasma.”
“Excellent,” said Hicks, dragging Pablo up into
the cab behind him. “But I still don’t see
how we’re gonna get off the planet in this thing.”
“Oh, we’re not getting off the planet in this
piece of lasuh,”
the captain said with a big grin, hitting the remote switch to open the hangar
doors. “We’re getting off planet in
that,” he finished, pointing at the ImpSec assault pinnace still sitting on the ground at the far end of the
runway.
Around the crashed shuttle, which
was now smoldering brightly, the smugglers were still exchanging fire with the
power-suited Imps. “It’s a death trap to
stay exposed out here like this, sir,” Hawking shouted to Harvern. “Sooner or later, they’ll bring in some air
support or artillery and we’re dead.”
“They’re Imps, corporal,” Harvern said, firing another barrage from the heavy spiker gun, “and even Imps are just cops. They’ll want you
alive… if possible.”
“Think that’s likely?”
“Saints preserve us, that gives us an advantage.”
“How so, sarge?”
“We’re soldiers,” Harvern replied, blasting at an Imp peeking around the side
of a small bunker, “Lord knows we don’t expect to get out alive.” With those words, he took the gun off the
tripod and dived out from behind the relative cover of the shuttle. Through a
hail of gauss and plasma rounds, Stephen took cover once more in a crater left
in the cremcrete surface of the runway by a near-miss
from a Type 24 Khukri
missile launched by one of the Imp power suits. From there, he poured fire
towards the Imp positions from his spiker gun.
“Heh, the
boss is coming, heh heh,”
Freak chuckled, as he reloaded his handheld grenade launcher. The other crooks followed his nods to behold
the odd sight of a bright-yellow crash recovery vehicle driving towards them at
top speed, bouncing over craters and through debris, with James Welthammer standing upright in the foam-sprayer turret atop
the cap, firing a light gauss rifle at a heavy groundcar
full of Imp reinforcements coming toward the runway from the edge of the
field. The ex-TI soldiers saw the front
tire of the Imp van get hit, and the newly-arrived vehicle promptly hit a
pothole and flipped over onto its roof and burst into flames.
“The man has style, I’ll give him
that,” Peterson answered with admiration, as he picked off the last of the
original pinnace-load of Imp troopers.
The crash recovery vehicle ground to
a halt in front of the burning shuttle, and James hopped down from his perch
atop the foam-sprayer. “Dammit, guys, I wanted you to rescue me, not the other way
around.”
“And what in God’s creation are you
doing driving that monstrosity?” Harvern said half-jokingly.
“Well, it’s designed to rescue
people from crashed shuttles,” James replied with a grin. “That’s a crashed shuttle,” he pointed out,
“and you guys definitely needed rescuing.”
“More to the point,” Shrak asked, slapping a fresh clip in his plasma rifle,
“how are we gonna get off this rock?”
“Well, our friends in the law
enforcement and fascist oppression business were kind enough to offer us a ride
in a security vehicle today, and we’re not the sort of people to turn down such
warm hospitality, are we?” James answered as he climbed back up the side of the
vehicle and beckoned his men to follow.
“There’s an assault pinnace landed a bit
further up the runway, we’re gonna have to take that
home with us.”
“This day just gets weirder and
weirder,” Peterson grumbled as he climbed into the truck.
Once everyone else was on board,
James nodded to Private Jenkins. “Freak,
clean up the evidence in that shuttle, would you?”
“Heh heh, sure thing boss, heh heh...” he giggled as he pulled a large grenade off the
belt of his body armor. He tossed the
grenade into the still-open rear hatch of the shuttle as they drove past it,
and the shuttle went up in a colossal explosion behind them.
“Um, sir? Who’s driving this thing?”
Harvern asked his employer warily.
“Our new client,” Welthammer replied, activating the teleoptical
sight on his new gauss rifle to peer at the pinnace
they were heading towards, “and he’s full of surprises today.”
“Ain’t
everyone,” Sam Moore interjected, lining up his sniper scope on the cockpit
windscreen of the pinnace parked ahead of them. He could see the chin gauss-gatling turret under the craft’s bow turning to track their
vehicle, but it wasn’t firing for some reason.
Imps must want us alive for some
reason, he thought to himself, probably
not a particularly pleasant one. He
put a single high-velocity gauss round through the cockpit glass and into the
pilot behind it, and the chin turret stopped tracking them. Gotcha,
you slope bastard.
“Nice shot, Sam,” James approved,
then spoke up to be heard by the rest of his men. “Okay, Imp pinnaces
only have the one dedicated flight crew, so that thing should be empty
now. But stay on your toes,
they might have another man in there anyway.
Once we’re inside, I want the first person inside to find the emergency
repair kit and slap a vacuum patch on that cockpit, I
want to be able to breathe once we break atmo.”
Thirty seconds later, the fugitives
were entering the Imp assault pinnace which had been
sent to capture them, but as captors, not captives. After his men had checked it and made sure no
Imps were left alive inside, James went back to the truck to get his new
clients. He opened the door to the cab,
and was greeted by the sight of Pablo Losada
feverishly pounding on the chest of a bleeding Dr. Hicks. “A gauss round came
through the door and hit him in the side!
Help me get him into the pinnace and into the autodoc!”
*****
Chan Lee was on Hoon’s
shuttle in the morning, just as he had told him, and soon enough he was saying
goodbye to Artemis, Alpha Centauri…and Joy. She was in Chan’s thoughts as they
passed from the black vacuum to the orange and black swirl of hyperspace. He
couldn’t express his feelings toward her, but somehow she knew… she knew too
well. Lost in those shadows from the Centauran sun,
he was finally able to express himself without words. The memories of it were
still roaming in his head till morning.
If Hoon
was upset at his lack of communication during the trip, he said nothing. It was
only a day trip to Earth… or what was left of it. The homeworld
of Humanity had become nothing more than a swirling mass of dust. They had
already repaired it once, then after the Moon was
forced into the planet, the powers-that-be decided it was a waste of time to
repair it again. Mars was still livable, albeit it as an Imperial Marine base
after the Mars Rebellion, but it was still a foothold in their old stomping
grounds.
Being a member of the Royal Family,
even the lowest on their ladder, gave him several orders of knighthood and the
rank of general on half-pay. This allowed him access codes to military jumpgates – and more importantly - permission to pass
through this highly restricted system. Of course, Chan didn’t notice any of
this – after a day of moping for his lost love in the cramped shuttle, he
finally fell asleep.
Thank Buddha, the prince
thought, locking onto the trajectory of the digital gate; I’d thought he’d
never stop moping.
Compared to the trip through
hyperspace to Earth, the digital gate jumps to Wilke’s
Star were fast. It still took four hours, but before the Middle Kingdom built
the digital gate network, it would have taken days. Again, one flash of the
official ident signal, and bureaucrats, traffic
control officers, and all the needful red tape of the imperial bureaucracy
simply vanished as they made their landing arrangements on a private field just
north of the
Chan never noticed any of this; the
werewolf was asleep. He was asleep the whole time – and it wasn’t until he felt
a sharp twinge in his neck that he bothered to open his eyes.
This is familiar, were the
first thoughts in Lee’s head as he looked around. The ornate trappings, the
crowd of people, even that fat guy on the chair in front of him. Wait a minute, I know who that is… “CHIANG!”
Habor
surged forward with a thrust of rage towards the throne, only to be whipped
back by the chains that held his body. He couldn’t morph – then he felt the
collar hanging around his neck. Damn prison issue…
“Your imperial majesty,” said a
voice behind him, “I have returned with the prisoner as promised.”
The large Chinaman on the throne
coughed and sputtered for a second, before lifting up his weary head and
rasping, “Very good, my grandson. You have proven your truly noble birth by
bringing this traitor to justice.”
Chan turned to see Hoon smiling there, just out of reach of his chains. “You
tricked me!”
If the prince noticed his cousin’s
shouted, he didn’t care to respond, “Grandfather, I thank thee for your care.”
“Now, Prince Chan,” Emperor Chiang
coughed out, his sicky brown eyes turning on his
nephew, “it is time to end our rivalry.”
END OF ACT II
Text Copyright (C) 2004 by Marcus Johnston. All Rights Reserved. Do not try ANY of this at home, even if the Devil Himself shows up and challenges you to a fiddle contest.