DREAMS OF AN UNHOLY NIGHT – ACT III
“Success
often depends upon knowing how long it will take to succeed.” -- Emperor Chiang I
General Lord Il-Jan, Lord High
Regulator, circled the prostrate form of Major Dame Cynthia Beatrix. “So, Major, you have met our
problem in the south.”
“Yes, sai, you were correct. There
was a mage, but he was not, as we had surmised a weakling using his powers to
control a group of cut-throats.”
“That is obvious… since he bested
you, or were you just incompetent?”
“No, sai, he was incredibly
powerful, but untrained. I believe his
powers are new to him, if he were trained at all I would not be here reporting
to you.”
“Powerful, maybe, but you still
should have bested him. You were given the best the Emperor has to offer… and
perhaps we were wrong investing in someone of such questionable stock. Get out of my sight. I suggest you re-examine the past few days
and discover why you failed and if we can make any further use of you.”
The major, hammered by the
displeasure of her master flew from the room in shame. As she moved to her quarters she began the
ordered self examination, yet for some reason all that she could focus on were
the parting words of adversary Weathers.
As the door closed behind the Major,
Il-Jan turned to a non-descript panel on the side wall. As his gaze was felt upon it, the wall opened
up revealing three other individuals, shadowed by the dim light of the room. “What is your opinion of her worthiness?”
“Sire, you may have been a bit
harsh, we do not see anyway she could have defeated that pirate. The rage he
was hurling at her was greater than anything we have seen.”
“That is my opinion as well,” the
general nodded, “but what interested me is he actually hoped to turn her. That
is why I was harsh. I implanted in her a desire to begin exploring his words. I
think we just might be able to use her to get to him. He obviously believes her
genetic heritage will somehow allow him to use her.”
“Excellent plan, sire. We will
continue to monitor her… discretely, of course.”
The panel closed and the three
figures made their way out of the hidden chamber down a series of halls that
gave them covert access to almost any chamber in the complex. The one that had spoken made his way to Regulator
Beatrix’s quarters. She sat at her desk
reading a document. The spy used a data
pad to the left of the observation port to access her terminal. Interesting
list of reading, the Emperor’s suggestion has really put this one to work.
Inside the room, Beatrix could not
shake the feeling she was being watched.
She closed the digital copy of Thomas Paine’s Common Sense and retired to her bed. As she willed herself to relax she was
confounded by the fact that she was unable to get Weather’s parting words from
her mind. “In the end, you are
little more than a slave.”
At that moment, on the other side of
the compound was a dark figure recording his impressions of the meeting between
Il-Jan and Beatrix. When he was finished
he placed the data into a scrambler and sent a secure transmission to the other
side of known space. His mission
complete, he went back to his duties, monitoring the inner workings of the
base.
Weathers looked across the Officers’
Mess and wondered how it was he was going to break the news to his
fellows. There is only one way to go about this, David knew, and that is to
just lay it all out there.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” he addressed
his officers, eagerly awaiting his message, “I am sure y’all are curious as to
why I have called you here today. I need
to explain why I left that frigate alive.
I feel we have worn out our welcome in this region and that ship was
sent specifically to hunt us. That was
no standard patrol; we were its target.
I left it alive because I wanted them to think this war had become
personal to me, to us. Only people who
were taking ownership over a chunk of space would send back a tangible live
warning. I want them to come back to
that region and hammer away looking for us.
I want them to crack down on the people of those systems and become even
more oppressive than they already are.
The only way we will ever take the Emperor down is for the people, all
of them, to rise up against him. So,
that being said, it is my hope to begin moving around, hitting and fading all
over the Empire, causing reprisals to increase tension. There have to be more groups like us out
there. If and when it gets hot enough,
if strong leadership is found, they will rise up, and if there are enough of
them, they will win. Our overall
operations will not leave this sight, in fact I have some very interesting
ideas for this base. The largest of
which we can think
“Captain Weathers,” Captain Lyle of
the Marm asked, “while I agree with you that things are a tad hot right
now, why not back off and let them cool down?”
“I wish we could lie low, but I’m
afraid they will find us if we sit still.
I cannot explain it to you, but I have this feeling we have struck a
nerve, and they have started to take our attacks personally. We have to keep moving.”
Lyle then posed a second question,
“If we are going to move to new hunting grounds, where do you suggest we go?”
Weathers activated the holoproj on
the desk and a galactic map hovered above them.
“I suggest we go here.” David touched his finger so that the
southwestern frontier glowed. “Oleander King and the
people of the
A young ensign at the back stood up,
“Sir, if our actions result in increased hardships for these people, how will
they be willing to follow us against the emperor? Won’t they hate us?”
“You are correct, Ensign,” answered
Weathers, “but I do not ever plan on leading anyone against the Emperor. We do not have the power to take him on. I see our role as that of agitator, creating
a situation that will result in a greater revolution. If this works, I doubt we will be remembered
in the history books, but we will have some stories to tell our grandchildren!”
“But sir,” Lieutenant Commander
Palmer raised her hand, “we’ve been doing that for the last twenty years.”
“No,” David shot back, “what we have
been doing, commander, is assisting anyone opposing the Emperor. Small pockets
can be crushed easily; but a greater discontent strikes at the heart of the
slants! Right now, they’re all so comfortable, ‘cause all the rebelling is
happening at the rim. We need to spread it around, give strength to those
groups that must be out there, and then kick the Emperor in the ass!”
There was a whoop that arose from
the table that echoed off the walls. Weathers couldn’t help but smile. Once he
had bathed in the newfound optimism, the captain order, “Helm, once the Marm’s
officers are away, set course for the Diocletian System, best speed.”
*****
Sharif couldn’t help watching the
broadcast as he walked the streets of Minos. He couldn’t help watching it
because it was being shown on the sidewalk, the billboards, and some of the
shop windows. I suppose I could simply walk blind, he thought, but then
he would still hear it.
It was a news broadcast; there was a
man standing there before a crowd in some part of the planet
There were so many fundamentalist
Christians on this planet, left over from the 3rd Civil War and the
New Jewish expulsion of the radical fundies. They were burning for another Bad
Andy to lead them and one appeared. One who could do miracles and not be a
mage. One who could do perform powerful deeds. However, most importantly, one
who somehow kept ImpSec and the Civil Police from raiding his gatherings. His
support was growing and it seemed to come out of nowhere.
Perhaps the Father of Lies got to
him after I kicked him in the royal jewels, Sharif smiled; then wept for
the thousands, perhaps millions who would die in the holocaust that this
deluded man had signed them up for. You can save yourself by saving humanity…
and throwing off of the wicked government. Instead of faith, this antichrist
had given them works.
This wasn’t the Way –
*****
Chan Lee couldn’t believe it; there
he was, before the Emperor, his hated enemy… and he couldn’t do a damn thing
about it. The collar was securely fastened, the chains were solid arcanized
corbidium, and he didn’t have his claws.
His Eminence, the Royal Emperor of
Heaven and Earth at the
“And I told you I’d kill you.”
Chiang managed a chuckle. “I’m
afraid Old Man Time might beat your futile attempt at revenge.” Driving the
throne back to its pedestal, the emperor sighed. “Now that you’re in my grasp,
I’m at a loss at what to do with you. You should have stayed under whatever
rock you came out from. Grandson, did he tell you where he was?”
Hoon bowed, “No, grandfather.”
“It is no matter,” Chiang said in yan-giz,
before shifting back to Mandarin, “Lord Chamberlain, what do you recommend?”
A man dressed in a shining blue
robe, with a beard so long you could trip on it, stepped forward. “I fear that
spilling more royal blood, albeit so diluted in this creature, would only serve
to spill more, your majesty.”
“Kill it now,” Crown Prince Rao,
flanking the emperor on the other side, “like you would do with any other
pest.”
“I have a suggestion, your majesty.”
came a voice from Chiang’s left.
The emperor coughed and turned
towards him with insolence, “Yes, my Left Minister? What would you recommend?”
The man stepped forward, his hair
incredibly slicked back, with his eyes just a little too far apart, dressed in
a simple black robe. “A solution that would appease both opinions; send him to
G2 to rot.”
“Unwise, Vin Dane,” an Italian man
dressed in a well-fashioned purple robe said to the emperor’s right. “After
all, he escaped Imperial custody once, we wouldn’t want him to do it again. And
people have been known to escape from G2.”
“Then what would you suggest,
Minister Treschi,” Dane shot back, “for as Count Aniketh pointed out, to kill
him would lead to more regicide, something I’m sure you wouldn’t
want.”
Andrea simply smiled. “But we don’t
want to place him somewhere he could easily be picked up again, by a party or parties
unknown.”
Chan was lost in the seemingly
polite conversation, knowing there were hints being said that told differently,
but he had never been one for courtier sniping.
“It is easy to criticize, minister,
but I see no suggestions from your quarter.”
Treschi smiled. “Then I will simply
build on your magnificent plan. Indeed, let us send him to G2, but let
us not send him alone. Send him with a companion, someone to watch him closely,
and kill him if he should try to escape.”
“Ni shi bai chi!” Crown
Prince Rao shot back. “You could never send a guard to G2 and expect him to
kill him should he escape. After all, escape for Chan would be escape for the
guard.”
“I was not suggesting a man, your
highness.”
Dane stared at Treschi. “Then what do you recommend?’
“There is a pernicious plant
that grows only on G2 that’s called Endari. It is an annoying little weed, but
it does have one natural advantage; it is a cure for Netter’s Syndrome.”
“But Endari is
poisonous.” Aniketh replied.
“Indeed – but since
when did poison kill a werewolf? Simply inject the prisoner with the disease
and he will have to spend
his days and nights on that rock, writhing in agony from the poison he must eat
to live, and never able to leave except to die. That, your
majesty, is fitting punishment for an enemy of the blood imperial.”
Chiang chuckled.
“Excellent, Right Minister, you have chosen correctly. See to it personally,
Andrea, and you will be well rewarded.”
“Thank you, your
majesty.” Treschi bowed and stepped forward towards Chan.
“Chiang!” Lee somehow
managed to stand, “If I do ever escape, I’ll make sure all your children are
dead before I die.”
“Then we’ll make sure
you never escape.” The emperor said with a smile. “Take him away!”
Treschi led the guards
and the prisoner away, leaving the
“Don’t you stick that go-sa in me!”
Andrea shrugged. “It’s
not personal,” as he injected the disease into Chan’s blood stream, “it’s just
business.”
Lee raged as he felt
the burning sensation go through his body. The minister just stared at him,
then said to the guards, “Take him on the next freighter bound for G2.”
“I’ll kill you!” Chan yelled at Treschi.
“You’d be surprised
how many men have said that to me,” Andrea smiled, “yet, I’m still here.
Perhaps one of these days you’ll remember that I saved your life, although what
kind of life you’ll have …” he shrugged, “well, why spoil the surprise?”
“TRESCHI!” Lee roared
as he was bundled into the shuttle, his voice muffled once they shut the doors.
*****
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!”
“Shit.” James shouldered the gauss rifle and helped
Losada lift Hicks out of the truck. They
carried him to the ramp at the back of pinnace.
The autodoc was strategically positioned against the starboard wall just
at the top of the ramp. They set Doctor
Hicks down, and locked the nanotech operating arm over him; Losada started
punching buttons on the control computer.
“You going to be ok with him, kid?”
“Well, I’m a few credit hours short
of my doctorate, and my focus of study was on research, but yeah, I can run an
autodoc.”
“Right, well I’m going to get us out
of here.” James ran forward, and Pablo
turned back to the Autodoc. The restraint
collar had already clamped itself around Hicks’ neck, and a few thousand
nanobots were injected directly into his spinal column. There, they fired a few tiny test signals
down various nerve fibers, and Icarus’ body twitched slightly in response, a slight
shudder all over. Satisfied, the
autodoc’s AI program mapped out the idiosyncratic arrangement of major nerve
fibers in the patient’s spinal cord, and began ordering nanobots to inject
microscopic doses of anesthetic into specific nerves to shut them down
temporarily. Other nanobots attached
microscopic electric wires to certain nerves below the cut-off point, and the
AI took over ordering Icarus’ heart to beat and lungs to breathe.
With Icarus’ lower body immobilized
and deadened to all sensation and pain, the autodoc could get to work on his
main injury. The robotic arms neatly
sliced off his shirt, and lasers scanned and mapped the contours of his skin
and the edges of the entry and exit wounds. X-ray and ultrasound probes mapped
the internal organs and the path the gauss round took as it blew through the
surgeon’s chest. The autodoc sensors
found no fragments of the gauss round, because it had been a solid
armor-piercing round, which had held together and exited in one piece, then
blown out of the vehicle’s cabin through the opposite door. A lighter, explosive antipersonnel round may
not have penetrated the thickened door panels, but if it had, it would have
exploded inside Icarus’ chest and he would have been killed instantly. As it was, the gauss round had gone through
one of his lungs, broken three of his ribs, and barely missed his heart. Bone fragments from the shattered ribs and
hydrostatic shockwaves from the bullet’s passage had damaged several other
organs, including the other lung.
Insect-sized nanobots were dropped
into both the exit and entry wounds, and began cleaning out fragments of bone,
skin epidermis, and bone from the wounds.
A cloudy liquid containing a soup of nanobots, antibiotic fluid, and
nutrient solution was sprayed onto the wound surface and injected into his
chest cavity. More nanobot-rich fluid
was formed into a mist and sent into his lungs to repair the air passages from
the inside out. Antennae built into the
chair beamed radio-wave energy through his body to power the nanobots and carry
their control signals.
Tiny nanobots grabbed pieces of
cellular debris and gathered them up for collection by large nanobots with
powerful swimming apparatus to tow the bundles of dead cells and contaminants
up to the surface for easier removal by the insect-sized bots. Other nanobots dropped off cargoes of
crystallized wound sealant to close tiny gaps left in membranes by burst
cells. Still further nanobots acted as
eyes for the autodoc’s AI and Losada, assessing the damage and building up a
microscopically complete map of the damage and the progress made in repairing
it. Additional nanobots injected
individual cells with compounds that would stimulate them to divide, speeding
healing by replacing lost cells. The
tiniest nanobots of all repaired damaged cell membranes, molecule by
molecule.
Within ten minutes, the debris had
been mostly cleared away and the bleeding had stopped. Within ten more minutes, the wounds were
sealed up with sutures and organic sealant, and the larger nanobots were
withdrawn to the skin surface. After ten
further minutes, the smaller nanobots withdrew through one last hole left in
the lung wall and into the air sac, where they began the long climb up through
Icarus’ trachea to his nose. The last
nanobots left behind sealed the last tear in his lung, and they too began
climbing out. A flexible vacuum tube snaked up one nostril and down into the
trachea, where the nanobots, cleaning up blood and debris as they went, were
sucked out and removed.
Satisfied that the patient was
stable, the autodoc AI injected a precisely measured dose of a stimulant into
Icarus’ bloodstream, and he awoke groggily from his unwilling slumber.
“Unnnhhh...wha....” Without full
conscious control of his still-anaesthetized lungs, he was unable to properly
speak. Losada immediately began calming
him down.
“Quiet, doc, shhh....shhh....” Pablo grabbed one of his employer’s hands in
his own left hand, his right still flashing over the control panel for the
autodoc, directing its’ AI in the continuing removal of the nanobots. “Don’t talk.
You’re in an autodoc in a shuttle.”
Losada looked around him. He hadn’t fully understood what was going on
for most of the afternoon, and this wasn’t looking much better. “It looks like a police shuttle. I hope these guys you hired are what you
think they are, because if they aren’t, we’re both screwed.”
Meanwhile, James strode up to the
cockpit, and then stopped. The Imp who’d
been flying this thing before had lowered the partition between the cockpit and
the troop compartment. In anger, he
kicked the wall, turned, and jogged back down the ramp. As he ran to the side hatch, he caught Major
Shrak.
“Get your men inside, Major; I’d
rather not wait around for more of these bastards.”
Shrak nodded, and waved for the
soldiers still outside to get moving.
James threw the cockpit door open and leaped inside, to find Freak
whistling as he installed a patch over the gauss-bolt-hole in forward viewscreen.
James hopped into the pilot’s seat,
threw the switch to raise the partition behind him, and started warming up the
jets that would take the pinnace into the lower atmosphere before escaping to
orbit.
“You
know how to fly a shuttle, Freak?” James
addressed the private who was finishing up his patchwork.
“Heh heh, a lot of people died the
last time I did.”
A shiver ran up Welthammer’s
spine. He’d been ready to say: Well, strap yourself in if you want to learn,
but he swallowed it, and returned to his pre-flight sequence.
Looking behind him, James saw the
med-student still hunched over the autodoc, and the rest of the soldiers
on-board, raising the ramp. As soon as
it had closed, he kicked in the anti-grav plating, and fired the jets to
maximum power.
The ship’s computer calculated the
most efficient ground-to-orbit course.
James scrapped that one and found the one that would take them into
space the fastest. The pinnace was a
bulky ship, it had wings, but other than that it was about as aerodynamic as a
house, so the antigravity and tiny jets could only take it so far before James
had to punch in the much more powerful rockets, which would carry them the rest
of the way.
He spared a glance over his
shoulder, “Hey, Shrak, where’d you leave my ship?”
“Uh…”
“Wonderful,” James muttered, “could
you see the orbital station?”
“Yeah, I think so; it didn’t look
that far away.”
You couldn’t trust sight alone to
tell you how far away objects in space were, the eye had few good references to
judge distance by. But at least it gave
James a hemisphere to aim for, after a minor course adjustment.”
Once De Ulloa orbital was in range,
he had the navigation computer access the public database showing the locations
of nearby vessels and satellites. Three
“unknown freighter-class vessels” matched the Resolve’s specs. For a
wonder, James guessed right with the comm on the first try.
“Resolve.”
“Tiller, this is Welthammer, we’re
coming back with a couple of passengers in stow. Had to borrow an Imp assault pinnace to get
here though, so be ready for us.”
“Roger.” The comm closed.
“Hang on back there, we’re nearly
home.”
Major Shrak walked forward,
“Captain, what about the rest of the crew?”
Fuck! In the excitement, James had somehow managed
to forget about the crew of his ship. If
Howard had played his cards right, they would probably be sitting around on the
station waiting for their Captain to return.
If he hadn’t then, hell, they could be back on the planet in a prison
like the one James had just gotten out of.
Either way, it was a serious problem for a fugitive with two ships, one
stolen and the other busted out of impound.
“Um, that’s a good question, Major,
I’m sure I’ll think of something.” I hope.
James fished his commlink out of his pocket, and dialed with
one hand.
A few seconds later, a voice answered on the other end,
“Yeah?”
“Joe, where are you?”
James kept one hand on the controls to the pinnace.
“James? Ugh, I’m in a
hotel, trying to get over the worst hangover of my life.”
“No, I mean where did the Imps leave you? Are you down on the planet?”
“Uh…no, they interrogated the hell out of us, then let us go
on the station.”
“OK, well I want you to gather up the crew. I’m taking the rest of the boys back to the
ship right now, and we’ll figure out a way to pick you up.”
James could hear a rustling sound from the other end,
presumably Joe sitting up in bed, “Why don’t you just fly the shuttle over?”
“Well, we had to leave the shuttle behind, you see; but
Imperial Security was kind of enough to lend us one of their assault pinnaces,
bless their little black hearts. Anyway,
I’d rather hold onto this thing for a while longer, if you get me.”
“Right. Okay, I’ll
gather everyone up, just call when you’ve got a plan.”
“Will do; go stick your head in a bucket of water.”
Howard groaned, “I think I just might…”
James closed the phone, and put it into a pocket on his
vest.
They were now ten kilometers away from Welthammer’s ship,
James shut off the pinnace’s primary thrusters; they would coast the rest of
the way. The assault transport was
significantly larger than the Resolve’s
shuttle, and while it would fit in the freighter’s docking compartment, it
would be difficult for James to maneuver.
At one kilometer, they were coming in high and to the starboard of the
larger ship, James cut in the maneuvering thrusters, yawing starboard and
rolling away. A couple more bursts of
compressed hydrogen, and the pinnace was directly under the rectangular
projection from the Resolve’s ventral
side which ordinarily housed the ship’s shuttle and repair pod. James rolled the pinnace one last time, so
the top of the pinnace faced away from the Resolve’s
belly, and then it was out of his hands.
The metal plate covering the bay would slide away, and then grav-plates
would draw the pinnace into it, James just hoped Tiller let the computer handle
the fine maneuvering.
James unstrapped himself from the pilot’s seat, and made a
frantic effort to turn on gravity as the motion sent him flying around the
compartment, cursing Imperial engineers when he found there was none. Struggling to grab handlebars and steady
himself, James made his way to the back of the pinnace to check on the
passengers. And hopefully find out where the ti’en sheh deh we’re going,
he thought to himself with a grimace.
Welthammer clattered to the floor—but recovered quickly—as
the pinnace came to a rest, and the ship’s gravity plating boosted power. He walked to the rear compartment. The soldiers were examining weapons from the
pinnace’s gun racks, James tried not to think about what would happen if Freak
dropped the cylindrical object he was tossing from hand to hand. At the very back, Pablo Losada was lazily
tapping buttons on the autodoc’s monitors; Dr. Hicks appeared to be sleeping.
“How’s he doing?”
The younger man looked up, as if startled, “He’ll be ok; the
autodoc’s controlling his breathing while his system continues to recover from
the trauma.”
The rear ramp fell, and a tall man with dark, sunken eyes,
stepped into the ship.
James waved, “Hey, Tiller, the old man here’s been shot,
anything you can do that the autodoc’s not thought of?”
The field medic put a hand on the machine, and looked at the
sleeping patient. After a few moments of
silence, he shook his head.
“All, right, then you’d better sit down, we’re in a bit of a
fix and I think some planning is in order.”
Tiller and the other soldiers moved to sit down on the seats
lining the sides of the transport’s hold.
James did likewise and the compartment became very quiet, Freak even
stopped juggling the grenade.
“Right…well, here’s the situation as I see it. About an hour ago, the Doc and I fought our
way out of an Imperial raid on a bar, killing four ImpSec agents. With your help, we then escaped off-planet in
a stolen Imperial shuttle, which we killed another dozen Imps to get. Sometime before that, you guys managed to
bust this ship out of an Impound Station, quite a feat…”
“Heh heh, station made a big
boom,” Freak laughed.
Shrak looked embarrassed, “I’m sorry Captain, I’m afraid I
might have been a bit overzealous with your ketracite.”
“Not a problem, Major, to tell the truth, I wasn’t too fond
of hauling that stuff around to being with.
But it still comes down to one point.
Boys, we are in deep shit. It
won’t be too long before the Imperial Fleet is swarming all over us. Anyway, my crew is still sitting around back
at De Ulloa Orbital, and I can’t leave without ‘em. Now, Joe’s gathering them up, but we need
away to actually pick them up and bring them back here, and considering the
status of the ships we’ve got, that may not be too easy. So, any ideas?”
The bay was silent for a moment, Sam Moore was the first to
speak, “Why can’t we just say we’re ImpSec?
We have the shuttle…”
“No, the minute they interrogated the pinnace and saw the
ID, we’d either be arrested or blown away.”
Peterson spoke next, “Well we’ll have to hit the station
won’t we? Slice the doors and pull them
out?”
“Much as I dislike the Middle Kingdom, I’d rather not make
them think I’ve declared war on them.
They’re probably pissed off enough as it is; after blowing the impound,
attacking a full orbital station might be just a bit too much.
“Excuse me. Ah,
excuse me, M. Welthammer.” Everyone
looked to the rear of the pinnace where Pablo Losada was waving nervously, “I’m
sorry to interrupt, but Doctor Hicks says he has an idea.”
The Duke of New
It had taken about ten minutes to crack into the pinnace
computer’s configurations, and change the interrogation-response numbers to
Hicks’s specifications. With that, and
the Imperial Security uniforms they’d gotten from a pinnace locker, the
disguise was near-perfect. As long as
they only dealt with civilian officials, no one should suspect.
They were docked, and James exited the pinnace, along with
the two least conspicuous-looking of his soldiers, Hawking and Peterson. They had waited around in bay 19-M for half
an hour before the Resolve’s crew
showed up. James had been about to call
Joe Howard to make sure he didn’t have the wrong bay, when a dozen people
crowded through the hatch.
The crowd stopped when they saw James and the two soldiers,
and a short, grumpy-looking, beefy man stepped forward. He looked James up and down, and then spoke,
“I knew there was somethin’ funny about ‘im from the moment I met ‘im. But even I didn’t think ‘e would turn on us
like this. Just ‘ow long ‘ave you been
ImpSec, eh?”
The two stared coldly at each other for a few seconds, then
burst into laughter.
“Glad to have you back on board, Cookie,” James said as he
slapped the Mess Officer on the back.”
“Aye, it’s good to be back.”
The rest of the crew was shuffling forward now, looking over
the newly acquired pinnace. Stephen
Faraday, the chief engineer remarked, “I love what you’ve done with the
shuttle, Captain,” as he ran his hand over one of the wings, “but I think you
could have picked better engines. This
fleet-issue stuff never holds up very long.
Are you trying to give me more
work?”
“I’m sure you’ll manage.”
James turned to re-enter the pinnace’s cockpit hatch, and
nearly collided with Tanya Kaul, one of his pilots.
“Uh…excuse me Tanya…”
The young Indian woman glowered at him, “You expect me to
believe you flew this thing off New
Madrid, to the ship, and then back here?”
“Well…I did…”
“And I bet you were expecting to fly it back out of here,
weren’t you?”
“Aren’t I?”
“Hell no! You think I
want to be killed because I let some moron like you pretend he’s a pilot and
tear the engines off my ship?” They were
following the rest of the crowd into the pinnace.
“You know, I am a
qualified pilot.”
“And I’m the Emperor,” she jerked her thumb, “get in back.”
James sighed, and headed for the transport compartment while
Tanya strapped herself into the pilot’s chair.
As he sat down on the row of fold-down seats, his crew exchanged
glances, suppressing laughs. One of the
techies, Tom Parker, offered, “It’s OK, Cap’n, I’m sure Chief Faraday’ll still
let you fly the repair pod, long as you promise to stay where we can see you.”
James found himself wondering why he’d come back for these
guys.
Icarus Hicks was sitting at a large table, bolted to the
floor of the freighter. His chest was
still sore, but the autodoc had said he was ok to move around some, but he had
to wear a vest that would regulate his breathing until he was fully healed.
“All right, Freak, I’m out,” the large werewolf sitting on
Hicks’s left, who had introduced himself as Major Shrak, threw down his cards.
“Heh heh, pair of—“
“PAIR?! Why you…”
Hicks wasn’t a big poker player, though his photographic
memory meant he was doing better than most of the other soldiers at the table,
except for the brooding Lieutenant Tiller across from him, whom Hicks suspected
was a mind-mage. Still, the game could
be fun on occasion.
There was a muffled clang below, and the ship shuddered
slightly.
“That’ll be them,” one of the other soldiers said.
Sure enough, a few minutes later, footsteps could be heard
all over the ship, and several people could be seen ascending the lift aft of
the lounge or entering the crew quarters.
Someone Icarus hadn’t seen before walked into the lounge and
began mixing an instant coffee; he nodded to Major Shrak, “Evening, John.”
The werewolf nodded back, “Nikola.”
Then Captain Welthammer came up the lift, and seeing Icarus
at the table, made a beeline for him. "So where did you hire me to take
you?" he asked pointedly. "We never got that far in the
bar."
Icarus smiled weakly, and
waited for his rhythmic, controlled breathing to go into exhale mode so he
could speak. "I want to contact
Arthur Clarke. I need to go where he
is." Shrak and Tiller exchanged a
surprised glance.
Welthammer snorted.
"If anyone knew where he was, they'd collect the 50 million crown
bounty on his head and retire on Disney Planet."
“Well, that is the problem, I was thinking of starting out
looking in Elysia, asking some discreet questions.” Hicks said, in between breaths.
Before Welthammer responded, Major Shrak broke in, “Why are
you looking for Clarke?” He was staring
daggers at Hicks, while Welthammer’s jaw was gaping staring at him.
“I, well…I have information for Clarke and the Resistance on
an ImpSec plot using my research, that could have some widespread and rather
unpleasant ramifications.”
Shrak’s hard gaze continued for a while; then he looked a
question to Tiller, the medic nodded, slowly.
The werewolf turned back to Hicks, “All right, son, I can tell you. Though I’m not sure if you grasp how valuable
this information is, and how dangerous to your health it could be. Old Man Clarke’s set up in the basement of a
warehouse just a couple blocks from the
“Yangtze Kiang.” Tiller spat
out.
“That’s right; old supply depot. It’s an obsolete station,
so the slants mostly use it for storage. We can dock there without worry.”
Dr. Hicks just smiled. “He’s right under Chiang’s nose.”
Welthammer, looked incredulous, he threw his hands up in the
air, “I can not believe this!”
“I can, captain.”
There was an electric whine, and everyone turned to see Joseph Howard
leveling a plasma rifle at the men in the lounge. “Now if you will please place your hands on
your head, I have a communication to Imperial Security I need to be making.”
END OF
ACT III
Text Copyright (C) 2004 by Marcus Johnston. All Rights Reserved. Do not try ANY of this at home, except reading "Common Sense" by Tom Paine. By all means, DO read that. Especially Part Three.