Warrior: Coupé (The Warrior Trilogy, Book Three): BattleTech Legends, #59

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Warrior: Coupé (The Warrior Trilogy, Book Three): BattleTech Legends, #59 Page 25

by Michael A. Stackpole


  Morgan frowned. “How can you call me that when you said you were afraid of my disloyalty?”

  Quintus laid his hand on Morgan’s shoulder. “Being afraid of fire doesn’t mean you never strike a match. You just don’t strike one in a place where the fire can get out of control. Hanse knew, deep down, that you could be trusted. He just had to be sure others could not twist you and use you against him.”

  Hanse nodded in agreement. “Now, however, a situation has come up that requires handling by a tactical genius. It is of vital importance. I will not repeat Ian’s mistake. Besides, I’m not certain my skill could bring us a victory. You’re the only one I can trust with it.”

  Morgan nodded once. “Give me a bucket of water and I’ll storm the gates of hell for you.”

  Hanse smiled uneasily. “Would that this mission were so easy.” He plucked a folder from his desk and handed it to Morgan. As the younger man scanned the material, Hanse continued speaking.

  “Liao has a minimum of one elite battalion—most probably his Death Commandos—heading in to Kathil. We believe they’re going to destroy the generating facilities on the ground. On the planet, we have a very green militia unit. The only other forces I can give you are a reinforced ’Mech company and the tailings from the Fifth Syrtis Fusiliers. We’ve nothing else in range that can get there in time.”

  Morgan looked up anxiously. “If they cripple Kathil, we’ll have no way to repair JumpShips, nor will we be able to build new ones to replace those that can’t be fixed. Our troops will have to pull back, our supply routes become more chancy, and our reaction time to enemy raids goes to hell.”

  Hanse sat back on the edge of his desk. “Now you know why you’ve got to stop the assault. The Death Commandos are suicide troops. They’ll keep coming until you blow them to pieces. They might have some help—in which case, things are going to get really nasty.”

  Morgan snapped the folder shut. He stood and saluted Hanse Davion. “I’ll stop them. If it takes every man and every ’Mech I have, I’ll stop them.”

  Hanse returned the salute. “You’ll have to do better than that.”

  Morgan frowned in confusion. “Pardon?”

  “We learned of this attack because of a risky move by an agent inside the Maskirovka.” Hanse looked his nephew straight in the eye. “After the defense of Kathil, whatever you have left in the way of men and machines must go to Sian to bring him back home.”

  Chapter 34

  THARKAD

  DISTRICT OF DONEGAL

  LYRAN COMMONWEALTH

  10 AUGUST 3029

  Katrina Steiner stood before her throne as Frederick Steiner entered the hall. The tap of his heels against the polished marble floor sounded a rhythmic tattoo, faltering only when Frederick noticed Ryan Steiner standing in the throne’s shadow. The Archon saw Frederick’s valiant struggle to keep the surprise from his face, and she savored it. Yes, you idiot. You are undone.

  Frederick, resplendent in the gray uniform of the Tenth Lyran Guards, came to a halt at the base of the throne. He clicked his heels and bowed to the Archon, but she did not offer him her hand. He straightened up stiffly. “You have summoned me, Archon?”

  The Archon looked down at him. “So I have.”

  Frederick squirmed uneasily beneath her cold stare. His right hand almost rose to massage the scar at his temple, but he caught himself. “What is it, Katrina?” Frederick transmuted some of his fear into irritation. “There’s a war on out there, and it’s time for my troops to rotate back to the front. What do you want?”

  The Archon smiled cruelly as she seated herself on the tall throne. Above and behind her, the two Griffin BattleMechs belonging to her Household Guard seemed to stare down at Frederick like executioners. “What do I want, Frederick?” She leaned forward. “If I had my way, I’d have your head on a platter!”

  Frederick drew back a step. “What are you talking about?”

  Katrina waved his question aside. “You moron! It’s bad enough that you plot little treasons with Aldo Lestrade, but now you actively join him in this latest of his plots! Until now, I’d always assumed the attempts on my life were the work of Lestrade, and Lestrade alone.” She turned to Ryan. “Now he brings me a holodisk you sent to Alessandro demanding his support in the situation resulting from my downfall. How could you have been so blatantly stupid?”

  Frederick’s mouth dropped open. “Aldo has tried to have you killed? I knew there had been attempts, but I assumed they were made by dissidents, by Heimdall…or by House Kurita. I…”

  The pained look of betrayal in his eyes touched something in Katrina. Frederick has always been hostile and malicious, but I’ve overlooked many things because of his loyalty to the Commonwealth and his general lack of imagination. Am I wrong in supposing he was desperate enough to sanction this latest attempt?

  “Frederick, two months ago, assassins nearly murdered me and Simon Johnson. If not for a member of Heimdall, you’d be sitting in my place now. Are you telling me this was not the incident you hinted at in the holodisk sent to Alessandro?”

  All color had drained from Frederick’s face, but fire still burned his eyes. He glanced hatefully at Ryan, then looked at the Archon. “I swear on my honor as an officer in the LCAF that I knew nothing of any attempt to kill you. Depose you, yes. I’ve wanted to do that ever since you usurped the throne. But I wanted to defeat you in a political battle, not destroy you like a thief fighting over the swag from a job.”

  Katrina’s nostrils flared. “Your honor as an officer in the LCAF means nothing, Frederick, but the desire for an open battle is you, through and through.” The Archon leaned back in her throne, resting her elbows on the arms and steepling her fingers. “What incident did you refer to in your message?”

  Frederick stiffened as though prepared to deny her that information, but Katrina never gave him the chance to offer honor as a defense. “Face it, Frederick. Aldo Lestrade betrayed you a hundred times over. I know he is behind this—he’s pulled your strings like a master puppeteer. What did he use to seduce you into cooperating this time?”

  Frederick’s resolve broke. “He planned, after any hostile action by the Combine forces, to declare the Isle of Skye independent. He would restrict trade, cutting you off from the Federated Suns.” His eyes full of a plea for understanding, Frederick looked up at Katrina. “I would negotiate a settlement between the two of you. I would be seen as a leader and—” he glared at Ryan, “—with Alessandro’s support, I could force you to abdicate. Or at least share power with me in some coalition.”

  Katrina glanced at Ryan, despising the smirk on the young man’s lips. Just as he told me, though that plan was obvious from the political situation and the holodisk. Obvious enough for even Frederick to plumb its depths and decide it might work. Katrina felt a cold chill. Yes, with the people’s irritation over the war’s stalemate and my daughter’s marriage, it probably would have worked.

  She nodded solemnly. “The Kell Hounds defeating the Third Dieron Regulars put a crimp in that plan. Lestrade could not claim I had neglected him when the Hounds defended his world for him, could he?”

  Frederick stared down at his boots. “No. He said the plan had just been delayed, not permanently stopped.” His head came up. “You’ve seen that he’s kept the Isle of Skye defended as lightly as possible, with the exception of Summer. He’s still afraid of a raid there, though I think he fears the Kell Hounds more than he does the Dragon.”

  Katrina let her hands drop to her lap. “It is well that he does. The Kell Hounds have business of their own to attend to, and after that, I am not certain I can restrain them from taking Summer apart.” Indeed, if Yorinaga Kurita had not sent Morgan a message setting up a battle on the desert world of Nusakan IV in two months, Morgan might have already killed Lestrade.

  Frederick Steiner tore the epaulets from his uniform and tossed them at the Archon’s feet. “I resign from the Tenth Lyran Guards. They’re the best troops an officer could ever hope to l
ead.” He looked into Katrina’s eyes, letting the barest hint of a smile lift the corners of his mouth. “But you know that. You commanded them before becoming Archon. They’re still the best. I will not have their reputation soiled when you try me for treason and have me executed.”

  Katrina looked down at the shoulder-boards, momentarily entranced by the light flashing from the silver double diamonds on each one. I wish it were that simple. She nudged them back in his direction with the toe of her boot.

  “Believe me, Frederick, I wish I could accept your offer. If I had a choice, I’d have you shot and Aldo Lestrade hung from the highest Triad tower. As it is, that’s impossible. I cannot have you killed, nor can I accept your resignation.”

  Frederick’s white brows met as a puzzlement made deep wrinkles in his forehead. “I do not understand.”

  Katrina moistened her lips with the tip of her tongue. “In leaving the Isle of Skye open for attack, Aldo Lestrade has made his holding very attractive to the Draconis Combine. True, they did try a raid that would give him the excuse to pull out, but that plan came from Luthien. A new, more deadly plan has been drafted by Theodore Kurita. In short, he plans a major offensive based from the world of Dromini VI. The offensive is to begin in late October, and will stab deep into the Isle of Skye.”

  Frederick closed his eyes as he summoned up a mental map of the region. “That puts a half-dozen worlds in jeopardy, and makes many more vulnerable to second- and third-stage jumps.” His eyes opened. “With our forces strung out through the Rasalhague District and fighting along the Marik border, we don’t have time to get troops and supplies to Skye to stop their offensive.”

  “Not unless we want to let our front collapse like a house of cards,” Katrina said. “I could pump troops into the Skye worlds, but they’d not have the needed support or supplies. Given another month, I could do it, and another month is what I mean to have.”

  She leaned forward, all Archon-to-subject protocol abandoned. Speaking as one MechWarrior to another, she quickly outlined her only hope. “Theodore Kurita has already hit Dromini VI with commando attacks that have eliminated the world’s militia. He’ll begin filtering troops and supplies onto the planet over the next two months. Then, late in November, he’ll head out. The JumpShips are using a pirate point less than three hundred thousand kilometers from the world to keep the evidence of activity to a minimum. The only hope we have of delaying the invasion is to prevent sufficient troops and supplies from being gathered. I need to hit Theodore’s supply base.”

  Frederick nodded slowly, rubbing his hand over his chin. “An elite unit could do it. We could destroy the stores, but it would be a suicide mission.”

  Katrina met his unwavering stare. “Dying a hero is a much better way to be remembered in history than being executed for treason.”

  Frederick raised himself up to full height. “Promise me that a JumpShip will wait for any of my men who do somehow survive to make it back.” He narrowed his eyes as she hesitated. “You need not fear, Katrina, that I will be among them.”

  The Archon stood and offered him her hand. “It shall be done.”

  Frederick kissed her hand, then took one last look at the throne room he had yearned to call his own. He bowed and turned to leave, but stopped to stare coldly at the other Steiner in the room. “What you have seen here, Ryan Steiner, is what happens when you lose to a gracious victor. When your time comes, I hope that your defeat will serve the Commonwealth as well as mine.”

  BOOK IV: HONOR

  “It is better to deserve honors and not have them than to have them and not deserve them.”

  Mark Twain

  Chapter 35

  NEW AVALON

  CRUCIS MARCH

  FEDERATED SUNS

  15 AUGUST 3029

  The frustrated look on Riva Allard’s face melted as Kym Sorenson entered the office. “Kym, can I use you as a character reference?”

  Kym set a small stack of disks down on her desk, then turned to look suspiciously at Riva. “What do you need references for?” She grinned and dropped her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “You’re not going to take that job with Biotron Industries, are you?”

  Riva glanced at the data terminal in her desk. “No, no. Nothing like that. I just need to get an increase in my security clearance to be able to look at that Star League library memory core. The MIIO investigators have to hear it from you that I’m not going to sell what I learn to the Draconis Combine.”

  Kym raised an eyebrow. “You tend to eat lots of sushi when we order lunch out…”

  Riva’s shoulders slumped. “Don’t even joke about that, Kym. This Star League library data is the hottest find in the past two hundred years. A mercenary company, the Gray Death Legion, apparently recovered it from an old Star League depot in the Free Worlds League two years ago. Copies have been slowly working their way through the Successor States and finally made it here to the NAIS.”

  Kym shrugged nonchalantly. “Probably just a romantic literature storehouse.”

  Riva shook her head resolutely. “That’s not the word down in Advanced Research. They think it’s chock-full of technical data on scientific discoveries and experiments. I’ve even heard a rumor that it has seven hundred and fifty megabytes on Kearny-Fuchida drive theory alone.” She smiled hopefully. “It could have all sorts of stuff that would help with my doctoral thesis.”

  “Hmmm, that’s interesting.” Kym pulled out her chair to sit down at her desk. “Why do you need to fill out a security report form? I mean, with your father being the minister, can’t he just clear you?”

  Riva looked down. “Look, with Justin going over to the Maskirovka, I’m considered a worse risk than a Kurita prisoner of war.” She tugged the sleeves of her blue sweater up to her elbows, then held her hands out, wrists next to each other. “Maybe I should just have them cuff me and cart me off to detention.”

  “Can’t let that happen,” Kim said mock-seriously. “Prison grays are just not your color.” She laughed as Riva smiled. “Sure, put me down. Have you asked Dr. Banzai for a recommendation yet?”

  Riva hesitated. “I was going to wait…”

  “For what? He’s agreed to teach next trimester, and he’s expressed interest in your thesis.” Kym looked mystified. “There are times I don’t understand you at all, Riva Allard. Dr. Banzai has been nothing but helpful and encouraging with your studies, yet you shy away from him as though he’s got the plague.”

  Riva stood and came around to the side of Kym’s desk. Leaning heavily against the wall, she crossed her arms. “I find him scary, Kym. He’s so brilliant he makes me feel like a child again. And he knows all sorts of diverse things. I never know when he’s going to offer a non sequitur that will throw me for a loop.”

  Kym sat back in her chair, light flashing from the silver neckpiece she wore. “For example?”

  Riva shrugged, wracking her brain for an example, then a spark flashed through her eyes. “Well, he was in a coma when they brought him from Northwind to the NAIS. I assisted with the myomer quadriceps replacement on his left thigh. When he came out of it, I went up to see him. He took one look at my nametag and said, ‘Don’t worry about your brother Dan. He’s in a good machine.’”

  “What!” Kym’s blue eyes grew wide with amazement. “He told you about your brother’s ’Mech?”

  Riva nodded in exasperation. “His mind works so fast. He placed me as Quintus Allard’s daughter, knew Quintus had a son Dan who was with the Kell Hounds, and he knew Morgan Kell had given my brother a Wolfhound.” Riva opened her hands and shrugged. “That’s the simplest of his deductive chains, and the only one I understand fully. Banzai has done everything, from fighting in ’Mechs to helping heal those who’ve been hurt by the wars. He’s just a bit scary.”

  Kym nodded thoughtfully. “I know how you feel.” She smiled weakly as she remembered. “I recall Morgan watching news reports about the war and predicting how things would work out in any particular battle. At firs
t, I thought he already knew the outcome, and accused him of tricking me. He denied it and took me by the hand to his computer. He quickly ran up a simulation of the battle in question and showed how it would go. At the same time, he noted what variations he would have thrown at the Liao commanders. Whenever the computer ran his variants, the battle always turned out worse for Liao than it did in real life.”

  Riva reached out and squeezed Kym’s shoulder. “Have you heard from him since he left?”

  Kym’s hand strayed to the neckpiece. “Yes and no.” She forced herself to smile bravely. “Morgan told me he’d be running under complete silence for this mission, so no news is good news. On th e other hand, he had this neckpiece delivered to me yesterday. It’s the ceremonial gorget he wore at the Prince’s wedding.”

  Riva kept a reassuring smile on her lips as her mind raced. Morgan must be mixed up in whatever has my father worried. Morgan leaves the morning after my father gets as jumpy as a cat at the dog pound. Something big is going on. I know it. She glanced out the window toward the darkening evening sky. I’m just glad it’s out there. The last thing I want to see is the war coming to New Avalon…

  Chapter 36

  COMSTAR FIRST CIRCUIT COMPOUND

  HILTON HEAD ISLAND

  NORTH AMERICA, TERRA

  19 AUGUST 3029

  ComStar Primus Julian Tiepolo half-closed his eyes as Precentor Myndo Waterly stepped to the center of the circle. She planted her feet defiantly in the middle of the gold ComStar insignia worked into the floor. The wood-paneled chamber’s recessed lights flashed from her long, golden hair and burned highlights into her scarlet robe. The look in her dark eyes pierced his heart like a dagger.

 

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