Rika Conqueror

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Rika Conqueror Page 19

by M. D. Cooper

Heather looked at Chase, their eyes meeting as the ship’s captain smiled. “Then they know about the vulnerability, just not exactly what it is.”

  “Damn,” Chase whispered. “If we can trigger the update, then we can still take out the fleet.”

  Potter said.

  Piper countered.

  “How?” Heather asked.

 

  “OK. Send the message,” Chase said to Heather. “Tell them to get to the datastore and secure it. If I were the Niets, I’d be off-lining that thing yesterday.”

  * * * * *

  Rika watched with impotent rage as the Niets erected a mobile frame around her, complete with powerful a-grav generators that continued to hold her suspended in mid-air when they switched off the ones hidden in the concourse.

  During the process, the Orion general prowled around her cage, an almost feral grin on his face. The Nietzschean emperor stood further back, watching with a dispassionate expression on his face.

  “She’ll be quite the prize,” Garza said as the cage lifted off the deck. “I’m looking forward to bringing her back—”

  “Nowhere,” the emperor cut Garza off. “You’ll not bring her anywhere. Rika is a prisoner of the Nietzschean empire.”

  “Captured by me,” Garza countered, turning to glare at Constantine.

  “I saw my guards shooting at her in my station,” the emperor replied. “Yes, you gave them orders without my authorization, but it’s a slight I’m willing to overlook. I’ll even share what we learn from our mech here, but you’re not going to whisk her off to Orion, only to dole out what you’ve acquired in dribs and drabs.”

  “You know,” Rika called out. “If you’re not sure what to do with me, you can just let me go. I wouldn’t want to cause a lover’s spat to flare up, here.”

  Garza tossed a sour look her way, then turned back to the emperor, the pair now staring silently at one another.

  Niki said.

 

 

  Rika asked.

 

  Rika nodded absently, still more worried that something had happened to Tangel, wondering what could possibly have knocked her out of communication. The whole idea behind quantum entanglement was that it worked anywhere in the universe. Tangel shouldn’t be able to go anywhere it wouldn’t connect.

  Niki said.

 

  Niki snorted.

  Rika said as she watched the bulkheads slide by.

 

 

  Niki laughed.

  Rika didn’t speak for a moment, considering her options, then said,

 

 

  The AI sent a languid wink into Rika’s mind.

 

 

  * * * * *

  Leslie crept up behind the Nietzschean solder and grabbed his head, giving it a sharp twist to the left, snapping his neck while also driving an EM spike into the base of his skull to ensure no alert was sent out.

  Jeremy whispered.

  Leslie replied.

  Annie said with a soft laugh.

  Leslie pulled the soldier’s body behind a crate and peered out into the corridor.

  Jeremy said.

 

  Annie sent a mental whistle.

  <‘This’?> Leslie asked as they crept down a corridor, now just a short distance from their destination.

 

 

  Jeremy laughed, and Leslie could hear a faint sound come from him.

  he apologized.

 

  Annie asked.

  Leslie paused at an intersection, waiting for two soldiers and a servitor pushing a lunch cart to pass by.

 

  The soldiers and servitor had moved past the intersection, and Leslie moved on.

  Jeremy’s tone was pensive.

  Leslie said.

  She pulled up short, not paying attention to the engineer’s response. Her drones had just made it to the bay where their ride off the Pinnacle awaited.

  It was surrounded by a squad of Niets.

  Her probe established a line-of-sight comm link with the shuttle, and relayed it back to her.

 

  The RR-4 sent back a strained laugh.

 

 

  Leslie breathed a sigh of relief. She wasn’t too worried about automated turrets; she could avoid them with ease…her charges were a different story. She considered her options, and was about to ask her engineers for ideas, when the bay doors began to close.r />
  Yig said.

 

 

  Leslie rolled her eyes.

 

  She signaled her two charges to keep following, and moved down the passage to the bay’s entrance. Once there, she ensured that there were no Niets nearby and slipped inside, crouching behind a stack of crates that were labeled as turret gimbals.

  Ironic, she noted. she said to the engineers.

  Annie drew the word out.

  Leslie asked.

 

  Leslie laughed.

  Jeremy volunteered.

  Leslie was tempted to cuff the man.

 

  She turned and looked at the entrance they’d just come through. Sure enough, a sign hanging next to it had instructions directing personnel to use the far panel if they wanted to get the bay doors open.

 

  he replied.

  Leslie was about to ask him why that was a prevalent concern, but then she realized he was more worried about Annie than himself.

 

  The two engineers signaled their affirmation and moved off. Leslie carefully climbed atop the stack of gimbals and unslung her rifle while passing an update to Yig.

  the corporal sent back in a mock-mournful tone.

  she replied.

  Yig said.

  Leslie asked as she saw Annie’s marker reach the crates of turrets, several of which had been conveniently opened.

  Leslie could imagine the grin Yig wore.

  She didn’t give a reply as she watched an access panel open on one of the uncrated turrets as Annie got to work. Checking Jeremy’s location, she saw that he was already on the far side of the dock at the panel.

  Satisfied that the engineers had reached their targets, Leslie began to wonder why the soldiers surrounding the shuttle weren’t yet doing anything other than staring at it.

  A moment later, a scuffle came from behind her, and she turned to see a group of Niets pushing a rather large plasma cutter on a grav pad into the bay.

  Well, shit.

  “OK, in there!” the squad sergeant standing at the bow of the shuttle called out. “Time’s up! Say hello to our little can opener.”

  Yig asked.

 

 

  Leslie replied.

 

  Jeremy added.

 

  Leslie carefully slid off her perch and followed the group of Nietzscheans pushing the plasma cutter. She eyed the thing, wondering if she could do something to impede it, when she saw that the cover of the emergency cut-off switch was flipped up.

  Well, well.

  Sidling in between the Nietzscheans, she reached out and toggled it off.

  The a-grav pad shut down and the whole thing hit the deck with a resounding thud, one of the Niets howling in pain.

  “My foot! What the fuck!”

  “Shit, the e-cut got flipped.”

  “Flip it back, you moron!”

  Two of the soldiers came over to investigate, and Leslie backed away, rifle held ready. If Annie’s explosion didn’t go off in time, shooting the plasma cutter in its mag-pod might just—

  An electron beam flashed in the far corner, burning a hole in the overhead before more beams slashed out, firing in every direction.

  Annie exclaimed.

  Leslie was about to admonish the woman to run, but Annie was already sprinting across the bay, her body faintly visible as the flow armor struggled to keep up with her rapid motion in the now-ionized bay air.

  Then an explosion rocked the deck, sending the wildly-firing turret soaring through the air to land on the plasma cutter, where it burned a hole in one of the Niets before exploding.

  At the same time, the bay doors began to open.

  Leslie said as she rushed to the docking strut, making it there a moment before the pair of engineers.

  She checked the bay, surprised to see that all of the soldiers, barring the two who were standing next to the shuttle’s sealed door, had run toward the plasma cutter and exploding crates.

  Leslie was about to signal Yig to open up, when the shuttle’s door did just that. Fiona and Cole leant out, both firing electron beams at the remaining two soldiers.

  the corporal called out as Leslie and her charges ran for the entrance.

  Leslie replied with a laugh.

  A second later, they were safely inside, and the craft was lifting off. Jeremy disabled his stealth systems, a cheek-splitting grin on his face as he reached out for Annie, finding her arm and clasping it firmly.

  “Stars…now that was fun!”

  A TRIP

  STELLAR DATE: 05.07.8950 (Adjusted Years)

  LOCATION: Capeton Command, Capeton

  REGION: Genevia System, Old Genevia, Nietzschean Empire

  Rika worked to keep herself calm as she was transferred to a large shuttle and then to a ship she assumed was the Belgara.

  Certainly the most ornate shuttle bay I’ve ever been in, she thought as her cage was pulled from the shuttle and set down on the deck. An entire platoon of Nietzschean soldiers surrounded it, though neither Garza or Constantine came to check on her.

  She felt a little put out that they were leaving her alone in the bay, but decided that it was preferable to having to look at either of them—or have them look at her like she was some sort of hunting prize.

  she asked Niki.

  the AI replied.

 

  Niki didn’t respond, and Rika watched as an engineer entered the bay and inspected the ca
ge before making some adjustments and chastising the soldiers for messing up one of the fields.

  Rika commented.

  Niki said, clearly distracted.

  she asked with a soft laugh.

 

  Rika whistled aloud. The sound was barely audible from within her helmet, but two of the guards turned to face her nonetheless.

  “Sorry guys, was just trying to entertain myself with a jaunty tune. Got any good vids or anything?”

  “Stupid Neeve,” one of the soldiers said, shaking his head before turning away.

  Rika said to Niki.

 

  Rika asked, feeling a sliver of panic rise in her.

 

  Rika barked a laugh, not caring that the Niets could hear her.

  Niki countered.

 

  Niki’s tone carried a note of sarcasm, and Rika wondered if the AI was angry.

  She decided not to dig into that, wanting to know more about the bomb Niki had dropped on her.

  Niki let out a burst of nervous laughter, which turned into a sigh.

  Rika paused, wondering why that was.

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