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Heirs of Empire fe-3

Page 15

by David Weber


  “Then what do you think he’s going to do with it?”

  “I have no theory at this time, unless, perhaps, he intends to use it as a threat to extort concessions. If that is the case, however, we are once more faced by the fact that he has had ample time to build the device and thus, one would anticipate, to make whatever demands he might present.”

  “Maybe Vlad has a point, then,” Colin mused. “Maybe they have hit a snag that’s kept them from building it at all.”

  “I would not depend upon that assumption,” Dahak cautioned. “I believe humans refer to the logic upon which it rests as ‘whistling in the dark.’ ”

  “Yeah,” Colin said morosely. “I know.”

  Chapter Fourteen

  The fist in his eye woke Sean MacIntyre.

  He twitched aside, one hand jerking up to the abused portion of his anatomy, even before he came fully awake. Damn, that hurt! If he hadn’t been bio-enhanced himself, the punch would have cost him the eye.

  He wiggled further over on his side of the bed and rose on one elbow, still nursing his wound, as Sandy lashed through another contortion. That one, he judged, could have done serious damage if he hadn’t gotten out of the way. She muttered something even enhanced hearing couldn’t quite decipher, and he sat further up, wondering if he should wake her.

  They’d all had problems dealing with the reality of Imperial Terra’s loss. Just being alive when all those others were dead was bad enough, but their conviction that Terra had been destroyed in an attempt to kill them made it worse, as if it were somehow their fault. Logic said otherwise, but logic was a frail shield against psyches determined to punish them for surviving.

  Sandy twisted in her nightmare, fighting the sheet as if it had become an enveloping monster, and it ripped with a sound of tearing canvas. Her breasts winked at him, and he chastised himself as he felt a stir of arousal.

  This was hardly the time for that! He wished—again—that even one of them had been interested in a psych career. Unfortunately, they hadn’t, and now that they needed a professional, they were on their own. The first weeks had been especially rough, until Harriet insisted they all had to face it. She didn’t know any more about running a therapy session than Sean did, but her instincts seemed good, and they’d drawn tremendous strength from one another once they’d admitted their shared survival filled them with shame.

  Sandy twisted yet again, her sounds louder and more distressed. She was the most cheerful of them all when she was awake; in sleep, the rationality which fended off guilt deserted her and, perversely, made her the most vulnerable member of their tiny crew. Her nightmares had become blessedly less frequent, yet their severity remained, and he made up his mind.

  He leaned over her, stroking her face and whispering her name. For a moment she tried to jerk away, but then his quiet voice penetrated her dreams, and her brown eyes fluttered open, drugged with sleep and shadowed with horror.

  “Hi,” he murmured, and she caught his hand, holding it and nestling her cheek into his palm. Fear flowed out of her face, and she smiled.

  “Was I at it again?”

  “Oh, maybe a little,” he lied, and her smile turned puckish.

  “Only ‘a little,’ huh? Then why’s your eye swollen?” The tattered sheet fell about her waist as she sat up and reached out gently, and he winced. “Oh, my! You’re going to have a black eye, Sean.”

  “Don’t worry about it. Besides—” he treated her to his best leer “—the others’ll just think you were maddened with passion.”

  His heart warmed at the gurgle of laughter which answered his sally, and she shook her head at him, still exploring his injury with tender fingers.

  “You’re an idiot, Sean MacIntyre, but I love you anyway.”

  “Uf course you do, Fraulein! You cannot help yourzelf!”

  “Oh, you creep!” Her caressing hand darted to his nose and twisted, and he yelped in anguish and grabbed her wrists, pinning her down—not without difficulty. He was sixty centimeters taller, but she wiggled like a lithe, naked eel until a final shrewd twist toppled him from the bed. He sat up on the synthetic decksole, then stood, rubbing his posterior with an aggrieved air while she laughed at him, the last of her nightmare banished.

  “Jeez, you play rough! I’m gonna take my marbles and go home.”

  “Now there’s an empty threat! You can’t even find your marbles.”

  “Hmph!” He took a step towards the bed, and her fingers curved into talons. Her eyes glinted, and he stopped dead. “Uh, truce?” he suggested.

  “No way. I demand complete and unconditional surrender.”

  “But it’s my bed, too,” he said plaintively.

  “Possession is nine points of the law. Give?”

  “What’ll you do with me if I do?”

  “Something horrible and disgustingly debauched.”

  “Well, in that case—!” He hopped onto the bed and raised his hands.

  * * *

  Brashan looked up from the executive officer’s station and waved without disconnecting his feed from the console as the others stepped through the command deck hatch. With Engineering slaved to the bridge, one person could stand watch under normal conditions, though it would have taken at least four of them to fight the ship effectively.

  Sean dropped into the captain’s couch. Harriet and Tamman took the astrogator’s and engineer’s stations, and Sandy flopped down at Tactical. She looked into the display at the star burning ever larger before them, and the others’ eyes followed hers.

  Their weary voyage was drawing to an end. Or, at least, to a possible end. They didn’t talk a great deal about what they’d do if it turned out that blazing star had no reclaimable hardware, but so far they’d detected no habitable world which might have provided it.

  Sean glanced at the others from the corner of an eye. In many ways, they’d made out far better than he’d hoped. It helped that they were all friends, but being trapped so long in so small a universe with anyone made for problems. There’d been the occasional disagreement—even the odd furious argument—but Harriet’s basic good sense, with a powerful assist from Brashan, had held them together. Solitude didn’t really bother Narhani much, and Brashan had spent enough time with humans—especially these humans—to understand their more mercurial moods. He’d poured several barrels of oil on various troubled waters in the past twenty months, and, Sean thought, it helped that he still regarded sex primarily as a subject for intellectual curiosity.

  His attention moved to Tamman and Harriet. Despite Israel’s size, she was intended for deployment from her mother ship or a planet, not interstellar voyaging, but at least she was designed for a nominal crew of thirty. That gave them enough room to find privacy, and the humans had fallen into couples without much fuss or bother. For him and Sandy, he knew, the pairing would be permanent even if—when!—they got home, but he didn’t think it was for Harry and Tamman. Neither of them seemed particularly inclined to settle down, though they obviously enjoyed one another’s company … greatly.

  He grinned and inserted his own feed into the captain’s console for a systems update. As usual, Israel was functioning perfectly. She really was an incredible piece of engineering, and he’d had an unusual amount of time to learn to appreciate her design and capabilities. They’d spent endless hours running tactical exercises, as much for a way to keep occupied as anything else, and he’d discovered a few things he’d never imagined she could do.

  Still, it was Sandy who’d unearthed the real treasure in Israel’s computers. Her original captain had been a movie freak—not for HD or even pre-Imperial tri-vid, but for old-fashioned, flat-image movies, the kind they’d put on film. There were hundreds of them in the ship’s memory, and Sandy had tinkered up an imaging program to convert them to holo via the command bridge display. They’d worked their way through the entire library, and some of them had been surprisingly good. Sean’s personal favorite was The Quest for the Holy Grail by someone called Monty P
ython, but the ones they’d gotten the most laughs out of were the old science fiction flicks. Brashan was especially fascinated by something called Forbidden Planet, but they’d all become addicted. By now, their normal conversation was heavily laced with bits of dialogue none of their Academy friends would even begin to have understood.

  He withdrew from the console, maintaining only a tenuous link as he tucked his hands behind his head and crossed his ankles.

  “Behold the noble captain, bending his full attention upon his duties!” Sandy remarked. He stuck out his tongue, then looked at Harriet.

  “Looks like our original position estimates were on the money, Harry. I make it about another two and a half days.”

  “Just about,” she agreed, an edge of anticipation sharpening her voice. “Anything more on system bodies, Brash?”

  “Indeed,” the Narhani said calmly. “The range is still well beyond active scanner range, but passive instrumentation continues to pick up additional details. In particular—” he gave his friends a curled-lip Narhani grin “—I have detected a third planet on this side of the star.”

  Something in his tone brought Sean up on an elbow. The others were staring at him just as hard, and Brashan nodded.

  “It would appear,” he said, “to have a mean orbital radius of approximately seventeen light-minutes—well within the liquid water zone.”

  “Hey, that’s great!” Sean exclaimed. “That ups the odds a bunch. If there used to be people here, we may find something we can use after all!”

  “So we may.” Brashan’s voice was elaborately calm, even for him; so calm Sean looked at him in quick suspicion. “In fact,” the Narhani went on, “spectroscopic analysis confirms an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere, as well.”

  Sean’s jaw dropped. The bio-weapon had killed everything on any planet it touched, and when all life died, a planet soon ceased to be habitable, for it was the presence of life which created the conditions that allowed life to exist. Birhat was life-bearing only because the zoo habitats had cracked before her atmosphere had time to degrade completely, and Chamhar had survived only because no one had lived there, anyway. Earth, never having been claimed by the Fourth Empire, was a special case.

  But if this planet had breathable air, then perhaps it hadn’t been hit by the bio-weapon at all! And if they could get word of their find home again, humanity had yet a third world onto which it might expand anew.

  Then his spirits plunged. If the planet hadn’t been contaminated, it probably hadn’t had any people, either. Which, in turn, meant no chance at all of finding Imperial hardware they could use to cobble up a hypercom.

  “Well,” he said more slowly, “that is interesting. Anything else?”

  “No, but we are still almost sixty-two light-hours from the star,” Brashan pointed out. “With Israel’s instrumentation, we can detect nothing smaller than a planetoid at much above ten light-hours unless it has an active emissions signature.”

  “In which case,” Sean murmured, “we might begin seeing something in the next eighty hours. Assuming, of course, that there’s anything to see.”

  * * *

  The talmahk were returning early this spring.

  High Priest Vroxhan stood by the window, listening to the Inner Circle with half an ear while he watched jeweled wings flash high above the Sanctum. One gleaming flock broke away to dart towards the time-worn stumps of the Old One’s dwellings, and he wondered yet again why such lovely creatures should haunt places so wrapped in damnation. Yet they also nested in the Temple’s spires and were not struck dead, so it must not taint them. Of course, unlike men they had no souls. Perhaps that protected them from the demons.

  Corada’s high-pitched voice changed behind him, and he roused to pay more heed as the Lord of the Exchequer came to the conclusion of his report.

  “ … and so Mother Church’s coffers have once more been filled by God’s grace and to His glory, although Malagor remains behind time in its tithing.”

  Vroxhan smiled at the last, caustic phrase. Malagor was Corada’s pet hate, the recalcitrant princedom whose people had always been least amenable to Church decrees. No doubt Corada put it down to the influence of the Valley of the Damned, but Vroxhan suspected the truth was far simpler than demonic intervention. Malagor had never forgotten that she and Aris had dueled for supremacy for centuries, and Malagor’s mines and water-powered foundries made her iron-master to the world, a princedom of stubborn artisans and craftsmen who all too often chafed under the Church’s Tenets. That chafing had been the decisive factor in starting the Schismatic Wars, but The Temple used those wars to put an end to such foolishness forever. Today Prince Uroba of Malagor was The Temple’s vassal, as (if truth be known) were all the secular lords, for Mother Church made and broke the princes of all Pardal at will.

  “Frenaur?” Vroxhan raised his eyes to the Bishop of Malagor. “Does your unruly flock truly mean to distress Corada this year?”

  “Not, I think, any more than usual.” Frenaur’s eyes twinkled as Corada’s jowls turned mottled red. “The tithe is late, true, but the winter has been bad, and the Guard reports the wagons have passed the border.”

  “Then I think we can wait a bit before resorting to the Interdict,” Vroxhan murmured. It was unkind, and not truly befitting to his office, but Corada was such an old gas-bag he couldn’t help himself. The fussy bishop’s bald pate flushed dark against its fringe of white hair as he sniffed and gathered his parchments more energetically than necessary, and Vroxhan felt a pang of remorse. Not a very painful one, but a pang.

  He turned back to the window, hands folded in the sleeves of his blue robe with the golden starburst upon its breast. A company of Guard musketeers marched across his view, headed for the drill field with voices raised in a marching hymn behind their branahlk-mounted captain, and he admired the glitter of their silvered breastplates. Polished musket barrels shone in the sunlight, and scarlet cloaks swirled in the spring breeze. As a second son, Vroxhan had almost entered the Guard instead of the priesthood. Sometimes he wondered rather wistfully if he might not have enjoyed the martial life more—certainly it was less fringed with responsibilities! But the Guard’s power was less than that of the Primate of all Pardal, too, he reminded himself, and sat in his carven chair, returning his attention to the council room.

  “Very well, Brothers, let us turn to other matters. Fire Test is almost upon us, Father Rechau—is the Sanctum prepared?”

  Faces which had been amused by Corada’s fussiness sobered as they turned towards Rechau. A mere under-priest might be thought the lowest of the low in this chamber of prelates, but appearances could be deceiving, for Rechau was Sexton of the Sanctum, a post which by long tradition was always held by an under-priest with the archaic title of “Chaplain.”

  “It is, Holiness,” Rechau replied. “The Servitors spent rather longer in their ministrations this winter—they appeared soon after Plot Test and labored for two full five-days. Such a ministration inspired my acolytes to even greater efforts, and the sanctification was completed three days ago.”

  “Excellent, Father!” Vroxhan said sincerely. They had three five-days yet before Fire Test, and it was a good start to the liturgical year to be so beforehand with their preparations. Rechau bent his head in acknowledgment of the praise, and Vroxhan turned his eyes to Bishop Surmal.

  “In that case, Surmal, perhaps you might report on the new catechism.”

  “Of course.” Surmal frowned slightly and looked around the polished table. “Brothers, the Office of Inquisition recognizes the pressure brought upon the Office of Instruction by the merchant guilds and ‘progressives,’ yet I fear we have grave reservations about certain portions of this new catechism. In particular, we note the lessened emphasis upon the demonic—”

  The council chamber doors flew open so violently both leaves crashed back against the walls. Vroxhan surged to his feet at the intrusion, eyes flashing, but his thunderous reprimand died unspoken as a white-faced under-p
riest threw himself to his knees before him and trembling hands raised the hem of his robe to ashen lips in obeisance.

  “H-holiness!” the under-priest blurted even before he released Vroxhan’s robe. “Holiness, you must come! Come quickly!”

  “Why?” Vroxhan’s voice was sharp. “What is so important you disturb the Inner Circle?!”

  “Holiness, I—” The under-priest swallowed, then bent to the floor and spoke hoarsely. “The Voice has spoken, Holiness!”

  Vroxhan fell back, and his hand rose to sign the starburst. Never in mortal memory had the Voice spoken save on the most sacred holy days! A harsh, collective gasp went up from the seated Circle, and when he darted a quick glance at them he actually saw the blood draining from their faces.

  “What did the Voice say?” His question came quick and angry with his own fear.

  “The Voice spoke Warning, Holiness,” the under-priest whispered.

  “God protect us!” someone cried, and a babble of terror rose from the Church’s princes. An icy hand clutched at Vroxhan’s heart, and he drew a deep breath and clutched his pectoral starburst. For one, dreadful instant he closed his eyes in fear, but he was Prelate of Pardal, and he shook himself violently and whirled upon the panicky prelates.

  “Brothers—Brothers! This is not seemly! Calm yourselves!” His deep, powerful voice, trained by a lifetime of liturgical chants, lashed out across the confusion, stinging them into brief silence, and he hurried on.

  “The Warning has come upon us, possibly even the Trial, but God will surely protect us as He promised to our fathers’ fathers these many ages past! Did He not give us the Voice against this very peril? There will be panic enough among our flock—let us not begin that panic in the Inner Circle!”

  The bishops stared at him, and he saw reason returning to many faces. To his surprise, old Corada’s was one of them. Bishop Parta’s was not.

 

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