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Sky Hunter

Page 19

by Chris Reher


  “Lieutenant?” Her squad’s ground mechanic had come over to where she stood.

  “Check the port lifts, Nik. Wagging all over the place.”

  “Where are you going?”

  Nova raised a hand to signal an urgency of a personal nature and dashed off into the direction of the deck’s hygiene station. She passed it and, still berating herself for this departure from protocol, entered a lift and dropped to the shipping level.

  It was quiet down here. No clanging of transport containers, no shouts, curses or laughter from the work crew. With the alert, the docks had likely been cleared of non-essential personnel and only the elevator hub would still be staffed. The security team assigned to patrol these passages was nowhere in sight. If she was right about them, today presented the opportunity to load up the cruiser moored to the locks. Perhaps they had even been aware of the impending Shri-Lan attack.

  But was that likely? Trakkas was a greedy opportunist but also a seasoned Air Command officer. Beryl and his group were crude and pitiless, but each considered himself as the embodiment of soldierhood. Perhaps that included smuggling and even murder but never treason. Any news of a rebel attack would not go unreported.

  Nova hurried to the end of the corridor and to the door leading to the bays. She slipped into the shipping bay and, instead of climbing the scaffold to the unfinished catwalk, she moved silently down the ladder and onto the floor. There was still not much to be heard but the steady hum of well-designed machinery. The relays feeding electric power down to the planet were green-lighted and the elevator itself was in motion.

  She heard voices to her left and slipped into a space between the orderly stacks of bins. Someone hurried past her. He came from the direction of the locks, a cylinder in his hands. She stepped forward again to see where he was going with it, whatever it was.

  Then she saw a pair of legs, clad in the cargo hands’ orange coveralls, splayed out on the floor. The rest of the body was bent around the edge of the companionway to the main entrance from the station. Beyond him lay someone else, this one unmistakably dead, the upper body crisscrossed with laser burns.

  Nova’s hand moved to her side only to realize that she was in her flight suit and, appropriately, her gun belt was still back in her cabin. She raised her arm to activate her com unit. “Security, Whiteside—”

  The barrel of a gun stabbed below her ear hard enough to bring her teeth down onto the tip of her tongue. A hand shot out to grasp her wrist before she could complete her call. Two people in civilian dress, one Bellac, the other Caspian, dragged her into the open space near the tether. Someone pulled her data sleeve off her forearm and searched her for additional devices.

  “Get rid of her,” someone nearby said. The voice belonged to a Centauri woman standing near the elevator monitoring station.

  “Stop!” another voice, this one much more familiar, rang out.

  Nova turned to see Djari rush toward them. He was not wearing the coveralls identifying him as ring crew and the gun at his thigh was also not standard issue.

  “Leave her to me,” he said. “I’ll take care of this.” He grasped her arm to pull her away from them.

  She twisted out of his grip. “What is this? What are you doing?”

  “The question is: what are you doing here? You’re supposed to be with your squad.”

  She looked around. “Is this part of what’s happening out there? The attack at the jumpsite? Djari, what is going on?”

  He glanced over to his companions. “You have to get out of here, Nova. I never meant for this to happen with you here. Please! There is still time.”

  “Time for what?” She was suddenly very alarmed by the fear and worry on his face. “I was just told that you’re with them. With the Shri-Lan. I can’t believe that!”

  He looked away. “You really had no idea? You never suspected?”

  “No! Gods, Djari, I trusted you!” She reconsidered. “Well, I thought maybe you were getting into the smuggling going on here with Beryl’s gang. But Shri-Lan? Those animals?”

  “Animals? It’s your people who are the animals on Bellac, Lieutenant. And that’s not being kind to animals. You have destroyed the peace of this planet.”

  “You wouldn’t even be on Bellac if not for the Union,” she said, not really interested in rebel rhetoric at this moment. She glanced at his gun.

  “You’d be dead before you can even touch that,” he said with a glance at the nearby rebels who, although out of earshot, were watching intently, weapons poised.

  “Why, Djari? Please just tell me.”

  “I told you why. You don’t belong here.”

  “You’re not a rebel. I think I know you better than that. You care too much. I’ve seen it.”

  “Don’t try that on me, Lieutenant,” he said. “Leave the head stuff to the non-coms. But if you have to know I’ll tell you that I used to have a family before Air Command came into the Rift. Blew away half the town looking for a rebel depot. My town.”

  She looked up into his tortured face as he remembered. “I’m so sorry, Djari…”

  “So I went to Shon Gat. Maybe to try to figure things out. Met Coria and some others and the things they said sounded right. Then you came and I thought maybe they were wrong.” His hand moved to the twisted scar along his cheek. “For a while, anyway. Then I learned more about your precious Air Command than I wanted to know.”

  She shook her head. “Doesn’t have to be like this,” she whispered.

  “It doesn’t?” he said angrily. “You were there! You held torn Bellac guts in your hands, making do without the tools only your people own. How can you still do this!”

  “Nearly time, Djari,” someone called.

  “Time for what?” Nova said to him.

  “Time to go.”

  She looked over to the Centauri at the elevator monitors. The climbers were controlled from the main command station on the admin level but this console dealt with emergencies. “What did you do? Is there going to be an attack on the station?”

  She shook his head. “We can’t even get close. But we can still take it down.”

  “What? How? This place is a fortress.” Would a scream from her alert anyone to their presence? The dampening around this area was designed to keep noise levels low. Were there even guards within earshot? Had they also been killed?

  “The elevator. The climber is stacked with explosive. The sort that’ll blow on impact, like your concussion charges. It’s been on its way here for three days. It only has to hit the shields hard enough to detonate. I don’t want you here when that happens.”

  “What?” Nova whispered. She gaped at him in terror and wonder. It would work. The shielding at the tether connection doubled as an emergency brake in case of climber failure. But had anyone considered an impact detonation at precisely that point? A large enough blast could disengage the elevator from the station, sending the ranch into space and, eventually, wrap large swaths of the tether around the planet at terminal velocity, like a whip across the landscape. “That’s why you went down to the surface the other day?”

  He nodded. “And to make sure it’s done right we’ve got a few bottles of the boom juice up here as well.” He gestured toward several clusters of unmarked cylinders piled up near the tether’s terminal. “It was easy to figure out what Beryl was up to and get onto his crew. People stupid enough to give me access to this place. And too stupid to realize that dope wasn’t the only thing coming up the tether.”

  Nova groaned. The bins allowed to pass through here without inspection by Beryl’s men would also have contained the explosive. Djari’s presence here, as a frequent receiver of goods from below, would be unremarkable as he removed his portion of the clandestine shipment.

  “And the general? Did you murder her? Did you kill my friends, Djari?”

  “No. That charge was set by one of the civilians that came up with her. I tried to get you out of there when I was told about it. I don’t want you hurt.”


  “Listen to yourself! You’d murder hundreds of people up here but you’d feel sorry about me? This is crazy! Please don’t do this, Djari. What about those on the surface? This will be terrible for them.”

  “And a lesson will be learned!” he snapped. He took a deep breath as he looked over to the air lock. “You can come with us, Nova. With me. You can leave all this. There is a better way.”

  “How can you even ask me this? This is wrong, Djari. You know it’s wrong!”

  “In the end it won’t be. There are always victims in a war. And this is a war, even if you choose to call us rebels.” He held his hand out to her. “Please come with me. I care about you. I want you with me. You matter.”

  “You lied to me,” she said. Where was security? Did no one realize that there was something going on down here? “I don’t matter at all.”

  “You’re right to feel… betrayed, I guess. Once all this started I didn’t want you to get involved with this. But I wanted you so bad. You’re so… I just wanted…” He ran his hand through his hair, looking for just a moment like the man who had caught her attention and her heart in the slums of Shon Gat. “I’m sorry it went this far. I should have stayed away from you.”

  “Djari, dammit,” one of his cohorts called. “We’re done. Let’s get out of here!”

  “You can still stop this,” she whispered urgently. “Shut down the elevator. Please!”

  “Not possible. The com link to the climber is down. The relay is recoded so the command center won’t notice. Nor will ground control. There are no brakes on that thing now. When it gets here it’s going to crash. We’ll take you away with us. I want you to live, Nova.”

  Before she could reply, something large and dark and flying through the air drew their attention. The object landed with a thud among them and they all saw that it was the body of a Centauri. Everyone looked up to see four Union soldiers along the catwalk above them, guns aimed.

  The rebels scattered at once, fleeing into the stacks where more soldiers awaited them. Laser fire lit up the air as the tracers found their targets. Nova spun and ran into a row of waiting shipping containers near the locks. She slipped through a gap too narrow for Djari and headed for the doors. The overhead lights had turned orange as the rest of the station was alerted to a security problem.

  She stumbled and fell over a prone body on the ground. Ignoring the sharp pain driving up from her knees, she groped for a gun among the dead man’s clothes but he was unarmed, a deck hand taken down by the rebels. She leaped to her feet when Djari came around the bins.

  He raised his gun. “Our pilot is dead. Come with me or we both die here today.”

  “I’m not going anywhere with you,” she said, furious. Behind them, someone screamed. Another voice shouted something. The flashes of light through the air grew more sporadic. It had taken only seconds for the soldiers to contain the untrained rebels.

  He gripped her arm and shoved her toward the air lock.

  Before she had a moment to consider a desperate lunge for his pistol, a hulking shape stepped between them. “That’s our pilot,” Captain Beryl said and twisted the weapon from Djari’s hand before sending him to the floor with a chop of his powerful fist.

  “They’ve cut the brakes on the climber,” Nova said quickly. “It’s going to blow when it gets here. I’m going to go after it.”

  Beryl handed her Djari’s pistol. “What? How?”

  Djari sat up, dazed by Beryl’s blow. He felt for his boot and withdrew another gun. Beryl spun around faster than she thought someone of his size could move when he saw her eyes widen in surprise. He grabbed the front of her flight suit and tossed her behind a bin as if she were weightless. The first blast from Djari’s pistol tore a hole into the container, the second one a hole into Captain Beryl’s throat. The giant grunted in surprise as he lurched away, coughed a spray of blood, and collapsed.

  Nova fled across the loading platform to the air lock. The interior door was open but when she turned to reach for the controls she saw Djari racing after her.

  “Stay away!” she shouted and aimed her gun.

  He raised his arms toward her and let his pistol fall to the ground. “Don’t leave me, Nova,” he made a shambling half-turn to look back toward the tether. “This is… I didn’t mean…”

  Several soldiers rushed toward them, looking primed to tear Djari’s limbs from his body in frenzied retribution for their fallen leader. She saw bared teeth and balled fists and now- holstered weapons on these men who had no intention of capturing Djari alive. Her jaw tightened until she heard her teeth grind. “Mitigate, Whiteside,” she said and fired. Djari stopped and she shot him again.

  She ran back to where he had fallen and knelt beside him. He turned his head briefly, squinting as if to fix her in his mind, and then he lay still.

  “Alert the station that the climber is out of control and packed with explosives,” she snapped at the soldiers. She saw Ancel beside the writhing shape of Captain Beryl, his hand clamped over the man’s neck. “Tell them to open a secure channel to the cruiser out there. I want the Air Boss, and whatever damn engineer is still alive to talk to me.”

  They gawked at her, considering her news. “On the fucking double!” she shouted, choking back tears of anger and regret and disappointment and all the other things that had no place in this moment.

  She did not wait to see if they complied. She fumbled her way through the air lock sequence and entered the private cruiser moored there. Although the ship was a standard model used for small hops and a minimal passenger load, she saw immediately that its modifications were powerful and likely to be reckoned with in a firefight. Its design was familiar and, like all planes of this class, equipped with a neural interface. She placed the headset over the contact module at her temples to connect with the plane. Closing her eyes, she prayed to some of the local gods, just in case, but the system recognized her flight grade and allowed her control.

  She released her grip on the air lock and punched out of the station’s gravity well. The ship maneuvered well to her tentative tests of its maneuverability and she soon felt it obey her mental commands without delay. “Tower, come in,” she said. “Lieutenant Whiteside aboard rebel cruiser. Don’t be shooting at me. Secure com link, please.”

  “Heard, Whiteside,” came the reply which soon lost all formality. “Fill us in, Lieutenant, because what we just heard from the basement makes no sense. The climber is fine.”

  “Negative. Please just get me an engineer. And some backup out here would be nice, too. They’ve rewired something and the brakes are offline. I’m going to try to knock the climber off the ribbon. As soon as someone tells me how to do that.”

  “Got it. Good news bad news. It’s past geosync so it won’t fall to Bellac if it disengages. But that means we can’t stop it.”

  “Heard, Tower. That’s kinda the part that worried me.” Nova steered the cruiser down along the tether to meet the arriving cargo pod. She closed her seat restraint when she spun down the ship’s gravity to avoid exerting its pull on the tether or the climber.

  “Lieutenant,” she heard another voice, this time the station commander.

  “Yes, Colonel,” she said. “How much time do we have?”

  “None. The climber will reach the station in minutes. The lower levels are sealed. We are evacuating whom we can but we just don’t have the pilots or the planes to get them all off.”

  “Respectfully, sir, this just isn’t the sort of information I need right now.”

  There was a babble of voices and she winced when all of it sounded panicked and none of it intelligible. She slowed when the ship’s instruments showed her the climber now approaching from below. She swung around it. This one had one open cargo platform stacked with the sort of supply containers she had seen on the station. It also carried one of the bulky, closed cargo pods designed to be transferred from the climber to a waiting ship, already processed and cleared by the Union base for forwarding shipm
ent. “I’m there,” she said. She rolled the cruiser and carefully matched the climber’s speed, letting the ship calculate distance and velocity to its smallest increment.

  “Lieut… Lieutenant?” a thin voice broke through her ear piece.

  “The only one here,” she said, focusing the ship’s cameras onto the climber’s grasp on the ridiculously thin tether.

  “This is Sol Josel, station engineer. I’ve confirmed that our systems were… were tampered with. I won’t be able to reset them quickly. That… that means… I mean.”

  “Look, Josel. Pull up your pants and tell me how to stop this thing. Can you do that? And I mean disengage it gently. Because if this thing blows it’ll probably blow the tether, too.” She looked over her displays. “I’ll need them to shut down the upper shield network along the tether or I won’t be able to get close.”

  “That… that would not be recommended. There is still some debris in orbit from the sabotage so it could possibly—”

  “Colonel?” she said. “Getting a little short here.”

  “Shields are coming down, Whiteside,” he replied. “Mr. Josel, if you please.”

  “What do I have that’ll work?” Nova asked, having already sent the cruiser’s specs up to the station.

  “There is a forward utility laser. You should be able to reach the upper clamp guard with it.”

  “Heard.” Nova directed the cruiser to hover to the left and engaged the laser’s tracer to seek out the spot she needed. “Is that it?”

  “No! That’s the belt guide! You don’t want to touch that.”

  “How about we pretend that I’m a pilot and you’re the engineer. You can see what I see. And you can see my tracer, right?”

  “Yes, to… to the left. That green hook-shape. If you can break that it’ll loosen the clamps sufficiently. It’ll take a lot of power.”

  “And then what’ll happen?”

 

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