The Berserker Throne
Page 15
“It is only that I must allocate resources and set priorities among the various commands that you have given.”
“Carry on as best you can. Right now I have yet another job for you. Setting up some communications.”
And presently, through a juggled communications relay that he hoped would be impossible to trace, the Prince, sitting in his new command post, managed to make contact with the base commander in her headquarters.
“I’m back at my post somewhat early. I keep my word, you see.”
“Harivarman, where are you?”
“In a safe place, for the time being, Commander. As you are.”
“What do you mean by that?”
“That you won’t be hurt, and that no more of your people will be hurt, as long as you follow my orders from now on. But you’re good at following orders, so you should survive.”
Realization grew on her only slowly. “You’ve done this, then. Somehow. Damn you.”
“It became necessary, Commander. You see, I really had no choice. I understand that necessity, a lack of choice, excuses anything.” It gave him great pleasure to throw some of her own words back at her.
It came as no surprise to find that the pleasure did not last.
Chapter 13
“I never got to go to a university,” Olga Khazar was saying, almost wistfully.
“I’m not sure you missed much,” Chen Shizuoka said. His feeling at the moment was that his own efforts to obtain an advanced education had never done him any particular good.
He was into practical learning now. He had discovered that if he set one chair on top of another and then leaned the tall double mass of them against the control of the door-intercom of the hotel room that was his prison cell, he could keep the intercom unit turned on steadily. Olga Khazar had again been left on duty outside, and she was willing to talk to him almost continuously. None of the other guards who had so far taken their turns watching over him in his various rooms of confinement had been anywhere near as communicative as Olga was, and she was not going to stay on guard forever. He wanted to benefit from her presence while he could. For Chen, having some kind of regular contact with the world was practically a necessity.
“Looks quiet out there in the hall now,” he commented. “Where’s everybody?” He had been locked up in this room for several hours now, and had already realized that at least some of his fellow recruits from the transport were being housed in nearby rooms; Chen had been able to hear some of their voices, half-familiar, passing his door from time to time.
Olga, trim-looking as usual in her uniform, mean-looking pistol on her hip to show that she was on guard duty, was leaning against the wall outside. Through the intercom Chen could see her little image complete from head to toe, along with a little bit of wall on either side. Her posture was unmilitary, he supposed, but right now probably no one could see her but himself. She said: “Right now I think they’re all out on the firing range.”
“Already? They’ve only been here a couple of days. I thought that kind of thing came later.”
“It’s three days now since your ship got here. We like to start people early with weapons. It’s a big part of being a Templar. What were you studying at the university?”
“I thought I was going to be a lawyer.”
“I wish I had a chance like that. I come from Torbas.”
“Aren’t there any lawyers on Torbas?” Chen knew it was perhaps the poorest of the Eight Worlds. Olga only shrugged and looked sad. Chen tried to think of what he might say to Olga to console her for being born in poverty and missing out on a university education, but at the moment he felt too envious of her to be able to come up with anything useful along that line.
He was the one who needed consolation. She, after all, was not locked up. Nor was she suspected of some insane crime that she would never have committed. Nor—no, he wasn’t paranoid—was she the victim of an involved and ominous plot.
Chen was still trying to think of the best thing to say next when conversation was interrupted by a distant blast, a faint vibration racing through the floor. In the little intercom screen, Olga’s image turned its head away, distracted by the noise.
“More remodeling,” Chen decided. “Clearing the slums.”
“I don’t know. It didn’t sound . . .”
“Didn’t sound what?”
“I don’t know.” Then she surprised him. “Wait, I’ll be right back.”
“Leaving your post? Oh, I’ll wait, all right.”
She was back in about five seconds, properly at her post again, standing up straight in a military way and using her communicator. “Post Seven here. Officer of the day?”
Olga repeated the call. Apparently she was having trouble getting anyone’s attention. She called again, several times, but Chen could tell that no one was answering.
She paused to look into the intercom at Chen. “I don’t think that was blasting,” she said, and then went back to trying the communicator on her wrist to hail her superiors. But still nobody responded.
Her manner remained calm, but something about it was alarming. It didn’t take much to alarm someone who was already locked up, Chen realized. He demanded: “What’s wrong? What is it, then?”
And even as he spoke, there were more faint blasting sounds, this time accompanied by faint distant screams.
“I think it’s berserkers,” said Olga Khazar, in a remote, taut voice. She had paused, holding the communicator a few centimeters from her lips. Her head was turned away from him again.
“Berserkers. Berserkers?” It couldn’t be, not really. Not here on the Templar Fortress. And yet, somehow, he already knew it was.
She didn’t answer, she was busy.
“You’ve got to let me out!”
Her dark eyes in the screen turned toward him. “I don’t have a key.”
“I don’t care! You’ve got to—”
For ten long seconds they argued back and forth.
Abruptly she gave in. In a way that scared him all the more, making the whole threat real. She said: “All right, all right. Stand back away from the door, way back. Better go into the latrine.”
Her image was drawing its sidearm.
Going all the way into the toilet was unnecessary, thought Chen. He didn’t want to lose a second getting out of the room once the door was open. He retreated into the middle of the room, looked about wildly, and dove behind a sofa just in time. There was a ripping, shattering noise, and he heard small pieces of something fly against the walls.
Olga’s voice, heard directly now, yelled at him: “Come on!”
Chen burst from concealment, and ran for the room’s door, which now hung open, amid aerial dust and the smell of something scorched. Fragments of metal and stone powder were strewn everywhere, and Olga Khazar had her firearm in hand. Chen moved forward, through more dust, out of the room. The corridor was empty except for Olga and himself, but in the distance he could hear people yelling.
“Thanks!”
She looked grim. “I figured it was part of my duty, to keep you alive. Come on, follow me.”
Chen followed. He thought he knew where they were headed, or the first stop at least. Yesterday he’d already been taken, under heavy guard, through one practice drill with the spacesuits, and he’d had to wear one on his little drive with Commander Blenheim. He now knew enough about the suits to use one in an emergency, which this certainly seemed to be. He followed Olga at a run down one corridor and then another to where their assigned emergency suits were stored.
Olga holstered her pistol, then took the belt and holster off and laid them down. She opened two of a row of lockers and dragged out two suits.
Chen said: “I could use a gun, too.”
“I don’t have one of those to give you. Get that suit on quick.” She knew the tone for giving orders, all right, even if she was at or near bottom rank herself. Probably, Chen thought, she had listened to enough of them to master the technique.
&
nbsp; He asked: “Where are we going now?”
She had her own spacesuit on already, over her regular uniform, and was clipping the holstered pistol on at her hip. “I’m going to rejoin my unit, and you’re coming with me.”
That was all right. The young lady sounded as if she knew what she was doing, and Chen was not about to try going anywhere alone just now if he could help it.
Suits on, helmets closed, they moved again. The suits were so light and well designed that they hardly slowed one down. As they trotted, Chen keeping up with Olga, there was more blasting, mixed with other sounds of weaponry, to their right and left. And now a large detonation ahead of them as well. Berserkers, streaking units in the sky, were intermittently visible. Fast as missiles, some of the assault units projected themselves in streaking curves that bent around the Radiant’s distorted core of space, picking up speed again as they neared their intended spots of impact or landing.
Gun in hand now, Olga slowed down, then stopped, then peered around a corner. “I don’t know how much farther in this direction we can go . . .” She moved to a different corner. “Let’s try down here instead. Some of my squad should be around . . .” She stopped abruptly.
Chen peered over her suited shoulder. Ahead, part of a wall had been demolished, along with something else. The mangled body looked unreal to Chen, a dummy in a Templar uniform.
But Olga recognized the dead young man, and called him by name. Chen could see that she was almost sick.
Chen, feeling only numb (this isn’t really happening), spoke to her—later he could never remember what words he had used—trying to comfort her somehow. Then he bent and picked up the fallen Templar’s weapon, a kind of short rifle. He thought it was what they called a carbine.
Looking as pale as her dark skin would allow, Olga muttered: “I’ll show you how to use that when we have a chance.”
“Better show me now.”
“Aim it. Get an approximate aim first. Look at your target through the scope sight, here, if you have the chance.” Her eyes were distracted, searching for terror and death around them, but her fingers moved surely on the carbine. She was repeating a lesson that she could have given in her sleep. “Here’s the locking sight control. Touch it when you’re looking at your target; the sight reads your eyeball and locks on. Your trigger is here, your safety here.”
Chen rose to his feet, the weapon cradled in his arms. He looked up. He saw an enemy machine passing swiftly in the distance. He tried to aim, knew he was mishandling the sight somehow, but blasted off some rounds anyway, without noticeable effect.
Olga struck his arm down violently. “Don’t draw them down on us, you damned fool! Don’t shoot unless you have to. I don’t know how much good a carbine’s going to do us.”
“All right.”
“We can’t get through to the base this way. We’ll try the docks. Come on.” They started in another direction.
They were now coming into a different part of the City from any that Chen had visited before; soon he would be hopelessly disoriented. But that worry dropped from his mind almost at once, replaced by something more immediate.
Looking back across a plaza, he started and then grabbed Olga by the arm. “One of them . . . one of th-them’s coming after us.”
At a distance of a couple of hundred meters it looked tall, and it was walking on three legs, a relatively slow-moving machine. Maybe it was a primitive type, but there was little comfort in the thought.
“Let’s move!” Olga ordered. It had been moving directly toward them, and there was no reason to doubt that it had seen them; no reason at all, except for the fact that it had not killed them yet. Maybe it was out of ammunition, and would have to get within reach to do that. . . .
They pounded around a few corners, and then on the edge of a plaza, behind a screen of masonry, they tried to hide from it.
A few seconds passed before the machine came into sight again, in the middle of an otherwise deserted street. It was approaching their location, but not directly, and it might not have spotted them yet.
Presently Chen heard the berserker calling his name, in the tones of a human voice, a voice he thought he could recognize. It boomed out loudly through the streets, uttering words in a world gone mad.
“Chen Shizuoka. Come with this machine and it will guide you to a place of safety. Chen Shizuoka, this is Prince Harivarman speaking. Come with this machine—”
Chen looked into the eyes of Olga, who was standing close beside him. The only answer he could see there was that she was as frightened as he was himself.
Chapter 14
Serving as defensive bunkers for the high command on the Radiant Fortress were chambers cut or built like other rooms out of the mass of stone, but hardened with thicknesses of special armor, and equipped with shielded communications conduits leading to what were considered key defensive points in various other sections of the Fortress. Commander Blenheim’s bunker was directly underneath her ordinary office—not her temporary one—and it had taken her two full minutes to reach the bunker after the attack started.
Grand Marshall Beraton had not visited the Radiant Fortress for well over a century, but he still remembered perfectly where the bunkers were. He and Captain Lergov were taking shelter in their own assigned hardened chamber within a minute after the commander had reached hers.
Before the grand marshall had gone underground, he had dutifully tried to find out what had happened to the crew of the Salutai ship on which he had arrived, but that information proved at least temporarily impossible to obtain. All around the docks was devastation, and at Lergov’s continuous urging the grand marshall soon came away. The bunkers, as Lergov kept repeating, would offer the best communication facilities, the best chance to try to get a line on what had happened to their troops.
Their bunker connected through a hardened, sealed passage with that of Commander Blenheim. They joined her presently, and listened with her while reports outlining the situation kept coming in.
There was no question that a real berserker attack was in progress, though where the machines could have come from was beyond anyone’s ability to guess. The automated outer defenses and alarms were not what they had been in the old days, but it was hardly possible that they had permitted a landing force to get by them without at least sounding the alarm. Another mystery was that although the enemy had seized a commanding position, they were not pressing their advantage.
That was fortunate. There were only a few hundred Templars on the Fortress, most of them a cadre preparing for the cadets’ school that was to have opened here in the near future. And here on the inner surface of the Fortress they had little, almost nothing, in the way of heavy weaponry with which to defend themselves. And what little the Templar base had of such armament had already been knocked out. More such ordnance, a lot more, was available out on the outer surface of the Fortress, and a little more at the interior firing range. But none of the strongpoints on the outer surface had been manned by humans for a long time, and as far as the commander could recall, no one at all had been at the interior firing range.
One bright spot in the situation, though it was of no immediate benefit to the now-besieged garrison of the base, was that one ship, a message courier that had been standing by to receive messages in one of the small outer docks, had managed to get away when the attack struck. At least the available evidence indicated that the courier had escaped successfully. Of course if there were spacegoing berserkers in the area, it would seem there must have been to effect a landing, then the courier’s fate was problematical at best.
Once inside the commander’s bunker, Captain Lergov retreated into the background, where he was presently joined by a civilian man as short and impassive as himself. This newcomer was introduced to Commander Blenheim as Mr. Abo, a cultural representative, whatever that was, from Prime Minister Roquelaure’s office. Captain Lergov in a few words to the commander explained who this man was, and that he had remained on the Salut
ai ship up until the attack.
Commander Blenheim, who had other things to think about, was not greatly interested. Neither was Grand Marshall Beraton, she could tell. He was hovering, acutely conscious of the fact that he was not really in command here, yet aching, as a veteran, as a grand marshall, to take over.
Well, she was a veteran too. There were her combat decorations on her jacket if he wanted to see them. The garment, taken off when she got into her spacesuit and combat gear, hung on the wall behind her now.
Sparing no time for discussion with her visitors, she was busy trying to stiffen the nerves of some of her junior officers when the call came in from Prince Harivarman.
His face, looking almost unruffled, appeared on the screen, and his voice was almost calm: “I’m back at my post somewhat early. I keep my word, you see.”
“Harivarman, where are you?”
“In a safe place, for the time being, Commander. As you are.”
Whatever she had been about to say to him was suddenly forgotten. Something in his face, his voice, made her catch her breath. “What do you mean by that?”
“That you won’t be hurt, and that no more of your people will be hurt, as long as you follow my orders from now on. But you’re good at following orders, so you should survive.”
Beraton and Lergov looked at each other. The commander sat back in her chair, realization growing on her slowly. She said to the image in the screen: “You’ve done this, then. Somehow. Damn you.”
“It became necessary, Commander. You see, I really had no choice.” Harivarman’s image paused; it seemed to be smiling. “I understand that necessity, a lack of choice, excuses anything.”
“You had better get here, to the base, if you can.”
“Oh no. No. You are coming to see me instead.”
“To see you! Where are you?”
He ignored the question. “I suppose you’re down in your bunker now. I want you to go up to the inner surface and get in one of your staff cars; you won’t be blasted. Come unarmed and alone; that’ll save time and argument at this end. I’ll give you directions, once I get a report from one of my lookouts that your staff car is under way.”