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The Mammoth Book of Best New Science Fiction 18

Page 88

by Gardner Dozois


  7

  This was what Barrow did during the war. With a platoon of picked soldiers, he would squeeze into his costume and pick up a gun that was always too heavy to carry more than a few steps, and after swallowing his fears as well as his common sense, he and his brethren would walk straight at the enemy, letting them shoot at will, waiting to reach a point where he could murder every idiot who hadn’t yet found reason enough to run away.

  This was the war all over again, and he hated it.

  His suit wasn’t as good as the one he wore in the war. Manmark’s students were experts at arranging the scales and fixing them to his clothes – a consequence of spending weeks and years assembling old bones – but there hadn’t been enough time to do a proper, permanent job. The scales were tilted in order to guide the bullets to one side or the other, but they weren’t always tilted enough. Every impact caused a bruise. One and then another blow to the chest seemed to break a rib or two, and Barrow found himself staggering now, the weight of his clothes and his own fatigue making him wish for an end to his suffering.

  That old platoon had been a mostly invincible bunch, but by the war’s end, those who hadn’t died from lucky shots and cannon fire were pretty much crazy with fear. Barrow was one of the few exceptions – a consequence of getting hit less often and doing a better job of killing those who wanted him dead.

  Through the narrow slits of his mask, he stared at the firing ports built into the armored car. Then he paused, knelt, and with a care enforced by hours of practice, he leveled his weapon and put a fat slug of lead into one man’s face.

  Two more rounds hit Barrow, square in the chest and on the scalp.

  He staggered, breathed hard enough to make himself lightheaded, and then aimed and fired again, killing no one but leaving someone behind the steel screaming in misery.

  The surviving men finally got smart. One would cry out, and all would fire together, in a single volley.

  Barrow was shoved back off his feet.

  Again, there was a shout followed by the blow of a great hammer.

  They would break every bone inside his bruised body if this continued. Barrow saw his doom and still could not make his body rise off the dusty earth. How had he come to this awful place? He couldn’t remember. He sat upright, waiting for the next misery to find him . . . but a new voice was shouting, followed by the odd, high-pitched report of a very different gun.

  The dirt before him rose up in a fountain and drifted away, and left lying between his legs was a single purple Claw of God.

  Damn, somebody had a dragon-buster gun.

  If he remained here, he would die. Reflexes and simple panic pushed Barrow up onto his feet, and on exhausted legs he ran, trying to count the seconds while he imagined somebody working with the breech of that huge, awful gun, inserting another expensive charge before sealing it up and aiming at him again.

  When Barrow thought it was time, he abruptly changed direction.

  The next claw screamed through the air, peeling off to the right.

  Three engineers were cowering on the dragon-eyed locomotive. Plainly, they hadn’t come here expecting to fight. Barrow pointed his rifle at each of their faces, just for a moment, and then they leaped down together and started running back toward town.

  The men inside the armored car fired again. But Barrow kept close to the tender, giving them no easy shots. A few steps short of them, he reached behind his back, removing a satchel that he had carried from the beginning, out of sight, and he unwrapped the fuse and laid it on the ground, shooting it at pointblank range to set it on fire. Then he bent low and threw the satchel with his free arm, skipping it under the car before he stepped back a little ways, letting the guards see him standing in front of them with barely a care.

  “There’s enough dynamite under you now to throw that car up high and break it into twenty pieces,” he promised. Then he added, “It’s a long fuse. But I wouldn’t spend too much time thinking before you decide to do what’s smart.”

  An instant later, the main door was unlocked and unlatched. Five men came tumbling out into the open, one of them bleeding from the shoulder and none of them armed.

  “Run,” Barrow advised.

  The mercenaries started chasing the train crew down the iron rails.

  The fuse continued to burn, reaching the canvas satchel and sputtering for a few moments before it died away.

  Barrow stared into the windowless car. The seven eggs were set inside seven oak crates, and he didn’t look at any of them. He was staring at the man whom he had shot through the face, his mind thinking one way about it, then another.

  A breech closed somewhere nearby, and a big hammer was cocked.

  Barrow turned too late, eyes focusing first on the cavernous barrel of the gun and then on the old foreign man who was fighting to hold it up. At this range, with any kind of dragon-round, death was certain. But Barrow’s sense of things told him that if he didn’t lift his own weapon, the man would hesitate. And another moment or two of life seemed like reason enough to do nothing.

  “I am a creature of foresight,” Zephyr remarked.

  “You’re smarter than me,” agreed Barrow.

  “Details,” the old man muttered, two fingers wrapped around the long brass trigger. “The world is built upon tiny but critical details.”

  Behind him stood one detail – a rather pretty detail, just as Barrow had recalled – and using a purse full of heavy gold, she struck Zephyr on the top of his skull, and the long barrel dropped as the gun discharged, and a Claw of God came spinning out, burying itself once again inside the ancient Earth.

  8

  Manmark had the freight wagon brought out of the draw, and he used a whip on the surviving camels, forcing them into a quick trot toward the motionless train. But there was a generous distance to be covered; open country afforded few safe places to hide. There was time to watch Barrow and the aboriginal girl with his binoculars, a little dose of worry nipping at him, and then Zephyr was awake again, sitting up and speaking at some length to the dragon hunter. All the while, Manmark’s students were happily discussing their golden futures and what each planned to do with his little share of the fame. They spoke about the dragons soon to be born, and they discussed what kinds of cages would be required to hold the great beasts, and what would be a fair price for the public to see them, and what kinds of science could be done with these travelers from another age.

  What was Zephyr saying to the dragon hunter?

  Of course, the crafty old trader was trying to top Manmark’s offers of wealth. And if he was successful? If Barrow abruptly changed sides . . .?

  “Look at that cloud,” one student mentioned.

  Somewhere to the south, hooves were slapping at the ground, lifting the dust into a wind that was blowing north, obscuring what was most probably a small herd of hard-running hyraxes.

  Manmark found the little pistol in his pocket, considering his options for a long moment.

  If it came to it, would he have the courage?

  Probably not, no. If these last days had taught Manmark anything, it was that he had no stomach for mayhem and murder.

  He put the pistol back out of sight and again used the binoculars, the jumpy images showing that Zephyr had fallen silent for now and Barrow was gazing off to the south and all of the talking was being done by the prostitute who stood between the two men, arms swirling in the air as she spoke on and on.

  The worry that he felt now was nebulous and terrible.

  Again, Manmark struck the big camels with his whip, and he screamed at everyone, telling them, “We need to hurry. Hurry!”

  But the wagon was massive and one camel short, and there was still a long, empty distance to cover. The curtain of dust was nearly upon the motionless train, and inside it were dozens, or perhaps hundreds of aboriginal men riding on the backs of the half-wild ponies that they preferred to ride – an entire tribe galloping toward the treasures that Manmark would never see again.
r />   9

  She spoke quietly, with force.

  “My favorite fable of all promises that the dragons will come again to this world. They will rise up out of the Earth to claim what has always been theirs, and only those men and women who help them will be spared. All the other people of the world will be fought and killed and eaten. Only the chosen few will be allowed to live as they wish, protected beneath the great wings of the reawakened gods.”

  Zephyr rubbed his sore head, trying to focus his mind. But really, no amount of cleverness or any promise of money would help now. Even with a splitting headache, he understood that inescapable lesson.

  Speaking to the man wearing dragon scales, she said, “Your ugly people came into my country and stole everything of worth. You gave us disease and drink, and you are murdering our herds. But now I intend to destroy everything you have built here, and my children will take back all the lands between the seas.”

  She was a clever, brutal girl, Zephyr decided. And she had done a masterful job of fooling everyone, including him.

  Barrow turned and stared at the oncoming riders. He had pulled off his armored mask, but he was still breathing hard, winded by his fight and terrified. He might defeat half a dozen mercenaries, if he was lucky. But not a nation of wild men and women armed with rifles and a communal rage.

  “You need me,” he muttered.

  The young woman didn’t respond. It was Zephyr who said, “What do you mean? Who needs you?”

  “She does,” Barrow announced. Then he pointed at the riders, adding, “If they want to help themselves, they should accept my help.”

  The woman laughed and asked, “Why?”

  “When I was a boy,” said Barrow, “I kept baby birds. And I learned that my little friends would take my food and my love best if I wore a sock on my hand, painting it to resemble their lost mothers and fathers.”

  The rumbling of hooves grew louder, nearer.

  “I’m a big man in this big costume,” he remarked. “This costume is bigger than anything any of your people can wear, I would think. And I’m brave enough to do stupid things. And you will have seven dragons to care for now . . . to feed and protect, and to train, if you can . . . and wouldn’t you like to take along somebody who’s willing to risk everything on a daily basis . . .?”

  Zephyr laughed quietly now.

  Clearly, this Barrow fellow was at least as surprising as the young woman, and maybe twice as bold.

  The woman stared at the man dressed as a dragon, a look of interest slowly breaking across her face.

  Zephyr had to laugh louder now.

  Dust drifted across the scene, thick and soft, muting the sound of their voices. And then the woman turned to her people, shouting to be heard.

  “I have dragons to give you!” she called out.

  “Eight, as it happens! Eight dragons to build a new world . . .”

  THE OCEAN OF THE BLIND

  James L. Cambias

  Here’s a short, sharp look at how unexamined cultural assumptions can sometimes come back to bite you in the ass – sometimes literally . . .

  James S. Cambias was a finalist for the 2001 James Tiptree Jr. Memorial Award for his short story “A Diagram of Rapture”; he was also a finalist for the 2001 John W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer. He’s become a frequent contributor to The Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction, and has also sold to Crossroads: Tales of the Southern Literary Fantastic and other markets. A native of New Orleans, he currently lives in Deerfield, Massachusetts, with his wife and children.

  BY THE END OF HIS second month at Hitode Station, Rob Freeman had already come up with eighty-five ways to murder Henri Kerlerec. That put him third in the station’s rankings – Josef Palashnik was first with one hundred forty-three, followed by Nadia Kyle with ninety-seven. In general, the number and sheer viciousness of the suggested methods was in proportion to the amount of time each spent with Henri.

  Josef, as the primary submarine pilot, had to spend upward of thirty hours each week in close quarters with Henri, so his list concentrated on swift and brutal techniques suitable for a small cockpit. Nadia shared lab space with Henri – which in practice meant she did her dissections in the kitchen or on the floor of her bedroom – and her techniques were mostly obscure poisons and subtle deathtraps.

  Rob’s specialty was underwater photography and drone operation. All through training he had been led to expect he would be filming the exotic life forms of Ilmatar, exploring the unique environment of the remote icy world and helping the science team understand the alien biology and ecology. Within a week of arrival he found himself somehow locked into the role of Henri Kerlerec’s personal cameraman, gofer, and captive audience. His list of murder methods began with “strangling HK with that stupid ankh necklace” and progressed through cutting the air hose on Henri’s drysuit, jamming him into a thermal vent, abandoning him in midocean with no inertial compass, and feeding him to an Aenocampus. Some of the others on the station who routinely read the hidden “Death to HK” board had protested that last one as being too cruel to the Aenocampus.

  Rob’s first exposure to killing Henri came at a party given by Nadia and her husband Pierre Adler in their room, just after the support vehicle left orbit for the six-month voyage back to Earth. With four guests there was barely enough room, and to avoid overloading the ventilators they had to leave the door open. For refreshment they served melons from the hydroponic garden filled with some of Palashnik’s home-brew potato vodka. One drank melon-flavored vodka until the hollow interior was empty, then cut vodka-flavored melon slices.

  “I’ve got a new one,” said Nadia after her third melon slice. “Put a piece of paper next to Le Nuke for a few months until it’s radioactive, then write him a fan letter and slip it under his door. He’d keep the letter for his collection and die of gradual exposure.”

  “Too long,” said Josef. “Even if he kept it in his pocket it would take years to kill him.”

  “But you’d have the fun of watching him lose his hair,” said Nadia.

  “I would rather just lock him in the reactor shed and leave him there,” said Josef.

  “Who are they talking about?” Rob asked.

  “Henri Kerlerec,” whispered the person squeezed onto the bed next to him.

  “Irradiate his hair gel,” said Pierre. “That way he’d put more on every day and it would be right next to his brain.”

  “Ha! That part has been dead for years!”

  “Replace the argon in his breathing unit with chlorine,” said someone Rob couldn’t see, and then the room went quiet.

  Henri was standing in the doorway. As usual, he was grinning. “Planning to murder somebody? Our esteemed station director, I hope.” He glanced behind him to make sure Dr. Sen wasn’t in earshot. “I have thought of an infallible technique: I would strike him over the head with a large ham or gigot or something of that kind, and then when the police come, I would serve it to them to destroy the evidence. They would never suspect!”

  “Roald Dahl,” murmured Nadia. “And it was a frozen leg of lamb.”

  Henri didn’t hear her. “You see the beauty of it? The police eat the murder weapon. Perhaps I shall write a detective novel about it when I get back to Earth. Well, goodnight everyone!” He gave a little wave and went off toward Hab Three.

  This particular morning Rob was trying to think of an especially sadistic fate for Henri. Kerlerec had awakened him at 0500 – three hours early! – and summoned him to the dive room with a great show of secrecy.

  The dive room occupied the bottom of Hab One. It was a big circular room with suits and breathing gear stowed on the walls, benches for getting into one’s gear, and a moon pool in the center where the Terran explorers could pass into Ilmatar’s dark ocean. It was usually the coldest room in the entire station, chilled by the subzero seawater.

  Henri was there, waiting at the base of the access ladder. As soon as Rob climbed down he slammed the hatch shut. “Now we can t
alk privately together. I have an important job for you.”

  “What?”

  “Tonight at 0100 we are going out on a dive. Tell nobody. Do not write anything in the dive log.”

  “What? Why tonight? And why did you have to get me up at five in the goddamned morning to have this conversation?”

  “It must be kept absolutely secret.”

  “Henri, I’m not doing anything until you tell me exactly what is going on. Enough cloak and dagger stuff.”

  “Come and see.” Henri led him to the hatch into Hab Three, opened it a crack to peek through, then gestured for Rob to follow as he led the way to the lab space he shared with Nadia Kyle. It was a little room about twice the size of a sleeping cabin, littered with native artifacts, unlabeled disks, and tanks holding live specimens. Standing in the middle was a large gray plastic container as tall as a man. It was covered with stenciled markings in Cyrillic and a sky blue UNICA shipping label.

  Henri touched his thumb to a lock pad and the door swung open to reveal a bulky diving suit. It was entirely black, even the faceplate, and had a sleek, seamless look.

  “Nice suit. What’s so secret about it?”

  “This is not a common sort of diving suit,” said Henri. “I arranged specially for it to be sent to me. Nobody else has anything like it. It is a Russian Navy stealth suit, for deactivating underwater smart mines or sonar pods. The surface is completely anechoic. Invisible to any kind of sonar imaging. Even the fins are low-noise.”

 

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