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The Chaplain's War - eARC

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by Brad R Torgersen




  The Chaplain's War – eARC

  Brad R. Torgersen

  Advance Reader Copy

  Unproofed

  Baen

  The Chaplain’s War

  Brad R. Torgersen

  The mantis cyborgs: insectlike, cruel, and determined to wipe humanity from the face of the galaxy.

  The Fleet is humanity’s last chance: a multi-world, multi-national task force assembled to hold the line against the aliens’ overwhelming technology and firepower. Enter Harrison Barlow, who like so many young men of wars past, simply wants to serve his people and partake of the grand adventure of military life. Only, Harrison is not a hot pilot, nor a crack shot with a rifle. What good is a Chaplain’s Assistant in the interstellar battles which will decide the fate of all?

  More than he thinks. Because while the mantis insectoids are determined to eliminate the human threat to mantis supremacy, they remember the errors of their past. Is there the slightest chance that humans might have value? Especially since humans seem to have the one thing the mantes explicitly do not: an innate ability to believe in what cannot be proven nor seen God. Captured and stranded behind enemy lines, Barlow must come to grips with the fact that he is not only bargaining for his own life, but the lives of everyone he knows and loves. And so he embarks upon an improbable gambit, determined to alter the course of the entire war.

  THE CHAPLAIN'S WAR

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.

  Copyright © 2014 by Brad R. Torgersen

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.

  A Baen Books Original

  Baen Publishing Enterprises

  P.O. Box 1403

  Riverdale, NY 10471

  www.baen.com

  ISBN: 978-1-4767-3685-3

  Cover art by David Seeley

  First Baen printing, October 2014

  Distributed by Simon & Schuster

  1230 Avenue of the Americas

  New York, NY 10020

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data: TK

  Printed in the United States of America

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Electronic Version by Baen Books

  www.baen.com

  PART ONE:

  The Chaplain’s Assistant

  Chapter 1

  I was putting fresh oil into clay lamps at the altar when the mantis glided into my foyer. The creature stopped for a moment, his antennae dancing in the air, sensing the few parishioners who sat on my roughly-hewn stone pews. I hadn’t seen a mantis in a long time—the aliens didn’t bother with humans much, now that we were shut safely behind their Wall. Like all the rest of his kind, this mantis’s lower thorax was submerged into the biomechanical “saddle” of his floating mobility disc. Only this one’s disc didn’t appear to have any apertures for weapons—a true rarity on Purgatory.

  Every human head in the building turned towards the visitor, each set of human eyes smoldering with a familiar, tired hate.

  “I would speak to the Holy Man,” said the mantis through the speaker box on its disc. Its fearsome, segmented beak had not moved. The disc and all the machines within it were controlled directly by the alien’s brain.

  When nobody got up to leave, the mantis began floating up my chapel’s central aisle, the mantis’s disc making a gentle humming sound.

  “Alone,” said the visitor, his vocoded voice approximating a commanding human tone.

  Heads and eyes turned to me. I looked at the mantis, considered my options, then bowed to my flock, who reluctantly began to leave—each worshipper collecting handfuls of beads, crosses, stars, serviceman’s Bibles, and various other religious items. They exited without saying a word. What else could they do? The mantes ruled Purgatory as surely as Lucifer ruled Hell.

  I waited at the altar.

  “You are the religious officer?” said the mantis.

  “The chaplain is dead. I am—was—his assistant.”

  “We must speak, you and I.”

  Again, I noted the mantis’s lack of armament.

  “What can I do for you?” I said.

  “I wish to understand this entity you call God.”

  I stared at the alien, not quite sure if I should take him seriously.

  “To understand God,” I said slowly, “is a skill that requires ongoing mastery.”

  “Which is why the other humans come here, to this structure? To learn from you.”

  I blushed slightly. In the year since I’d built the chapel—some two years after our failed invasion and subsequent capture—I’d not given so much as a single sermon. Preaching wasn’t my thing. I built the chapel because the chaplain told me to before he died, and because it seemed obvious that many humans on Purgatory—men and women who had landed here, fought, been stranded and eventually imprisoned—needed it. With the fleets from Sol departed, and our homes many thousands of light-years away, there wasn’t much left for some of us to turn to—except Him.

  “I don’t teach,” I said, measuring my words against the quiet fear in my heart, “but I do provide a space for those who come to listen.”

  “You are being deliberately cryptic,” the mantis accused.

  “I mean no offense,” I continued, hating the servile tone in my own voice as I spoke to the beast, “it’s just that I was never trained as an instructor of worship. Like I said when you asked, I am only the assistant.”

  “Then what do the humans here listen to, precisely?”

  “The spirit,” I said.

  The mantis’s beak yawned wide, its serrated tractor teeth vibrating with visible annoyance. I stared into that mouth of death—remembering how many troops had been slaughtered in jaws like those—and felt myself go cold. The chaplain had often called the mantes soulless. At the time—before the landing—I’d thought he was speaking metaphorically. But looking at the monster in front of me I remembered the chaplain’s declaration, and found it apt.

  “Spirit,” said the mantis. “Twice before has my kind encountered this perplexing concept.”

  “Oh?” I said.

  “Two other sapients, one of them avian and the other amphibian.”

  Other aliens…besides the mantes? This was news.

  “And what could they tell you about God?” I asked.

  “Gods,” my visitor corrected me. “We destroyed both species before we could collect much data on their beliefs.”

  “Destroyed,” I said, hoping the alien’s ears couldn’t detect the shaking dread in my voice.

  “Yes. Hundreds of your years ago, during what we call our Third Expansion into the galaxy. We thought ourselves alone, then. We had no experience with alternative intelligence. The homeworld of the avians and the homeworld of the amphibians were pleasing to the Quorum of the Select, so those worlds were annexed, cleansed of competitive life forms, and have since become major population centers for my people.”

  I took in this information as best I could, unsure if any human ears had ever heard anything like it. I thought of the Military Intelligence guys—all dead—who would have given their years’ pay to gain the kind of information I had just gained, standing here in the drafty, ramshackle confines of my makeshift church.

  I experienced a sudden leap of intuition.

  “You’re not a soldier,” I said.

  The mantis’s beak snapped shut.

  “Certainly not.”

  “What are you then, a scientist?”

  The mantis seemed to contemplate this word—however it had translated for the alien’s mind—and he waved a spiked fore
limb in my direction.

  “The best human term is professor. I research and I teach.”

  “I see,” I said, suddenly fascinated to be meeting the first mantis I’d ever seen who was not, explicitly, trained to kill. “So you’re here to research human religion?”

  “Not just human religion,” said the mantis, hovering closer. “I want to know about this…this spirit that you speak of. Is it God?”

  “I guess so, but also kind of not. The spirit is…what you feel inside you when you know God is paying attention.”

  It was a clumsy explanation, one the Chaplain would have—no doubt—chastised me for. I’d never been much good at putting these kinds of concepts into words that helped me understand, much less helped other people understand too. And trying to explain God and the spirit to this insect felt a lot like explaining the beauty of orchestral music to a lawnmower.

  The Professor’s two serrated forelimbs thoughtfully stroked the front of his disc.

  “What do the mantes believe?” I asked.

  The Professor’s forelimbs froze. “Nothing,” he said.

  “Nothing?”

  “We detect neither a spirit nor a God,” said the Professor, who made a second jaw-gaped show of annoyance. “The avians and the amphibians, they each built palaces to their gods. Whole continents and oceans mobilized in warfare, to determine which god was superior. Before we came and wiped them all out, down to the last chick and tadpole. Now, their flying gods and their swimming gods are recorded in the Quorum Archive, and I am left to wander here—to this desert of a planet—to quiz you, who are not even trained to give me the answers I seek.”

  The Professor’s body language showed that his annoyance verged on anger, and I felt myself pressing my calves and the backs of my thighs into the altar, ready for the lightning blow that would sever a carotid or split my stomach open. I’d seen so many die that way, their attackers reveling in the carnage. However technologically advanced the mantes were, they still retained a degree of predatory-hindbrain joy while engaged in combat.

  Noticing my alarm, the Professor floated backwards half a meter.

  “Forgive me,” said the alien. “I came here today seeking answers from what I had hoped would be a somewhat reliable source. It is not your fault that the eldest of the Quorum destroy things before they can learn from them. My time with you is finite, and I am impatient to learn as much as possible before the end.”

  “You have to leave…?” I said, half-questioning.

  The Professor didn’t say anything for several seconds, letting the silence speak for him. My shoulders and back caved, if only a little.

  “How many of the rest of us will die?” I asked, swallowing hard.

  “All,” said the Professor.

  “All?” I said, at once sure of the answer, but still needing to ask again anyway.

  “Yes, all,” said the Professor. “When I got word that the Quorum had ordered this colony cleansed of competitive life forms—prior to the dispatching of the Fourth Expansion towards your other worlds—I knew that I had a very narrow window. I must study this faith that inhabits you humans. Before it is too late.”

  “We’re no threat to you now,” I heard myself say with hollow shock, “all of us on Purgatory, we’ve all been disarmed and you’ve made it plain that we can’t hurt you. The Wall sees to that.”

  “I will return tomorrow, to study your other visitors in their worship,” said the alien as his disc spun on its vertical axis, and he began to hover towards the exit.

  “We’re not a threat—!”

  But my shouting was for naught. The Professor was gone.

  Chapter 2

  I didn’t sleep at all that night. I kept thinking about what would happen. There were approximately six thousand of us left from the invasion, mostly men, but some women too—and now, here and there, children. All of us confined to a single semi-arid mountain valley by what we’d come to think of as The Wall—a slightly opaque curtain of energy that ringed us on all sides, with an indefinite height that faded into the sky. Rain, wind, snow, and air fell into and through The Wall, but every man or woman who had approached and touched it had been reduced to ashes.

  “Selective nuclear suppression field,” I’d heard one of the parishioners tell me one day—a man who’d been a pilot. “It’s the same thing they mask their ships in orbit with. Our missiles couldn’t ever get through. Nor the shells from the chainguns. We were smoked before we knew it.”

  Now, it seemed, the mantes were going to finish the job.

  When morning came, there was a stiff wind coming down off the peaks from the north, and the irregularly-shaped shutters of the chapel stuttered and flapped. Such was common. Purgatory had small oceans and large deserts, with most of the livable country up in alpine territory. Why the mantes had seen it as worth defending—or why we’d seen it as worth invading—was a question I often asked myself.

  Only a few people wandered in after breakfast. I had the oil lamps going to light the altar, and tried to offer my flock a smile, though I am afraid I must have looked a wreck.

  The Professor showed up before lunch, getting the same kind of stabbing glares he’d gotten the day before. He hovered right up to the altar, turned, and looked at the parishioners as they looked at him, some of them glancing at me, as if to silently say, what kind of goddamned sacrilege is this?

  Those in prayer ceased. One or two got up immediately and left.

  “What is wrong?” the Professor asked me as I nibbled at some root bread and a small bowl of stew, made from native Purgatory vegetables and varmint meat—both of which we’d learned to farm. Purgatory’s native fauna was on the diminutive side, and unfortunately for us, did not taste like chicken. You got used to it, after hunger for protein drove you to desperation. Thank heaven Purgatory wasn’t short on salt.

  I looked at the mantis, and pointed to the door that led to my room where I slept. He followed me back, and I closed the door behind us, light leaking around the corners of the room’s shuttered, rattling window. His disc buzzed softly.

  “You really don’t understand religion, do you?”

  “You state the obvious,” he said.

  “When people come here, they want to get away from you mantes. They want to get away from the anger and the rage and the despair.”

  The Professor just stared at me.

  I sighed and rubbed my hands over my eyes, trying to figure out a way to penetrate his cold sensibilities.

  “God is about warmth, and hope, and being able to see the future free of pain. Your coming here today is reminding everyone in the chapel of their pain, and they hate you for it. This is the one place where they think they can have a moment—just a moment, in the whole miserable world—of true peace. You’re denying them that.”

  “I have not interfered with their activities at all,” said the Professor.

  “Worship is not something you do so much as it’s something you feel. Your being here…It’s driving out the feeling. The spirit is gone.”

  Gaping maw, vibrating saw-toothed horror.

  “It doesn’t help,” I said, “that you told me yesterday we were going to die. I haven’t said anything about it to anyone else—it would just upset them, and we clearly can’t do anything about it even if we wanted to—but the people who have been here today, they know I’m bothered. Makes me wonder why you mantes let any of us live at all.”

  “Some of us were curious,” the Professor said. “Humans are only the third sapient species we have found, after searching and colonizing thousands of star systems. Like I told you before, we annihilated the first two species without thinking more deeply about it. This time, we were determined to not make that same mistake.”

  “So we’re good to you alive,” I said, “only as long as we’re of research interest.”

  “Do not forget, human, that it was you who initiated hostilities.”

  “Bullshit,” I said. “The planets Marvelous and New America were uninhab
ited when our colonists got there. They didn’t know about the mantes until your people showed up and blew the colonial fleets out of orbit. Sol would have been totally in the dark, except for the two picket ships that got away. Bad mistake, that. We came back hard. Showed you what we were made of.”

  The vestigial wings on the Professor’s back opened and fluttered—a sign of extreme amusement.

  “What’s so funny?” I said.

  “Do you know what happened to the six colonies—mantis colonies—that your Sol fleets attacked, in so-called reprisal?”

  “We kicked your butts,” I said, my voice rising.

  “No, assistant-to-the-chaplain. We wiped you out. Those worlds remain in our hands, as do many others you once thought of as yours.”

  “Liar,” I said, feeling hot in the face.

  “If you’ve been told that your attacks against us on other worlds have been successful, then it is not I who has been lying to you. Think of your own fate, here on this planet. How successful was your fleet this time? Why would it have been any different anywhere else?”

  I longed for a weapon. Any weapon.

  “Our science is far advanced beyond your own. Discovery of the jump system is an easy, first step towards becoming truly technological. It in no way prepared you to deal with us at our level, and fortunately we have been able to deflect your violence and will now extinguish it from the universe.”

  The Professor stopped, as if noticing my posture for the first time.

  “You hate me,” he said.

  “Yes,” I told him.

  “I can smell it on you. You would kill me, if you could.”

  “Yes,” I said. Why lie now?

 

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