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The Endless Twilight

Page 25

by L. E. Modesitt Jr.


  Without being able to read the faded letters on the spines of the volumes, she knew that most were Imperial manuals.

  “Why did you leave the Service and settle here?”

  He gestured toward the wall behind her, then laughed a short laugh.

  “Nowhere to sit.”

  “It’s not really necessary—“

  He brushed past her and did something to the wooden panel behind her.

  The lieutenant stepped aside as the blond man lowered a double width bed from the wall and pulled a quilted coverlet, red and gray, from a recess over the bed, and spread it over the Imperial-issue colonist’s pallet.

  She could see his nostrils quiver as he straightened and motioned toward the couch/bed.

  “Still familiar.” His low statement was made more to himself than to her.

  He frowned, but with three quick strides returned to the swivel and dropped into it, turning toward her as he did.

  “Two questions. One asked. One unasked. Last first. The Imperial supplies? Maintain some credit balance at the base. Lets me buy what I need. First last. Why here? Nowhere else to go.”

  His words answered one question, but not the other. Only a retired or disabled member from Recorps or one of the Imperial Services had base-purchasing privileges. But he had not answered why he had settled on Old Earth.

  “Why did you settle here?”

  “Why not? Didn’t settle. Born here. Not that anyone would remember. No place for me in the Empire. No place for me in Recorps, either. Not when all the barriers are crumbling.”

  “Barriers?” The single-word question tumbled from her lips. Why did she sound like such a simpleton? Why? Why? Why?

  “You can take the stress so long. Had to be civilized. That meant barriers . . . if I wanted to survive. I built them, but not strong enough. Time wears down all walls. Remember. Grew up when the shambletowners hunted the devilkids.”

  “Shambletowners?”

  “Old Mazers . . . what they called them then.”

  She could see that the hardness was gone from his eyes, the terrible intensity muted, misted over.

  The lieutenant waited for him to go on, wondering why he was so obsessed with age. He had to be a mental case, or disabled. He didn’t look much older than she was, and she certainly wasn’t ready for retirement, not just five years out of the Academy. But the dwelling was undeniably his, and the locals called him old. Why?

  “Watch out for the old devil,” at least three of the reclam farmers had told her. “He knows everything, but he moves like the lash of the storm, like the old storms.”

  She studied his face, the so-short and tight-curled blond hair, the tanned and smooth skin of his face, trying not to stare, waiting for him to go on.

  The afternoon wind whined, but the cabin did not shake, unlike some of the town buildings. While their native wood bent, it never broke, not with the local design.

  “When the Empire rediscovered, they were lucky. Between storms of summer and howlers of winter. No landspouts that day.

  “Could be we were lucky. Time should tell. Couldn’t see the sky then, just the gray and gray of the clouds, and purple funnels of the landspouts. Screaming and ripping through the hills and plains. Rock rains all the time. Sheerwinds could cut rivers in half.

  “Silver lander. Went hunting and found a devilkid.”

  He laughed, a short hard bark of a laugh that contrasted with the soft penetrating intensity of his light voice.

  “That was six centuries ago. You act like you were there.”

  He ignored her interruption. “Great Empire decided they had some obligation to poor home planet. Guilty conscience. Decided to fix us up. Till the local budget got tight, and they decided to recruit locals. Couldn’t find anyone, except a devilkid. Other couldn’t hack it. Devilkid ended up in charge. Called him captain. Still a devilkid in soul. Scared the Impies until the day he walked out. End of story.”

  “You haven’t told me anything.”

  “Who are you?”

  “Me?”

  “No matter. Told you everything. Now listen. My turn.”

  She frowned, then leaned back as he began to whistle in the strange double-toned sound she had heard him let out momentarily when she had arrived.

  The song had a melody, a haunting one, that spoke of loss and loss, and yet somehow each loss was an accomplishment, or each accomplishment was a loss. The melody was beautiful, and it was nothing.

  Nothing compared to the off-toned counterpoint, which twisted and turned her.

  The tears billowed from her eyes until she thought they would never stop, and his song went on, and on, and on.

  When the last note died, she sat there. Sat and waited until he sat beside her and stroked her cheek.

  As he unfastened her tunic, she shivered once before relaxing in the spice of his scent, before letting her arms go around him, drawing him down onto her.

  The song was with her, and with him. Nor did it leave until he did, and she laid back on the coverlet, shuddering in the rhythms of music and of him, her movements drawing her into a sleep that was awake, and a clarity that was sleep.

  She woke suddenly.

  Her clothes were where they had dropped, next to the bottom edge of the bed, and her stunner and equipment belt had been moved to the highest shelf, the one without the old books on it.

  She rolled away from his silent, and, she hoped, sleeping form gently, until their bodies were separated. She waited, half holding her breath, to see if he moved.

  Next, she eased into a sitting position, a position she hoped would not wake him. Again, she waited.

  An eternity passed before she edged to her feet, and silently padded across the smooth and cold wooden floor.

  First, to get the stunner.

  By climbing onto the bottom shelf, she reached the belt and eased it down. Her fingers curled around the butt of the weapon, and she drew it from the holster.

  “Wouldn’t.”

  She brought the firing tube up and toward him, but before her fingers could reach the firing stud, his naked form of tanned skin, hair-line scars, and blond hair had struck across the room like the flash of coiled lightning he resembled. His open hand slashed the weapon from her fingers.

  Ramming her knee toward his groin, she drove to bring her right elbow toward his throat.

  Before she could finish either maneuver, she found herself being lifted toward the bed, her right arm numb from the grip of his left hand.

  “NOOOO!”

  “Yes.”

  She could feel her legs being forced apart, his strength so much greater that her total conditioning and military training were brushed aside as if she were a child, and she could feel the hot tears scalding down her face, even as he heat drove through her like hot iron.

  You were warned, a corner of her mind reminded her. You were warned.

  But they didn’t know. They didn’t know!

  When he was done, this time, again, he kissed her cheek, ran his hands over her breasts. But he did not relax.

  Standing quickly, he went to the hidden closet and pulled out a loose, woven gray robe and pulled it on before sitting at the end of the bed, his hawk-yellow eyes exploring her.

  She wanted to curl into a ball, to pull into herself and never come up. Instead, she took a deep breath and slowly sat up, cross-legged, and faced him.

  “Was it necessary to hurt me?”

  “After a while, need the thrills. Beauty isn’t enough. Neither is scent. With you, it’s almost enough.” He frowned. “Shouldn’t have tried for the stunner. High-minded lady. Sexy bitch. Changed her mind and tried to zap old Greg. Hard to resist the instincts. Don’t have many barriers left, and fewer all the time. Happens over the ages.”

  He straightened, leaning back with his eyes level with hers, for an instant before he stood. She could see the blackness behind the yellowflecked eyes, a blackness that seemed to stretch back through time.

  She shook her head to break awa
y from the image.

  After crossing the room with a slight limp she had not noticed before, he turned and walked back, picking up her clothes, and sorted and folded them, putting them on the foot of the bed. Next he put the equipment belt down, without the stunner.

  He shook his head, hard.

  “You had better leave. Not exactly sane, not all the time, anymore. Never sure which memories are real, which are dreams.”

  She dressed deliberately, afraid that undue haste would be construed as fear, which seemed to be a turn-on, or that slowness would be a tease.

  By the time she was together, boots and belt in place, she realized that he had also dressed, though she did not remember him changing from the robe back to the gray tunic and trousers.

  The late afternoon light was flooding the cabin with the dull red that preceded twilight when she stepped outside the door.

  In another quick move, he was at her side.

  She looked down. The stunner was back in her holster. Neither acknowledging the weapon’s return nor flinching at his speed, she took a deep breath and opened the door.

  His right arm held her back, went around her shoulders, and she found herself against him again, face-to-face, the strange spice scent of his skin and breath still fresh.

  His fingers relaxed as he kissed her neck and brushed her cheek with his lips.

  “Good-bye, Caroljoy. Thought you’d never come. Good-bye.”

  He released her, standing there, face impassive, as she slipped out and onto the wide stone slab that comprised the top step on the long stone staircase down to the old highway and her electroscooter.

  The tears she could not explain cascaded down her cheeks, a few splashing the dust from her boots, a single one staining the last step of the stairway.

  Her carriage perfect, she did not look back, but felt the door close, felt that as it closed it sealed away a forgotten chink in the past as surely as though she had destroyed the sole copy of a priceless history text.

  Eyes still blurring, she started the scooter back toward the base.

  LXI

  “INCOMING. EDI TRACKS. Corridors two and three.”

  The senior lieutenant relayed the report from his screen to the Ops Boss, both on the audio and through the datalink. He did not altogether trust the ancient and patched-together equipment, but there was no new equipment and nothing left to cannibalize.

  “Understand EDI track. Incoming Cee one and Cee three.”

  “That is affirmative.”

  “Interrogative arrival at torp one range.”

  “Unable to compute,” the lieutenant responded. “Synthesizer is down. Data fragmentary.”

  The lieutenant wiped his forehead.

  “Interrogative arrival estimate,” repeated the disembodied voice of the Ops Boss.

  The lieutenant ran his thick hand through his thinning hair, wishing he could undo the brevet that had jumped him from senior tech to full lieutenant, wishing he were back in the old days when the Service had really been the Service.

  “Data is fragmentary,” he repeated. “I say again. Data is incomplete.”

  “Understand data limitations. Interrogative estimate of incoming at torp one range.”

  The lieutenant sighed to himself. “Personal estimate, based on trace strength and standard incoming combat closure. Personal estimate of incoming ETA at torp one range in less than point five stans.”

  “Understand arrival in less than point five stans. Interrogative incoming classification. Interrogative incoming classification.”

  “Data incomplete. Personal estimate of incoming is uniform three delta.”

  “. . . damned Ursan cruiser . . . ,” muttered the rating at his elbow, “. . . coming in for the kill . . .”

  “Understand Ursan heavy cruiser.”

  “That is current estimate.” The lieutenant wiped away at his damp forehead, unable to keep the sweat from the corners of his eyes, with the building heat in the orbit control defense center. The station’s internal climatizers were just as old and patched as the nonfunctioning synthesizer and the unreliable defense screens behind which they all waited for the inevitable.

  Two red stars flashed on the display panel. The lieutenant swallowed. Both corridor control centers destroyed—more than an hour ago, with the data only arriving at light speed, not all that much ahead of the incoming Ursans.

  “Control Alpha and Control Delta. Status red omega. Status red omega this time.”

  “Interrogative . . .”

  The audio request and the display panel before the lieutenant blanked. The lieutenant sat gaping as the lights overhead dimmed, then went out. The hiss of the ventilators whispered into nothingness. Only the dim red glow of the emergency light strips remained.

  The orbit control center had been the last functioning base between the Ursan raiders and New Augusta itself. The last, and it no longer functioned .

  “. . . raiders . . . just damned raiders . . . not even a fleet . . . ,” muttered the sour-faced rating.

  “Begin evacuation plan delta. Evacuation plan delta . . .”

  The lieutenant, out of habit, touched all the shutdowns before easing himself from behind the screen, shaking his head in the gloom as his fingers slipped across the age-faded plastic surfaces.

  LXII

  THE TEN MONTH winds came. Came with the black clouds that whistled death, as those clouds had whistled death through all the centuries they had struck the easternmost hills of the continent-dividing mountains. Came and whistled death for those who ventured out into the violent gusts, bitter cold, and ice arrows that attacked with the force of a club.

  None of the hill people, nor the high plains farmers who lived downside of the hills, left their dwellings while the ten month winds blew, but huddled inside their well-braced homes. The hardy might dart forth in the lulls between storms, but always kept an eye toward the west and an ear cocked for the low moaning that preceded the devilstorms.

  Cigne, from neither high plains nor hill stock, had waited, and waited. This time she had played coy, forcing down her nausea, then, as her chance came, she had bolted from Aldoff into the low wailing that foreshadowed the winds. Praying that the killer gusts would arrive in time, she had scrabbled from the tiny cottage Aldoff had acquired for them. Clawing, stumbling, falling, and staggering up, stumbling again, she had scrambled into the hillside trees before he had managed to get his other leg back into his trousers, and his heavy boots back on.

  Cigne hated those heavy brown boots. To think she had once thought him rugged and handsome!

  Less than two hundred meters into the trees she fell headlong.

  “Oooohhh.” A stone gouged into the purpled bruise on her left thigh.

  “Cigne! You bitch! I find you . . .” Aldoff’s voice carried above the low wail of the dark winds sweeping in from the west.

  She jerked herself back to her feet, ignoring the shock that ran from her hip to her calf, and tottered uphill, willing herself toward the taller spruces and the darkness beneath them. Moving uphill, her breath leaving sharp white puffs, Cigne staggered on, winced at the sharp small stones that had invaded her shoes and had sliced even her callused feet. Blood welled out of a dozen cuts, leaving the thin town shoes she wore slippery from within, and making each step less and less certain.

  Whhhppp!

  The first ice missile crashed through the spruce overhead.

  The cold air chilled further, as if winter had arrived instantly with the ice. The afternoon gloom deepened, as though twilight had descended. The wind’s low whistle lowered into a deeper moan, rattling the branches above and around her on the hillside.

  “Bitch! Bitch! Cigne! Get self down here!”

  She had put more distance between them, for his voice, even at full bellow, was fainter.

  Just because she had not been able to conceive—was that any reason to turn against her? With every other woman having the same problem? It was not as though she were some freak. And Aldoff refused to b
elieve it might be his problem—not big, bull-strong Aldoff.

  Stumbling again, she reached out instinctively. Her hand touched a boulder nearly waist-high. With a sharp breath of cold air, she halted and looked around. She looked up. Looked up and took another, fuller breath, in an effort to repress a shiver.

  The overhead sky boiled black, black as night, as it erupted gouts of ice and flung them at the earth and forests below.

  Cigne steadied her grip on the rocky outcrop and glanced around her, searching to see if she could find a better shelter than the pair of upthrust boulders no higher than her waist. The two slanted toward each other and would provide some protection.

  Whhhpppp! Whhhppp!

  With the sound of the ice missiles, she scrabbled under the outcroppings, burrowing as far under the larger as possible, huddling with her left leg, the still one, as covered as far as she could stretch the leather skirt.

  Aldoff had sold her leather trousers, the ones provided by her family. Then, she had not known why, she had not protested the cavalier actions of her rugged husband.

  Whhhpp! Whhhppp! Whhhppp!

  The ten month winds struck the trees, struck from the black clouds with ice and gusts that splintered branches and ripped bushes from exposed hillsides. Struck from the black clouds that represented destruction, that condemned all those unsheltered to near-certain death.

  Whhhp! Whhhppp! Whhpp!

  With and through the winds flew the ice spears, whistling death from the blackness above, as they had for all the centuries since the Great Collapse.

  Cigne flattened herself still farther into the depression under the outcropping. Already the spruces were bending in the shuddering gusts of the winds. In the distance she could hear the wailing moan of a devilmouth spout as it raced through the heavens toward the high plains east of the hillside where she lay.

  The spouts never touched the hills. But the killer winds did, pulling spruces and golden trees out by their roots, smashing entire stands of trees flat, hillside by hillside.

  After the winds lifted, before the snows drifted across the desolation, the woods crafters would come, picking the best of the downed timber for furniture and for the vans and simple machines that could be fabricated without metal, or with minimal use of metals. Then would come the builders, to take their timbers and planks from the second cull. Then, finally would come the fuelmakers, to salvage what remained for alcohol and stoves. Even the chips would be put to use, for paper and kindling blocks.

 

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