Book Read Free

Duty, Honor, Planet: 02 - Honor Bound

Page 30

by Rick Partlow


  * * *

  Shannon leaned tiredly against the window of the flyer, her eyes slitted against the late morning sun, looking down every now and then when the vast, nearly unbroken plains of Oklahoma were interrupted by the swiftly moving dots of pronghorn antelope or the lumbering masses of elephant herds. Once, she was sure she saw the tawny bulk of a pride of lions slinking through the tall grass near the edge of a clump of bison.

  “I’ve never been to the Preserve before,” Ari commented idly from the pilot’s seat, glancing back at Major Stark. “Always meant to check it out one of these days.”

  “My parents brought me here when I was twelve,” Shannon told him, her voice sounding rough and hoarse to her own ears. She hadn’t had a good night’s sleep in days. “For a year after, I wanted to be a park ranger or a wildlife biologist.”

  “My family never had the money to take all of us that far,” Ari said wistfully, “what with five kids, and my folks weren’t taxpayers or anything.”

  “Maybe you should take a vacation one of these days, Ari,” she suggested. “I personally plan to take one when all this is over, assuming we live through it and don’t wind up conquered by the Protectorate or exiled to a star colony by a new government.”

  “That’s what I’ve always liked about you, ma’am,” Ari said with a grin. “You’re so upbeat and optimistic.”

  The flat grasslands and gently rolling hills of the Great Rewilding Preserve that covered millions of acres of America’s Great Plains gradually gave way to clusters of support and control buildings and living quarters that ran along the edge of the park, then to the infrastructure that was the outskirts of Oklahoma City.

  “There it is,” Shannon nodded at a long fence-line that ran along the cracked and neglected length of an ancient surface road “Follow that fence-line and it’ll take us to the ranch house.”

  “Flying this thing on manual, it feels like I’m out on a colony world somewhere,” Ari commented, “instead of the middle of the United States.”

  “Well, we can switch back to satellite control if you like,” Shannon replied dryly. “Then we could go on Republic HoloNet and announce to the whole system what we’re doing, just to put a cherry on top.”

  “Well, when you put it like that, ma’am…” He chuckled. “I see the house. We should be there in a minute.”

  Ari traced the route of a dirt track that turned off the main road and then followed it to the crest of a low hill, where a single story ranch house sprawled comfortably in the dry, brown grass of summer as it had since the early 1900s. He landed the flyer on the side of the house, between it and a much newer garage, not far from a rugged-looking all-terrain rover suitable to travel the untended roads as well as the rolling grassland.

  Shannon was unstrapping even as Ari powered down the turbines, and when she looked up from unfastening her safety harness, she could see the lone figure stepping out the side door of the house to meet them. He was tall and powerfully built, still intimidating in his early 70’s, though looking strangely incongruent to her in a short sleeved shirt, jeans and boots. He had skin the color of cafe-aux-lait; close-cropped, tight-curled hair with no grey in it and a face that had been sculpted from the side of a granite cliff. He halted a few meters from the flyer and waited for Shannon and Ari to climb out of the vehicle.

  “Welcome to my home away from home, Colonel Stark,” he said with a thin smile, his voice a modulated earthquake.

  “Thanks for agreeing to meet, Mr. President,” Shannon said, extending a hand.

  Gregory Jameson, former President of the Republic, took her hand in his and shook it warmly.

  “From the method you used to contact me, I assume this isn’t a social call.”

  “No, sir,” she admitted, “unfortunately it’s business.” She waved a hand back at Ari. “You remember Captain Shamir, sir.”

  “Yes, a most capable Marine,” Jameson declared. “And quite the Intelligence officer in the last few years, I understand.” Ari actually felt himself blushing.

  “Thank you, sir,” he said. “It’s an honor to meet you again.”

  “Come on in,” Jameson invited them, waving at the open side door. “My wife is back in Capital City for a conference, so it’s just me today.”

  “How is Janice, sir?” Shannon asked politely as they stepped into the house. She’d met the woman once, just after the wedding five years ago and couldn’t remember a thing about her.

  “She’s doing well,” Jameson said, closing the door behind them. The side door led into the house’s old-fashioned kitchen; from the layout, Shannon could easily imagine it as it had been three hundred years ago, fitted with a wood-burning stove and an ice-box instead of the modern food storage and processing equipment it now held.

  A drowsy English sheepdog padded into the kitchen from the living room and shoved its head under Jameson’s hand. He paused to kneel and scratch the dog’s ears affectionately before turning back to the two officers.

  “Please, sit down,” Jameson motioned to the kitchen table. “Can I get either of you a drink?”

  Shannon started to say no reflexively, but smelled coffee brewing and changed her mind. “I’d love a cup of coffee, sir,” she said. “I feel like I haven’t slept in a week.”

  “You, Captain Shamir?” Jameson asked as he stepped over to the counter and grabbed a cup for Shannon.

  “I’m good, sir,” Ari assured him, shaking his head.

  Jameson sat across from them and the sheepdog draped itself contentedly across his feet on the floor beneath the table. “So, how can I help you save the world this time, Colonel Stark?”

  She took a careful sip from the cup he’d handed her before she answered. “Sir,” she began, “we’ve come to you because we have a problem with the Executive Council and we know you have some connections there since…”

  “Since I lost the election and had to get a real job,” Jameson finished for her, a smile quirking across his lips. “Yes, I’ve done some lobbying for Brendan Riordan the last couple years, both for the Council and for Republic Transportation. What’s Brendan done now?” He shook his head ruefully and leaned his elbows on the table. “I know he wasn’t happy with Daniel’s emigration reforms…is he trying to bribe the colonial governors again?”

  “Not quite, sir,” she replied carefully. “He’s ah…”

  “He’s trying to cut out the middleman, you might say,” Ari interjected, earning a baleful glance from Shannon.

  “We have reason to believe,” Shannon told him, “that Director Riordan is part of a coup attempt against President O’Keefe.”

  “What?” Jameson’s eyes widened and he jerked upright, startling the dog, who glanced up at him curiously. “Are you serious?”

  “That’s not the worst of it, Mr. President,” she went on. “The coup attempt may involve an alliance with Antonov and the Protectorate.”

  “Perhaps,” the former President said slowly, “you should start from the beginning.”

  “Yes, sir,” she said. “You have to understand that this is incredibly sensitive and strictly need-to-know; you can’t repeat this to anyone without clearance and honestly, the only reason I can tell you any of this is that we’re basically desperate and President O’Keefe has dumped this whole thing in my lap.”

  “Teach your grandma to suck eggs, Colonel Stark,” Jameson commented dryly and she had to chuckle. Jameson had been well known for playing things close to the vest as president.

  “It started a few weeks ago, sir, when…”

  A half hour later, her coffee cup was empty and Jameson was sitting back in his chair, a stunned expression on his face. The sheepdog had laid her head across his thigh and he was petting her reflexively. Shannon had told him most of the story, but she had left out the fate of Glen’s assassin and also, from gut instinct and natural paranoia more than anything else, she had omitted the fact that the Decatur had returned.

  “If anyone,” he said slowly and quietly, “and I mean anyon
e other than you or Colonel McKay had told me that story, I would have laughed them out of my house. Unfortunately, I believe you. Jesus Christ,” he moaned softly, rubbing his eyes. “How did it ever come to this? What could Riordan be thinking working with Antonov?”

  “Actually sir,” Shannon said, “I was wondering the opposite: why would Antonov work with the Council? What could they offer him?”

  “Perhaps it’s as simple as the promise to leave him alone?” Jameson wondered. “After all, he knows we’ve been trying to hunt him down for the last five years.”

  “Antonov would never be satisfied with that,” Shannon disagreed. “He spent over a century dreaming and planning to take over Earth, he wouldn’t be satisfied reigning in some alien hell.”

  “That doesn’t mean he hasn’t let them believe that’s what he wants,” Ari pointed out thoughtfully. “If they’re desperate enough or greedy enough, they might buy it.”

  “They’re likely both,” Jameson confirmed grimly. “Things are going badly, as I’m sure you both know. It hasn’t filtered all the way up to the level of the Council, but it will and they know it. Half the time I’m in Capital City, I spend trying to force Senators to face reality: the Republic economy and our government is a house of cards and it’s about to collapse.”

  “Damn, another ray of sunshine,” Ari muttered. At Shannon’s quelling glance he raised his hands helplessly. “Sorry, ma’am, Mr. President, but everyone we run into keeps telling us the same thing and I keep wondering why it’s come to this if everyone seems to know it’s going to happen.”

  “It’s a fair question,” Jameson admitted. “I’ve asked myself the same thing many nights since the election. Before the invasion, we were pushing our borders out and colonizing every habitable world simply because we were so surprised and delighted that there were habitable planets so close to us. So we came up with reasons to be there: we drilled for oil and found exotic animals and plants and we dumped our political rabble-rousers off far away from home and used them for cheap labor.

  “But it wasn’t sustainable. We were pouring money into the antimatter production plants and building Eysselink drive starships and not making enough return to cover our investments. Eventually it would have imploded anyway…but the war pushed things up by years.” He sighed heavily. “I’m afraid we’re going to have to abandon the colonies pretty soon…at the least, we won’t be able to resupply them. Whoever stays will be on their own for years at a time.”

  “That makes it even more crucial that we get rid of the threat of Antonov now,” Shannon declared. “Otherwise, he’ll be able to prey on the colonies and we won’t be able to stop him.”

  “Actually, Antonov could be the key to saving the colonies,” Jameson said, a bit of excitement creeping into his voice. “Think about it…if we could gain access to the wormhole matrix that Antonov controls, we could reach the colonies without using expensive Eysselink drive starships…anyone who could afford an in-system transport could travel to the stars. Mining in the star colonies would be practical and affordable. But only if we get rid of the threat of Antonov…otherwise, he could ambush ships coming through the gates and make things too dangerous for trade.”

  “That might explain why the Council is desperate enough to deal with him,” Shannon guessed. “They think they can make a deal with him and save their corporations. But why do they think he would cooperate?”

  “I’ve known Brendan Riordan for over twenty years,” Jameson told her. “The man is many things, but he’s nobody’s fool. If he is involved in this, he must think he has some hole card that will keep Antonov in line.”

  “This is where we need your help, sir,” Shannon told him. “We had some idea of when, where and how the people involved with this were going to make the attempt on President O’Keefe’s life, but things have changed. We’re pretty sure they won’t make an attempt while he’s in Houston addressing the Council, but that means we don’t know when they will decide to try it. We need you to try to get a read on who is involved in this beyond Fourcade and Riordan and what their next move might be.”

  “I’ll do my best to find out what I can,” Jameson promised. He rubbed the knuckles of his right hand thoughtfully. “If they’re confused and their plans are in flux, it could be a good time for me to approach them. After all,” he grinned, “I am an old friend.”

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  “You are going to lose,” Podbyrin declared flatly.

  McKay started, looking up at the man suddenly as if he were just realizing he was there in the cabin with him.

  “What?”

  “This game,” Podbyrin expanded, nodding at the chess board between them. “Mate in three moves. You are distracted today.”

  “Well Gosh, D’mitry,” McKay grinned crookedly, “what could I possibly have to be distracted by?”

  “You are supposed to be resting,” the Russian reminded him. “That is why we are stopped here, no?”

  “I slept for ten hours,” McKay muttered, looking at the chessboard sourly and seeing that Podbyrin hadn’t been exaggerating. He tipped over his king and they began to reset the pieces.

  “Knowing you, McKay, you probably worried in your damned dreams.” Podbyrin said with a snort. Then he shrugged. “I do admit, sitting here orbiting this rock makes me nervous too. The gate is not that far away…if they come through, they will see us here.”

  “We didn’t have much choice. We had to repair a dozen damaged relays and get the antimatter storage canisters we retrieved at Novoye Rodina hooked back into the drive system. And we’d been on alert for three straight days-the crew needed the downtime.” McKay shrugged. “Besides, we already had two Protectorate ships come through the gate and they just passed right on through without seeing us.”

  “Der’mo!” Podbyrin spat. “And no one bothered to mention it?”

  “The duty crews were on alert. Commander Nunez didn’t want to wake the others needlessly.” He frowned. “Plus, if there are any other Protectorate sleeper agents on board, we didn’t want to give them any ideas.”

  “I have been thinking about this,” the Russian said, drumming his fingers on the chessboard as pondered his first move. “It does not seem like something General Antonov would do.”

  “Huh?” McKay peered at him curiously. “I met the man and I would say there’s not too much beneath him.”

  “No, my friend,” Podbyrin said, chuckling, as he advanced a pawn cautiously. “I didn’t mean that it was too evil for him, I meant that it was too subtle.” He waved a hand demonstratively. “The General can be brilliant and bold, but at heart he is a direct man, not possessed of such subtlety. If he were, we…the Protectorate, that is…would have won the war, won both wars: the first one with the Chinese and the second against your Republic. I was working on that bioweapon, remember, when the invasion was occurring. If he had been patient, if he had waited even a few months we might have had it ready. Then he could have controlled the only treatment for it and held all of Earth hostage to it.”

  McKay felt a prickling on his neck listening to this man speak so calmly about potentially killing millions of people and he remembered again that just because Podbyrin was his ally didn’t change the fact that he had been a dangerous fanatic at one time.

  “But he had his plan and it was the one that could be implemented the soonest and the simplest. And he had little patience for anyone who told him he was wrong…it was to the point where no one wanted to be the one to tell him bad news. If General Antonov had hijacked the Patton, one of your star cruisers, he would never have given it back. He lacks the patience to give up the immediate reward for something more long term.”

  McKay’s eyes stared through the chessboard as he considered what Podbyrin had said. “You know, D’mitry, you’re right, this is a bit of a complicated and risky plan for him. Why wouldn’t he have kept the Patton when he had her?” He glanced up at the Russian. “Is there an advisor he might have listened to more after being defeated
in the invasion of Earth?”

  “Hell no!” Podbyrin’s answer was a scornful laugh. “After we lost the war with China, he blamed everyone but himself! He blamed you Americans most of all, even though you didn’t fire a shot in the war. No, I wouldn’t be a bit surprised if he blamed the failure of the invasion on me…and, to be fair, it was my fault for being captured rather than killing myself.”

  “What if he didn’t make it back from Earth?” McKay suggested almost reluctantly. “Is there anyone else with more patience and foresight who would have taken over?”

  Podbyrin thought about that for a moment before shaking his head. “No,” he finally answered. “The General did not encourage initiative among his officers. They had a plan and they would stick to it or die. If someone did take over, it would take them a long time before giving up on his return. Mere months after the war…no, none of them would have the initiative and intelligence to come up with this plan so quickly.”

  “Well great,” McKay said morosely, pushing forward a pawn of his own. “As if I didn’t have enough to think about. I’m playing chess with someone and I can’t see their side of the board.” He snorted a laugh. “Half the time it feels like I can’t see my own side of the board.”

  “General Antonov was never much of a chess player,” Podbyrin told him, making another move. “I used to beat him every time. It made him mad as hell, but he kept playing me, always confident he would get it right next time.” He looked up and caught McKay’s eye. “It comes to me that you are not playing chess with the General alone. There is another player here who thinks farther ahead.”

  “If you’re right, then we aren’t sailing into safe harbor going home,” McKay said softly, advancing a knight.

  “How do you know that?” Podbyrin asked, voice taking on a sharp, suddenly-worried tone.

 

‹ Prev