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Rika Redeemed

Page 5

by M. D. Cooper


  Chase reached out and touched Rika on the shoulder.

  Rika almost jumped when he touched her—the team’s banter had only been a dull background murmur beneath her processing what she had witnessed at the granaries.

  The visuals from the drones were arrayed before her, superimposed over her vision; a dozen of the Genevian mech were highlighted and pulled to the fore. An SMI-2…it has to be. No armor cuts the same profile, and there is no other weapon that looks like a GNR.

  Rika turned her head to meet Chase’s eyes.

 

  Rika felt a stab of guilt. She should have been going over the battle and analyzing the enemy to identify which belonged to what enemy force, logging team kills and damage, checking on Patty…

  Rika said after a moment’s indecision.

  Chase let the words hang in her mind for a moment.

  Rika knew that the fear of meeting an old comrade on the field was something nearly every Marauder felt. With so much of the former Genevian military working for mercenary companies—many of those operating in Praesepe—the chance was always there that you could find an old friend in your sights.

  I’m being selfish, she thought. Every other Marauder faces this fear with each foe they see. I only have to worry about the least common mech-model out there.

  she finally answered.

  Chase asked with understanding in his gaze.

  Silva.

  < I can’t tell. That’s what I’ve been looking for in the drone feeds—some sign that it’s her.>

  Chase asked.

  Rika liked that about him. He didn’t try to placate or offer false hope; he saw to the root of the issue: how did she really feel about it?

  Thing was, she didn’t know.

 

  Chase nodded slowly, his eyes still locked on hers.

 

  Chase replied. he finished, echoing her earlier thoughts.

  Rika let out a long sigh, which coincided with the pilot finally settling the gunship on a level space at the ravine’s bottom.

  “Thank the stars,” Leslie said.

  “Yeah, I hear ya,” Barne agreed. “Would suck to make it all this way, and then have this chucklehead clip an outcropping and kill us all.”

  “I’m on this thing too,” the pilot said pointedly.

  “Your level of loyalty to your organization is unknown to us. You might consider it an acceptable trade,” Rika said as she rose, ducking low in the cramped space. “Get up.”

  The pilot hit the release on his harness and half stood, remaining hunched over in front of his seat.

  “You first,” Rika prodded, gesturing to the back where Chase waited. Beyond him, Leslie was saying something to Amy while Barne exited the gunship to secure the area.

  “Uh, you first? You’re all big and kinda sharp in places. I can’t get past.”

  Rika pressed herself back into the corner. “This is as good as it gets; you’ll just have to mind my pointy bits.”

  Leslie snorted from her place in the back of the gunship, and Rika shook her head. That one’s coming back to haunt me later.

  The pilot squeezed past, muttering something about not even knowing her name before brushing his ass against her.

  Chase commented on the team’s general net.

  Leslie replied.

  Rika asked as the pilot exited the gunship with Chase behind him.

  Leslie looked down at Amy, her yellow eyes full of compassion.

  Rika thought back to what life was like when she was ten—before the war had destroyed her life. In hindsight she could see that her parents had been worried about the struggle against the Nietzscheans, but they had shielded her as well as they could. It had been a good year for young Rika.

  was the only response Rika gave before crouching down next to Amy.

  “You’ve been really good; done really well, Amy. We’re going to check the area over and make sure our ground transportation is OK before we get on the move again.”

  Amy’s big brown eyes looked up at Rika. They weren’t currently wet with tears, but the streaks on her face told of a recent bout.

  “I didn’t know mechs could talk. You have a nice voice.”

  “A lot of mechs don’t have mouths anymore,” Rika explained. “They can talk through speakers on their armor, but they usually talk over the Link.”

  “I don’t have the Link yet,” Amy said. “I never get to hear them.”

  Rika wondered how many mechs this girl had seen. Perhaps her father employed some for security.

  “You’re taking me to my father soon?” Amy asked.

  “Yes, Amy. But I’m really glad I got to meet you—you’re one tough girl.” Rika looked up and met Leslie’s eyes. “Leslie and I like to see strong girls like you. Gives us hope for the future.”

  “I don’t feel strong,” Amy said quietly.

  “That’s how I know you are, though,” Rika assured her. “Being strong, even when you don’t feel like you can go on another minute—that’s the real deal. I see it in here.” Rika reached out and touched the young girl on her chest, over her heart. Amy reached up and touched Rika’s index finger.

  “Did it hurt?” she asked.

  “Did what hurt?”

  Amy looked at Rika’s arms, and then her face. “When they…when you…”

  “When my limbs were cut off?” Rika asked gently, swallowing as the memory resurfaced.

  Amy nodded silently in response.

  “Yeah, it hurt a lot.”

  “Does it still hurt?”

  Rika smiled. “Sometimes, but not the way you mean. You’d be surprised what you can get used to.”

  Amy frowned, and then a sad look filled her eyes, and she nodded. “I think I know what you mean.”

  Rika wondered what the girl had endured at the hands of her captors. There weren’t any signs of abuse—but there weren’t always visible indicators. She could also just be referring to how one could even become accustomed to imprisonment. To obeying the orders of others, to not having a voice.

  That was something Rika understood all too well.

  “I’m going to go out and help scout the area. We’ll let you know when it’s all clear.”

  Leslie nodded, stroking Amy’s shoulder, and Rika backed out of the gunship into the dimly lit ravine, settling her helmet on her head.

  Rika reached out to her friend privately as she surveyed the canyon walls rising up sharply on either side.

  Leslie deferred, her mental tone laden with unspoken emotion.

  Rika offered, receiving only an affirmative response from Leslie.

  Rika wondered what Leslie could be referring to. There was no mention of children on her record—though that didn’t mean Leslie never had any. It wasn’t as though Leslie’s record with the Marauder
s comprised her life’s story. The cat-like woman was over two hundred years old; a lot could happen in that amount of time.

  Rika turned her attention back to the task at hand. she asked Barne as she walked to where Chase had directed the pilot to sit underneath a rock outcropping at the base of the cliff.

  Barne observed.

 

  Barne chuckled.

  Rika knew there was innuendo there, but chose to ignore it. Instead, she looked down at the pilot slouched on a rock.

  “Name,” she said aloud.

  “Jenny,” he replied.

  “What?” Chase asked. “ ‘Jenny’?”

  “No,” the pilot shook his head. “Jem-mee. With an M.”

  “Huh. I don’t think I’ve ever heard that name before,” Chase said. “Seems a bit unfortunate.”

  Jemmy scowled. “Why’s that?”

  “Just sounds a lot like ‘Jenny’, is all. What’s it short for? I assume it’s short for something.”

  “Jeremiah,” Jemmy replied. “I really don’t get what the big deal is. What’s your name?”

  “ ‘Marauder’,” Chase replied tersely. “I always thought that ‘Jerry’ was short for ‘Jeremiah’.”

  Jemmy scowled and gave a short shake of his head. “What? ‘Jerry’? That sounds stupid. I know a lot of guys named Jeremiah. No one goes by ‘Jerry’. Sounds like ‘Sherry’, and that’s a girl’s name.”

  “And ‘Jemmy’ doesn’t sound like ‘Jenny’? That’s short for ‘Jennifer’, you know.”

  “You don’t say,” Jemmy sneered. “I’ve neeeeeever heard that before.”

  Chase assessed.

  “This may be the dumbest conversation I’ve overheard in weeks,” Barne commented as he walked by.

  Rika couldn’t help but give a soft laugh. Maybe some dumb conversation was just what she needed right now to take her mind off the other mech.

  “So, you’re K-Strike, right?” Rika asked, getting to the point.

  There had been no markings on the gunship, and Rika hadn’t spotted any of K-Strike’s logos on the soldiers it had disgorged—but it was still the most likely choice.

  Jemmy nodded. “Yeah, but I’m not a fighter; I just fly ships.”

  “Ships that shoot at us,” Chase replied. “Sounds like fighting to me.”

  “We don’t care that you fought for your outfit,” Rika said in a mollifying tone. “That’s what we do, too. There are no hard feelings there.”

  “Though our outfit doesn’t kidnap children,” Chase added, his voice dripping with disdain.

  Rika coaxed privately.

 

  Rika replied.

  Chase gave a laugh over the Link while Jemmy defended himself against Chase’s verbal accusation. “Yeah, but you guys shot first!”

  “OK, that’s enough,” Rika said sharply, turning her helmeted head to Chase. “Go check over the transport with Barne. I got this.”

  Chase shook his head and stomped off, while Rika knelt beside Jemmy and pulled off her helmet.

  “Sorry about him. He’s always a bit testy after missions.”

  “I can tell,” Jemmy said. “Guy’s grouchy and a bit rude.”

  “I’ll let him know to ease up,” Rika said with a warm smile.

  “What happens now?” Jemmy asked. “You shoot me and leave me in the gunship when you blow it?”

  Rika chuckled. “You seem pretty blasé about the whole thing.”

  “I kinda expected to be dead already. I’m just living it up on borrowed time right now.”

  “Marauders don’t execute prisoners,” Rika said.

  “Oh, yeah?” Jemmy asked, his right eyebrow raised skeptically. “What about tying them up and leaving them to die in the bottom of a deep ravine?”

  “I’d group that with ‘execute’,” Rika said.

  “Wow, morals and everything.”

  “Let’s get to my questions, then we can decide what we’ll do with you. First off, how many more from your outfit are on Faseema?

  She could see that Jemmy was having a small crisis of conscience. He didn’t want to give away his own people, but he knew the game they were playing. There was the easy way, or the hard way.

  He also knew that even a gentle slap from Rika was the sort of thing that broke jaws and knocked out teeth.

  “Gunship was the backup team,” he finally said. “No one else on-planet.”

  “And above?” Rika pressed. The gunship could do short flights and atmospheric drops, but it didn’t have food, supplies, or environmental systems for long flights. It certainly wasn’t FTL-capable. That meant K-Strike had a ship nearby.

  Jemmy didn’t reply, but Rika watched on scan his blood pressure rise and heart rate go up, and then drop as he tried to regulate his stress levels.

  When Basilisk had approached Faseema on Patty’s pinnace, there had been over two thousand ships in orbit, and thousands more docked at the various stations.

  While many were certainly not the right class or configuration to be a K-Strike ship, capable of interstellar flight, there were hundreds that could be.

  Space above Faseema even had three battlecruisers in orbit. Remnants of Oran’s military—such as it was.

  Rika took a moment to consider the situation in the Oran system, and what that might mean for an evac. Twenty years ago, Oran had been in its prime; wealthy from being the last system on an FTL spur route that went five light years into the Praesepe cluster.

  Beyond Oran, FTL flight was not possible in the cluster. The dark layer was suffused with dark matter, concentrations that heralded the end of any ship that dared transition into the DL.

  Beyond Oran, only light-huggers plied the black, ships that employed massive ramscoops to draw in interstellar hydrogen as they continually boosted or braked between the stars.

  But nineteen years ago, a new power had arisen in the region; a warlord named Stavros had built up an empire of ships and warriors that he had scavenged in the wake of recent wars on the edge of the cluster.

  Unlike outfits like the Marauders, Stavros wasn’t interested in doing work for hire. He wanted to build a new empire—which he named ‘The Politica’—and he wasn’t afraid to subjugate, or obliterate, the occupants of any system he set his eyes on.

  Oran had been one such system.

  The Oranians had believed themselves secure in their alliances and trade agreements. As a result, they had not built up a large military. The other nations within the cluster were happy to work with them, as the people of the Oran System were fair, and efficiently facilitated the constant two-way handoff of cargo coming into and going out of the nations deeper within Praesepe.

  Which had made them ripe for the picking when Stavros came.

  Oran had fought back, and a few of their neighbors even came to their aid—but in the end, Stavros and his Politica fleets had forced the Oranians back to the three planets in the core of their star system.

  Faseema was the only habitable world of the lot, and so became home to the remnants of the Oranian people.

  Strangely, Stavros did not strike the final blow to destroy the original inhabitants of Oran. He contented himself with controlling the outer system, and the FTL jump points. He even allowed trade and commerce with the Oranian people on the inner planets.

  It was a strategy that turned the inner worlds into a vassal state, dependent upon The Politica for trade and access to the rest of the Praesepe cluster.

  From what Rika could tell, the three cruisers above Faseema may very well represent the
entirety of the local space force.

  If team Basilisk got into space, and K-Strike attacked, there may be no help from the military. Unless they were on a local ship.

  Rika brought her attention back to Jemmy, who had not answered her last question.

  “So, you have a ship up there,” she surmised. “Makes sense. Even without a hole in the side, your gunship wasn’t getting you home. And you’re loyal enough not to screw over your pals up there. I respect that. You’ll be interested in knowing that we didn’t kill everyone on your team—one of them ran off.”

  Jemmy’s eyes narrowed. “That’s not what you told me last night.”

  “I didn’t exactly say I killed everyone,” Rika pointed out with a shrug. “I kinda implied it.”

  “Heavily.”

  “Guilty.”

  “Are you telling me this to get me to think you’re OK, to conclude that my team is a bunch of cowards, or to sow hope of rescue?”

  “Hadn’t thought of that last one,” Rika admitted. “I suppose if your shuttle has a third transponder, that might happen—though I’d like to see them try. Unless they’re willing to do an orbital strike and risk killing the target, then I think we’re OK.”

  “For now,” the pilot allowed.

  “Yes, for now. We’ll let someone know you’re here before we go.” She reached out toward Jemmy, and he pulled back, his fear justified.

  “Shit,” Jemmy muttered as a hypospray extended from the palm of Rika’s hand.

  “Better than death,” Rika judged. “We’ll leave water.”

  The hypospray injected him with a fast-acting neurotoxin, plus a batch of nano to make sure his own internal systems didn’t clear out the neurotoxin too soon.

  she asked Barne and Chase.

 

  Chase added.

  Rika asked.

 

  “Shit,” Rika muttered aloud, though she supposed it could be worse—the hikers could have been right underneath them as Jemmy brought the gunship in.

  She walked back to the gunship and stuck her head in. “All clear. Barne has the transport ready to the south.”

 

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