Throne of Stars

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Throne of Stars Page 45

by David Weber


  “Turner! Find Rastar. Tell him to take all the Vashin to Mudh Hemh; it’s under attack! Spread the word!”

  “This is most unpleasant.” The Gastan lowered his binoculars. “They’re burning my town. If they think this is going to improve negotiations, they are sorely mistaken.”

  “Worry about that after we find out who’s alive and who’s dead,” Pahner muttered.

  “Erraah!” Despreaux butt-stroked the Krath so hard in the face that it smashed her rifle, but it didn’t really matter. She was flat out of ammo . . . and just about out of time.

  “Son of a vern!” Pedi yelled as she blocked a strike from a Shadem staff. She drove forward in a windmill of steel that ended in a kick which sent the Shadem stumbling back over the edge of the wall. His intestines slithered after him.

  “Pedi!” Despreaux gasped, and threw her broken rifle past the Shin like a spear.

  Sor Teb blocked the missile with one of his swords and snarled.

  “I’m going to enjoy sending you to the Fire, you Shin witch!” the Scourge commander told the Gastan’s daughter. He was just about the last Krath on the battlements. But, then again, they were pretty much alone, as well.

  “You’ll have to manage it first,” Pedi said, and darted forward.

  From Despreaux’s perspective, the engagement was nothing but a vortex of steel. The sound of the swords grating on each other sounded like so many sharpening steels in action, and neither combatant was paying attention to any of the other battles going on around them. They were in a focused, private world of steel and fury, and as Despreaux watched the deadly, flashing blades, she realized to her amazement that Pedi’s reflexes were just as extraordinary as Roger’s or Sor Teb’s.

  They broke apart for moment, as if by mutual consent, just as Cord limped up to them, and the shaman shook his head.

  “Wrist! Keep your wrist straight!”

  “Thanks,” Pedi panted. “I’ll keep that in mind.”

  “No, I was talking to him,” Cord said. “His technique is awful. Your wrist is perfect, darling.”

  “Darling?” Pedi looked over her shoulder at him.

  “I’m sorry,” he said. “It just slipped out.”

  “I’m going to feed you, your boyfriend, and your get to the Fire,” the Scourge panted.

  “You talk big,” Pedi replied, focusing once more on the task at hand. “We’ll see who’s going to the Fire today.”

  “Yes, we will.”

  Sor Teb gestured with his left false-hand. Pedi’s eyes flicked towards it for just an instant, and that was when his right false-hand moved. It threw a handful of dust into her face, and he drove forward right behind.

  Pedi flung up a false-arm. She managed to stop most of the powder, but some of it still took her in the eyes and mouth, and she buckled as instantaneous pain and nausea ripped through her. But she still managed to drop to one knee, and she drove upward with both swords as the Scourge’s downward cut sliced into her shoulder.

  Sor Teb looked at the two swords buried to their quillons in his stomach and coughed out a gush of blood.

  “No,” he muttered, raising his off-hand sword.

  Cord raised his spear, but before he could drive it forward, Dogzard—who’d had enough of this stupid single-combat and fairness stuff—crashed into the dying Krath’s chest and settled matters by ripping out his throat.

  Despreaux darted forward and caught Pedi as blood from her shoulder poured out.

  “Damn it, why is Dobrescu never around when you need him?” she demanded of the universe.

  “Pedi?” Cord went to his knees beside her, ripping at his hated clothing until he tore off a strip and wadded it into an impromptu bandage. “Pedi, don’t go away from me.”

  “I . . .” She shuddered. “It hurts.”

  “The healer Dobrescu will be here soon,” Cord said. “He’s a miracle worker—look at me. Just hold on. Don’t . . . don’t leave me. I don’t want to lose you, too.”

  “You won’t . . . darling,” she grimaced a smile. “I have too much to live for. You . . . and your children.”

  “Mine?” he repeated, almost absently. Then grabbed his horns in frustration. “Mine? How?”

  “I . . . I’m sorry,” she said with a sigh. “You were so hurt, so needing. You came into your season while you were injured. I couldn’t stand to watch you in such agony, and you were calling for your . . . for your wife. I—Ahhh!” She panted in pain. “I love you. . . .”

  “Look, this is touching and everything, but are you going to let me work on her shoulder, or not?” Dobrescu demanded.

  “What?” Cord looked up as the medic tapped him with a foot, then stood. “Where did you come from?”

  “I said I don’t have much use for civan,” the warrant officer replied. “Never said I didn’t know how to use one,” he added as the first of the Vashin appeared on the walls.

  “Oh,” he added. “The cavalry’s here.”

  Roger opened his eyes and groaned.

  “Crap,” he muttered. His ribs hurt like hell.

  “Water?” Dobrescu inquired sweetly. The medic had dark rings around his eyes, but he looked as mischievous as ever.

  “Well, since I’m alive, I take it we won.” Roger took a sip from the proffered camelback, then grimaced. “What was the egg breakage?”

  “Pretty hefty, Your Highness,” a new voice said, and Roger turned his head just as Pahner sat down beside his bed. The captain looked as if he hadn’t slept in far too long, either.

  “Tell me I look better than you two,” the prince said, and winced as he levered himself very gingerly into a sitting position.

  “Actually, you probably do,” Pahner replied. “Doc?”

  “Four broken ribs and contusions, mainly,” the medic said. “Which is no big deal with His Highness.” He grinned tiredly at Roger. “I kept you under for a day just to keep you out of the way and give your nannies a chance to begin the repairs,” he added. “You can start moving around whenever you like.”

  “It hurts like . . . heck,” Roger noted.

  “That’s good,” Dobrescu told him, and stood. “It might keep you from doing stupid things.”

  He tapped the prince lightly on the shoulder and walked out, leaving him with Pahner.

  “You’re alive,” Roger said, returning his attention to the Marine. “That’s good. How are we doing otherwise?”

  “Just fine,” Pahner replied. “The breakage was bad for the Shin, both in Nopet and Mudh Hemh. But they’ll survive. The Gastan is talking about letting some of the Krath settle in the valley, since the Shin own both citadels again.”

  “The company? Diasprans? Vashin?”

  “Low losses,” Pahner reassured him. “We didn’t lose any Marines, not even Despreaux—who, I note, you haven’t asked about. We lost two Vashin, and a Diaspran. That’s it.”

  “Good,” Roger sighed. “I was going to ask about Nimashet as soon as I’d asked about business.”

  “I won’t tell her about your priorities,” the captain said with a rare smile. “But I’ll note that I approve. And at least we’ve solved the whole problem with Cord and Pedi.”

  “What problem? I knew something was going on, but I couldn’t tell what.”

  “Ah, you were asleep for that.” Pahner’s smile segued into a grin, and he shook his head as he pulled out a bisti root and cut off a slice. “The Gastan wasn’t all that happy, either, although he wasn’t showing it. It turns out she’s pregnant.”

  “Pedi?” Roger asked. “When? How?” He paused a moment, then shook his head, an almost awed expression on his face. “Cord?”

  “Cord,” Pahner confirmed. “While he was recovering. He didn’t have any memory of it.”

  “Ouch. Oh, and the whole ‘I cannot use my asi that way’ thing . . . Oh, man!”

  “Yes,” the captain said. “Which was why she couldn’t tell him whose child—children—they were. He assumed she’d had . . . a fling, for want of a better term. Add to tha
t that she was considerably less than half his age but that he was . . . interested in her anyway, and—”

  Roger laughed, then clutched at his chest in pain.

  “Oh, my. May-December romance, indeed!” he got out, almost crying between the laughter and the pain.

  “So now the Gastan has a new son-in-law, who’s older than he is,” Pahner acknowledged. “And from what Eleanora and I can figure out, it’s even more complicated than that. Since the Gastan’s oldest son, Thertik, managed to get himself killed, Pedi is his legal heir. But a benan can’t inherit his position. There have been a handful of female Gastans in the history of the Shin, although they’re very rare. It’s more common for a female heir’s consort to inherit the title. But a benan is required to follow his—or her—benai wherever that leads, so he can hardly stay home to rule the tribes. Unfortunately, a benan’s children can inherit. So Cord’s children—the Gastan’s grandchildren—are the legal heirs to the overlordship of the Vales.”

  “And since Cord insists on following me off-planet . . .”

  “Precisely,” the captain agreed with a thin smile. “I hope you’ll pardon me for pointing this out, Your Highness, but the three of you have a positive talent for leaving chaos in your wake. Well, to be fair, I suppose I shouldn’t include Cord in that. Not, at least, until we met the Lemmar and his sense of honor got him into all of this!”

  “I think you’re being too hard on him,” Roger said with a laugh. “As far as I can tell, he fought the good fight to resist his attraction to Pedi. It’s not his fault that he lost in the end—especially not with her taking such unscrupulous advantage of him when he was unconscious and unable to resist her advances!”

  “You would come up with something like that,” Pahner told him, shaking his head in resignation. “And I suppose it actually is sort of funny, in a way. But don’t you dare laugh when you see them. They’re like a couple of teenagers. It’s worse than you and Despreaux.”

  “Oh, thank you very much, Captain,” Roger said, and chuckled. Then grimaced as the chuckle claimed its own stab of pain.

  “Or Julian and Kosutic. Or Berent and Stickles. Or, God forbid, Geno Macek and Gunny Jin, for that matter.” The Marine sighed, rubbing his head.

  “I’m sorry, Armand.” Roger reached out to his bodyguards’ commander. “I know we’ve laid burdens on you that were unnecessary, and for that, I apologize.”

  The captain looked down at the hand on his arm, then patted it and shook his head.

  “Command challenges just make life more interesting,” he said with a faint smile. “Although, after a certain point, they do tend to drag you down.” He shook his head again. “For example, I would really appreciate it if you could stay out of one-shot range for the foreseeable future.”

  “Sounds like a good idea to me,” Roger acknowledged, settling back against his pillows and feeling very carefully of his chest. “Of course, it never occurred to me that the bastard might have one.”

  “It wouldn’t have occurred to me, either,” Pahner admitted. “And I can’t say that the fact that he did makes me very happy. But at least he didn’t drill you clean.”

  “I don’t understand why he didn’t,” Roger said thoughtfully. “I thought once one of those things locked onto your breastplate, you were pretty much screwed.”

  “Pretty much,” Pahner agreed. “But from the looks of your armor, you managed to twist sideways just as he hit the tractor-lock. It didn’t lock squarely. Instead of depositing the explosive charge at right angles, it hit you obliquely and a lot of the force of the explosion leaked sideways across the face of the plate. It was still enough for the shock damage to break your ribs, disable about sixty percent of your armor systems, and knock you unconscious. But it never managed to blow a scab loose, and you were lucky, Your Highness. Your anti-kinetic systems lasted long enough to keep it from doing anything worse than pounding your ribs—hard. Doc Dobrescu wouldn’t have been quite so cheerful about the state they were in if you didn’t have an even better nanny pack than the Corps gets issued. I know they still hurt like hell, but they’re rebuilding fast.”

  “I know I was lucky,” Roger agreed, still exploring his chest gently. “It just doesn’t feel that way.”

  “Maybe not,” Pahner said somberly. “But if he’d manage to blast that scab loose, all the anti-k systems in the galaxy wouldn’t have helped you. And if they’d failed, the concussion alone should have turned every bone in your torso into paste.” He shook his head. “No, Your Highness. You definitely were lucky. That’s all that saved you—well, that and those souped-up reflexes of yours. I don’t know if anyone else could have turned enough to take it at a survivable angle.”

  “And what about Sor Teb?”

  “He was lucky, too . . . for a while,” Pahner said. “The tractor must have gotten a good enough lock to at least stay put, instead of blasting right back through him. And the angle must have been oblique enough to direct the back blast away from him. I’m sure he figured you really were dead, since he had a second one-shot on him and he didn’t use it on you to make certain. Unfortunately for him, he encountered Pedi on the parapet and suffered a mischief.”

  “God, I bet she enjoyed that!”

  “You could put it that way. Especially since it was what pushed Cord into declaring his feelings for her,” Pahner agreed with an evil chuckle.

  “But to return to you and Sor Teb’s little surprise,” the Marine continued, “he may not have managed to kill you, but he certainly did manage to kill your armor.”

  “Which isn’t good,” Roger said with a grimace. “It’s not like we had all that many operable suits to begin with.”

  “Oh, it isn’t all that bad,” Pahner reassured him. “In fact, Poertena ought to be able to take care of the problem without too much difficulty. Assuming, of course, that we take the spaceport before he implodes.”

  “Poertena?” Roger quirked an eyebrow. “What’s his problem?”

  “He just found out that Mountmarch has a complete Class One manufactory at the port,” Pahner said, standing up. “Can you imagine Poertena with a full-scale manufacturing plant at his mercy?”

  CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE

  Temu Jin picked up his cup and sipped. His attention—obviously—was entirely focused on the coffee, and he kept it that way as the timer clicked over to just past Mardukan noon.

  There were normally two com techs on duty in the communications control center, but at lunchtime, they went off duty, one at a time, to get something to eat. There were still the two guards, of course, but they were stationed in the vestibule just inside the blast door that was the only possible way in, not in the center itself. On this particular day, it was the other tech’s turn to go to lunch first, which left Jin as the only person actually in the room. Which worked out just fine for him. Especially since the com center also doubled as the control room for the security perimeter.

  He watched the schematic from the corner of one eye and nodded internally as the first notation of a possible perimeter breach popped up on his screen. Right on time. It was nice to deal with professionals for a change.

  The com center guards were supposed to be cycled off together just before noon, instead of one of them at a time going to get something to eat, but their relief was late. That wasn’t particularly unusual—the relief was usually late on Marduk, and they would be late in their turn. But it meant they were suffering just a tad from low blood sugar, which made them more surly than usual with the Mardukan messenger.

  “What do you want, scummy?”

  “I have a message from the governor,” Rastar said, in carefully badly accented Imperial as he held his message up in front of the security cameras. He stood there in the poncholike garment the peasants in the area around the spaceport habitually wore, and made himself look as much like one of the local rubes as he could.

  It must have worked.

  “Okay, we’ll give it to the geek,” one of the guards said, and keyed in the code to o
pen the door.

  “Thank you,” Rastar said in his horrible Imperial, and stepped inside to hand over the folded message as the door finished opening. Then he reached under the “poncho” once more.

  “And if you’ll be good enough to take me to the communications center,” he continued in suddenly flawless Imperial, as four polymer-bladed knives closed like scissors on the guards’ necks, “I’ll let you live.”

  “Rastar and Jin have the communications center,” Julian said. “Fain’s team has taken down the guards on the main gate. The Shin are through the wire on the spaceport, and they’ve seized the vehicle park. I’ve got the code that the plasma towers are off-line.”

  “I’ll believe it when we’re in,” Pahner growled, and wiggled his body, writhing up through the chunks of ore in the back of the turom cart.

  The main difficulty in taking the spaceport was that the sensor net extended well beyond its perimeter. Besides increased radar sweeps from the geosynchronous satellite, there were micrite sensors scattered all over the surroundings. Those tiny sensors sent back readings on power emissions, nitrite traces, metal forms, and a variety of other indicators that could mean a potential attack by either low-tech or high-tech foes. Defeating them wasn’t really hard, but it was time-consuming and complex.

  One of the things the sensors looked for was evidence of ChromSten or high-density power packs. To cloak both of those, the armored personnel had been secreted in piles of metallic ores after tests had shown that the ores were sufficient to hide them from the Marines’ own sensors.

  The facility routinely purchased bulk materials from the Krath and the Shin, and, once again, the IBI agent had been invaluable. He’d spent his time and limited resources suborning various persons in the facility, which gave him all sorts of interesting handles when he needed them. In this case, he’d not only convinced the chief of supply that he needed to order “a little early,” but had even given him a list of what to order. If the chief hadn’t chosen to comply, certain pictures that he had on his personal system would have been turned over to the governor. Amazingly, an order for six carts of iron ore and ten of mixed foodstuffs had been placed within a day.

 

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