Through Fire (Darkship Book 4)

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Through Fire (Darkship Book 4) Page 25

by Sarah A. Hoyt


  The reaction came in the form of twin groans, and the one on my side fell—I could hear him or her fall on the other side of the wall. The one on Brisbois’s side, though, said, “Merde” and jumped forward, filling the doorway, burner blazing.

  He sent his burner on a blazing path from side to side, at a level that would have cut us in two. I dropped to my belly, as did Brisbois, avoiding the cutting ray. Simon ducked, then came up, burner in hand, burning a neat hole through the attacker’s heart.

  At the same time, there was a noise from our prisoner. I can’t say what it was now. A grunt, a sound of effort, or even the sound of his feet scuffing the floor.

  I just know I turned. Saw him jumping. There was no thought involved. I nailed him through the chest. Brisbois did the same time, a little above my burn hole. The man fell, twitching, a burner in his hand, pointed at Simon, who was turning back from his pivot, looking bewildered.

  He looked towards us, his eyes wide, his face pale.

  Brisbois got up, dusting himself. “I guess you’re not the only one who can hide weapons, Simon,” he said. Then to me, “You’re well, Madame?”

  I stood up, feeling dizzy and confused, but otherwise fine. I looked at the enemy I was supposed to have shot. Unusually tall. I had shot him through the stomach. Enough life left to do damage, if Simon hadn’t got him through the heart. I nodded. The room smelled of ozone and burn.

  “Merde,” Simon said. It was said in the tone of a deep, philosophical declaration. It was followed by, “We must get out of here.”

  Brisbois put out a hand, as though he were about to say, No, stay.

  But Simon shook his head. “No, you fool. This is not a safe room. It’s a danger room. We can be trapped, in here. Out. Now.”

  We went out. We went out without any attempt at disguise, hands on burners, in a triangle formation, eyes cast all around.

  If they were going to kill us, they were not going to catch us unawares.

  On Thud and Blunder

  We hadn’t gone far before someone shot at us. Simon shot back and a young man dropped from a sort of overhanging walk.

  We were in a vast space, rounded and about twenty feet above. I didn’t know the plan of this base, of course, but it felt like a sort of central room, with corridors like spokes branching out in every direction.

  It struck me as a very dangerous place. It must have struck Brisbois the same way. He looked up at the walk—there were two of them, crisscrossing above, just bridges of planks, with no guardrails. They looked like they’d been put in after the fact, possibly to access newly excavated tunnels in the base of the seacity. This place had a feeling of a warren multiplied by afterthought and necessity.

  Brisbois was fumbling in his pants. Don’t ask me how, but before throwing out the jacket in the meeting room, he must have found the time to stash his ultra-light rope ladder in his pants and somehow have kept it from being found when we were searched. You’d think I’d have noticed that, but apparently, I was dumber than I thought. He threw it now, with precision, and did something. It anchored above, on one of the walkways.

  “Up,” he told me. “I’ll guard you while you’re climbing, and then both of us can guard Simon while he climbs.”

  So much for chivalry, I thought, half-amused, as I perfectly understood that Simon was more important than I was.

  I scrambled up the rope ladder as fast as I could.

  Not fast enough, as a burner ray just missed the top of my head, missed because I’d hesitated for a couple of seconds. Perhaps I hesitated because I’d heard the burner fired. I don’t know. The problem with very enhanced senses is that unless you’re making a particular effort to use them, you make an effort to turn them off. You have to or you can’t live, as you monitor how everyone smells, breathes and moves around you, including those people you can’t see.

  The thing is, if you’re keyed up, you still react to what you heard. You just don’t consciously register it.

  The burner ray blazed just above my head. I could smell hot hair. And Brisbois fired. I thought I heard the distant sound of a body falling. I didn’t turn to look. Before he even said, “Up,” in a tone of command, I was running up the rest of the rungs as fast as I could, to lie flat on my belly on the walkway, surveying down below. I saw a glint of movement at the end of a doorway, and aimed for the foremost portion of movement, since I couldn’t be sure that it was hostile, but I knew that portion that glinted might be a burner.

  I let a burner ray off, and hit the glinting thing, which exploded like a burner will when hit, and at the same time Simon must have shot, because there was a sigh, and the sound of someone falling, and Brisbois said, with a tone of impatience in his voice. “Leave off, Simon. Up. Fast.”

  Simon must have interpreted the “fast” as I would have. So fast that no one could get a shot off while he was on the ladder, because there was a sense of scramble, two burner rays that singed the air just after him, and which were responded to by Brisbois, and then Simon was lying by my side on the plank, smelling of sweat and aftershave, and saying, in his best devil-may-care voice, “Hello, petite, you take the right, I take the left.”

  I looked the way indicated, in time to drop someone with a burner, as I heard the scramble of Brisbois upon the rope ladder.

  He landed with a thud somewhere north of me, and started shooting immediately, while saying, between gulps for breath. “Crawl forward, to the cross, move.”

  “He sure gives orders,” Simon said, but I’d already started moving. Stood to reason the part where the two beams crossed was the safest, and besides, if they were going to chop us down, we’d make it as expensive for them as possible. One thing was to chop the walkway half of which would remain suspended, supported by the crossing place, and the other was to cut right through the middle of the cross and cause the entire structure to fall. They might be willing to do that to get to us, but I doubted they’d have the time.

  As I crawled forward, I burned someone to my left, without even thinking. I heard Simon follow me, and Brisbois’s heavier movement.

  Lying flat, shooting whoever poked a head out, Simon said, “Now what?”

  Brisbois, instead of answering, bellowed to the surrounding area, “Basil! Basil!”

  “What is that going to accomplish?” I asked as I burned someone at our own level, coming out of one of four openings on the second floor.

  “Basil is my second in command here,” Brisbois said. “And I very much doubt he’s been corrupted. Damn it,” he said, as he burned someone below and someone above. “Basil!”

  I could hear fights everywhere, on all levels, and realized that Brisbois was right. Not everyone had been corrupted. But at the same time, a lot of people had been, if there was fighting all over this place.

  “Basil!”

  “He might have been corrupted after all,” Simon said.

  “More likely he’s dead,” Brisbois said.

  But at that moment there was a bellow from somewhere, “I am coming, Brisbois.”

  The shout distracted us long enough for a bright girl, fast on her feet, to make it running onto the walkway, a burner pointed at us. “Stay where you are. If you—”

  So we were valuable as hostages, I thought, and even as I thought it, without moving in a perceptible way, with my hand pressed down and making the slightest gesture, I burned the bright girl at the thighs. She fell, and I’d swear that she was dead before she hit the floor twenty feet below in a shower of blood. The scream from downstairs allowed me to burn a bright boy who’d been advancing close to the wall in the shadows, doubtless till he could get a good aim on us.

  “Don’t shoot,” a voice shouted, and then a word I couldn’t understand.

  I focused on the corridor below, that the shout had come from. There were a lot of people there. I trained my burner on them, and realized Simon was doing the same.

  “Don’t shoot,” Brisbois yelled.

  “What now?” I asked, while Simon said, “Can they
be trusted?”

  Brisbois said something that sounded like a swear word, followed by “It’s Basil. If he’s been taken over, we’re dead, because everyone will be against us, here.”

  “You have our word, unless you do something funny,” Simon yelled.

  A group of people emerged into the open space below. Like the men before, they wore the white uniforms of Simon’s house guard. Well, at least they had been white once upon a time, and were now varying shades of dirt, with liberal application of reddish-black blood.

  The man in the lead was built like Brisbois, and had blood-matted gray hair. He shouted, “Put your hands up,” and I thought he meant us, but the people below, the people with him, protested, and he said again, “Put your hands up or they burn us from above, and I will not blame them. Drop weapons and put your hands up.”

  There were the thuds of several burners dropped, disregarded, and then hands went up.

  “You have us at your mercy, Brisbois,” he said. “I am most heartily sorry for this mess.”

  “Unless, of course,” Simon said, “you have comrades in all those hallways, ready to erupt the moment we come down.”

  The man that Brisbois said was Basil looked surprised as though the idea hadn’t occurred to him.

  I’d been straining my senses again, trying to hear more than normal people could. “There are no people in those tunnels,” I said.

  The decision of course was ultimately Brisbois’s, because this was a man he knew. How much confidence he had in him made all the difference. Brisbois still sounded a little winded. I guess what we’d been doing was a lot for someone older and heavier than Simon and I were.

  He said, “He knows we’d still burn him if he pulled something funny.”

  “Nothing funny,” Basil said. “I’m not laughing.”

  “Well, in that,” Brisbois said, and looking backward I saw him attach his little rope ladder and drop it. “You have my full concurrence.”

  And then there was a sound of running feet from one of the hallways.

  “Not ours,” Basil shouted, and I reached for the burner.

  When about twenty people erupted into the space below from one of the tunnels, I had a bead center mass on the lead man, and just barely stopped myself from shooting Jonathan LaForce.

  “Don’t shoot,” I shouted, but it was probably superfluous, since both Brisbois and Simon knew him.

  The newcomers were soaked, dripping water from what looked like the same sort of amphibian suit I was wearing. In Jonathan LaForce’s case it also dripped from his hair and beard. Between them his eyes blazed furiously. “What in hell,” he said. “Has been going on here?”

  Let There Be Light

  To say the next half hour was confused is not unakin to saying that the ocean is a little wet.

  We did come down from our roost and, after a brief conference, Brisbois told Basil to pick up his burner and to let his people rearm themselves. After that, we separated into groups of two and three to go search the hallways and the rooms off them.

  I cannot prove that Brisbois assigned Simon and myself the safest, most boring hallway in the entire compound. I don’t even know how he could have found out that it was the safest hallway. After all, if he’d known that, then he’d know who was in every place and he wouldn’t have needed to send patrols out, which they needed to do because the normal monitoring system had been tampered with and none of the sensors were working or couldn’t be trusted.

  If you get the impression that things aren’t very clear in my memory, you are right. I was tired and coming down from a period of high stress, so words and sentences reached me, out of whole conversations, and I remembered only the impression of them.

  Thus I retained the impression their surveillance system had broken, and so they sent us out, by twos and threes, and they sent me with Simon, who did the thing in style.

  We walked down the hallway as silently as we could, listening at every door and kicking open the doors from the side, in the best virtus detective style, before peeking in, after which he searched the room, while I stayed in the hallway, in case someone charged out of another of the rooms, and then we traded, in case I could find something he had missed.

  There must have been twenty bedrooms off that hallway, and I was starting to think that they were all unoccupied, until we got to the end, where there had obviously been a fight, and two young men lay dead on the floor, in pools of blood, each with a burner still in his hand.

  And then we returned to the common area, and were pulled into a room where things were being discussed, or explained. Or both. At first I wasn’t very sure what was happening.

  As I said, I was tired and confused.

  The group consisted of myself and Simon and Basil, LaForce and Mailys, and some other people who’d come in with Jonathan LaForce and Mailys, but whom I didn’t know. The strangers were very quiet. Mailys told me she’d left Corin with Jonathan LaForce’s family, having convinced him to stay in order to keep them safe. She smiled when she said that, obviously very proud of having found the right way to talk Corin into not running any unnecessary risks.

  I remember that, but nothing else said to me or around me left any impression.

  However, little by little, after some young man in a relatively clean uniform had brought me three cups of coffee in quick succession, I stopped shivering and began feeling somewhat warmer and started paying attention to those around me.

  Maybe it wasn’t as much time as I thought. Brisbois and Simon both looked at me with concern, but they thought I couldn’t see it, I think, so I pretended I didn’t, for the sake of keeping the peace.

  Basil looked tired, and he too was sipping coffee. He looked older than Brisbois, so he was a survivor from the regime of Simon’s father. Which made me wonder if he was fully loyal. He frowned at me as if from a long distance, and unless I am completely wrong, at some point he asked me, “Jarl Ingemar?”

  I don’t know what the rest of the question was, because that part was either never heard or not rightly understood. I answered what I thought he was asking. “Has been dead,” I said, “for over twenty years. He and Doctor Bartolomeu Dias created male and female clones of themselves. For—” I thought about the confused tangle of motives I knew about and the ones I could infer, and then remembered Doc Bartolomeu, who might be the closest thing I had had to a relative, or at least to a relative who cared for me. In the arid landscape of my childhood, he’d been a kindly if curmudgeonly presence, always ready with jokes or advice, with encouragement and derision. He hadn’t treated me like a child of the gods. I suppose, to him, I wasn’t, just the closest thing to a daughter of an old friend.

  So I thought of him and the less than charitable ideas I’d had about why Kit and I and possibly others—though Doc denied going through with creating his own male and female clones—had been created. And then I kept that part to myself and said, “For company, and I suppose for a new experience in their old age. Raising children. Only Jarl died before I was born.”

  “Oh,” he said, and looked at me, a long evaluating look.

  If I hadn’t known that Athena Sinistra, like me the clone of a Mule, had been created so that her father’s brain could be transplanted to her head, I’d have been offended. As it was, I merely shrugged it off and returned his scrutiny with an open stare.

  He shook his head. “You understand finding your DNA…Well…We…Brisbois tells me you were born and raised in a colony not populated by Mules. He says you can’t reveal its placement, or your origin, and I’m certainly not going to force the issue. I don’t have an interest in it. Even if you came from the world of darkship thieves. I know that Good Man Sinistra had an entire project of catching the darkship thieves, but there is no real damage from them. More power pods are created than can be harvested in time. It’s possible the thieves are doing us a favor, by diminishing the chances that the pods will explode and reseed, making the power trees even harder to harvest. So, if your planet of origin is some
harmless colony of the normal people who left with the Mules and were abandoned behind, we don’t mind.

  “On the other hand, it is hard not to imagine that the Mules who named their ship Je Reviens had something planned.”

  “Whatever they had planned,” this was Simon, crisply. He disliked the term “Mule” as intensely as the original Mules had. He referred to them as they’d referred to themselves, as biorulers or biolords. “Their plans went wrong almost from the beginning, since they did not plan on leaving half of their number behind. So, I think we can stop wondering what they meant. And Jarl is dead. He won’t be coming back.”

  I felt a twinge of discomfort, since Jarl had more or less tried to come back from the grave by taking over Kit, and Simon knew it too, but neither of us spoke of that.

  Basil sighed. “Well, that’s it. And we know who you are and what you are, of course, Monsieur St. Cyr.”

  Simon smiled, his lips quirking upwards on the right. It wasn’t a nice smile. “I know who I am, also,” he said.

  Brisbois made a sound that might have been “merde” under his breath.

  “What I want to know,” Jonathan LaForce said. “Has very little to do with who St. Cyr or Madame Sienna is and everything to do with how in holy hell you got into this mess here.” He looked at Basil, his eyes conveying barely restrained fury. “This was a safe place. Known only by me. There are others of these places even I don’t know of. Brisbois—” He looked at Alexis. “Set these up because he thought the carefully planned transition in the revolution might go wrong. They were supposed to be safe!” LaForce’s fist was huge, and it banged on the table hard. “We were supposed to be safe here and able to work a counterattack. So, we come back to this?”

  Basil held the bridge of his nose between thumb and forefinger for a count of two minutes, his eyes closed, his head slightly inclined. When he looked back up, he looked…bereft. Like a man who had a plan and had done his best to make it work, only to find that he was on the wrong track the whole time. “I still had to staff these shelters with people. Our people.”

 

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