“I was a young fool,” he agreed. “I take it you like him, then?”
“From what I know of him,” Vaughn said. “Major Shaklee spoke highly of him, as did a handful of his subordinates. He definitely shows promise.”
“More than shows it,” Marius pointed out. “He killed four battlecruisers and took the only prisoners that we got out of the whole war, at least until they came through the Asimov Point and tried to take us out.”
The thought made him grimace. The attacking starships had all been destroyed, but a handful of starfighter pilots had surrendered once they realized they’d been abandoned. Their interrogations had been brief; the pilots knew little beyond their own roles in the battle, certainly nothing about Admiral Justinian’s overall strategy. He’d hoped to learn about why they’d thrown themselves in with the rogue admiral, but they hadn’t been forthcoming. ONI would have to use drugs or direct brain implantation to learn their secrets, and that didn’t seem too likely under the circumstances.
“You’re the admiral,” Vaughn reminded him. “If you have doubts about him, act on them; if not...”
“Shit or get off the pot?” Marius guessed.
“Exactly,” agreed Vaughn.
Marius shook his head, studying the display. “I’m giving the Enterprise to Captain Fowler. He’ll be delighted to get out of the line of fire and he can certainly command her long enough to take her back to Earth...”
He snorted. Captain Fowler had somehow been promoted time and time again, mainly for looking like a 3D star, but it hadn’t taken long for Marius to realize that the man had a soft, panicky interior. Fowler had never seen action before, at least not against an equal or superior force, and he’d come close to losing it completely during the Battle of Jefferson. Only the threat of being relieved of command from Commodore Sheridan had kept Fowler and his ship in line. If Fowler had fled, his ship would have been isolated and exposed to enemy fire. Her rapid destruction would have been a certainty.
Perhaps that, too, had kept Captain Fowler in formation.
“He won’t hesitate to stab you in the back,” Vaughn warned. “He’ll whine to the Senate and his backers about how you mistreated him and threatened him with death or worse.”
“Fuck him,” Marius said tartly. “He’s stupid enough to think that command of Enterprise is a reward, even now. He can take the carrier back home, along with my report on his fitness—and Commodore Sheridan’s report. We’ll see what the Admiralty makes of that.”
“Make sure they’re in an unbreakable code,” Vaughn warned. “I’d bet you dinner at the Hotel Splendid that he’ll read them as soon as he’s out of reach, otherwise.”
Marius nodded, then ran his hand through his hair. Legally, he could have relieved Fowler of command and sent him back on a civilian ship to face a court martial, but that would have opened him to attacks from the captain’s backers and family. Sending him back on the Enterprise would reduce the number of attacks, at least until the Admiralty had a chance to decide if he should face a court martial or simply be transferred to an isolated mining station in the middle of nowhere. The Federation Navy had plenty of places to promote incompetent officers into command positions where they could do no harm.
“On a different note, the Governor of Maskirovka requested that you assign a pair of Marine Regiments to support the Planetary Guard,” Vaughn said.
Marius frowned in surprise. The request was probably working its way through his inbox somewhere, but he hadn’t seen it yet. Vaughn would have been copied into any requests for Marine support.
“He didn’t say why,” Vaughn went on, “but Maskirovka does have an intelligent race. Perhaps they’re causing trouble for the settlers.”
“Or perhaps the settlers are thinking about causing trouble themselves,” Marius said. He’d been on the Rim too long to share the unthinking prejudice against aliens held by most of the human race, but when push came to shove it was humanity first, last, and always. “How long has it been since the Inheritance Wars? Long enough for us to forget the carnage?”
“Boskone wasn’t involved in the wars,” Vaughn pointed out. “The chances are good that the governor is just as deeply corrupt as any other politician. His subjects may feel that they have nothing to lose through rebellion, and the settlers may feel like throwing their lot in with Admiral Justinian. How can it get any worse for them?”
“It can always get worse,” Marius said sourly. “Anyway, please go check it out. We can’t advance through the Asimov Point without reinforcements, so if you think it’s necessary, ship in a couple of regiments and deploy them as you see fit.”
“They’ll be pleased,” Vaughn said. “Damage control isn’t what we jarheads signed up to do.”
Marius shrugged. Now that Admiral Justinian’s forces had been beaten back, he’d taken the risk of carrying out more extensive repair work on some of his starships. ECM buoys would create the impression that his fleet was still on alert, watching the Asimov Point carefully. The CSP would keep any intruding recon drones from getting close enough to realize that they were being conned.
But even with the Fleet Train, the repair work was going slowly. Too slowly. He’d sent an urgent request to the Core Worlds for as many mobile repair yards as they could send forward, along with fortress components and additional crew. But he doubted he’d get everything he wanted, or even everything that he absolutely needed. He knew that the Senate would still be reeling from the disaster at Jefferson, and would be looking for someone to blame—him.
But he couldn’t let that affect him, or his decision making, or this war would be over soon—and in a way the Grand Senate assuredly would not like.
“They may need to do more of it,” Marius said after another long pause. “We can’t leave this system without risking overall defeat.”
“So who gets there first with the most wins,” Vaughn said thoughtfully. “In the long run...can Justinian win?”
Marius studied the star chart. “If the other Sector Admirals and governors remain loyal, then no—he can and will be ground into powder once the massed Federation Navy is pointed at him. If not...the Federation could shatter into a myriad of competing powers. In that case, Justinian might win by default.”
“Not a pleasant thought,” Vaughn agreed. “One other point: I would like to deploy Marines to escort the younger officers and crew on Maskirovka. They won’t have any experience of life on a settled world, and may get into real trouble.”
“Babysitting,” Marius said with a nod. “See to it. They won’t like it, but it’s for their own good. I can do without having to search for kidnapped crew—or bailing them out of jail.”
“You could always send in the Marines and break them out of jail,” Vaughn offered.
Marius allowed himself a moment to consider the image before dismissing it with a wave of his hand.
“Come on; it will be fun—and cheap.” Vaughn’s eyes twinkled.
“Be gone, tempter,” Marius said with a laugh. “I have to write the report. If I’m really lucky, it won’t get me summarily demoted when the Senate reads it.”
“They won’t do that, will they?” Vaughn asked. “You got us all out of the trap.”
“Why not?” Marius asked. “Who else do they have to blame?”
Chapter Nineteen
The Human Race’s Burden, according to the Federation, is to civilize every other intelligent race. Toward this end, the human race assumes control of every other intelligent race encountered by the Federation. Despite the propaganda, the overall intent is far more sinister—by making other races dependent upon humanity, any threat they pose is forever removed. Needless to say, this practice causes no end of resentment among the client races...
-An Irreverent Guide to the Federation, 4000 A.D.
Maskirovka, Boskone System, 4092
“You see, all the Purples cannot be trusted,” the man announced. Roman hadn’t caught his name when he’d turned up and bought the table of Navy personn
el a round of drinks. “We have to keep the boot on their necks for their own good...”
Roman shrugged, doing his best to conceal his disgust. After a day in Maskirovka City—the unimaginatively named capital of Maskirovka—he’d decided to see some local color and head to one of the alien cities on the gas giant’s moon. There had been little to see in Maskirovka City, just another spacer town with bars, brothels and overpriced souvenirs, trying to drive spacers and other visitors deeper into debt. Merchant crewmen were generally paid in a lump sum whenever they reached safe harbor and the planet’s inhabitants were devoted to relieving them of as much money as possible before they left. Not that most of them complained. After months on merchant ships, breathing in each other’s air and getting on each other’s nerves, the chance to get drunk and enjoy some female company had to be very welcome.
“They just can’t be trusted,” the man insisted, waving toward the bartender. “Can you believe—they think they would have achieved greatness if not for us!”
Roman had seen aliens before, but he’d never previously encountered a native of Maskirovka. But that shouldn’t have been surprising. According to the files he’d accessed on the way down to the surface, none had ever set foot off the planet, unless they’d been lifted illegally by smugglers and taken to a hidden base.
The alien showed no sign of listening to the conversation. Like roughly half of the aliens known to humanity, the Purples were humanoid, but there the resemblance ended. Their skins looked like gooseberry skins—although of a sickeningly purple color—and their eyes were dark and lidless. The alien was clearly female—she had prominent breasts, larger than the human norm—and was actually taller than Roman. If he recalled the files correctly—his implants lacked a secure connection on the surface—the intelligent Purples were all female; the males weren’t intelligent and lived only for food, fighting and fucking, perhaps not in that order. He’d mentioned that to Elf, who was seated on the other side of the table with a bored expression, and she’d quipped that they were just like humanity. Roman had blushed scarlet before he realized that he was being teased.
He deliberately looked away from the alien—and their unwelcome entertainer—and studied the bar itself. It had started life as an alien building and all the proportions were odd, even though someone had insisted on modifying it to better suit humans. A display of alien artwork covered one wall, paintings that reminded him of some of the early rock carvings done by RockRat asteroid miners during the First Expansion Era. Many focused on humanity and while the overall tone was positive, there was something sinister about seeing his race portrayed as godlike entities.
But perhaps the natives considered them to be gods. Humans had changed the shape of their world forever.
Years ago, according to the files, the Purples—their name for themselves was unpronounceable by humans—had been on the verge of entering the computer age. The files claimed that they’d been loosely comparable to Earth of 1914, although they’d actually advanced faster in some areas than humanity had—a fact that had been carefully buried under a mountain of statistics and dry data. It had taken Roman several hours to work it out from the sparse hints in the files. In fact, he had a suspicion that if Enterprise’s computers hadn’t recognized him as her acting captain, he wouldn’t have been able to access and download the complete file.
Their advancement hadn’t helped when the Federation arrived. The human race had landed, made contact with the alien leaders and started supplying them with technology to help correct their problems. Free food had been provided for aliens on the verge of starvation, technological fixes had been offered for other issues...and the humans had eventually taken over the world. Over the years, the Purples had been systematically reduced to little more than zoo animals, seemingly for their own good.
But it hadn’t taken long for Roman to realize the truth, even though the files had never stated it directly. The Federation’s intervention—in the name of saving the Purples from themselves—had ensured that the Purples would never become a threat to humanity.
The irony was chilling. Humanity’s first contact had almost been its last. The Snakes wouldn’t have allowed a race as adaptable as humanity to live—they’d enslaved several races, but exterminated at least two others—and humanity had learned a hard lesson. No alien race could be allowed to become a threat. Even without the Imperialist Faction pushing the Federation into war, the Blue Star War might have taken place anyway. An alien race with a space navy, even a primitive and unreliable one, was a clear and present threat. It could not be tolerated, even if it meant reducing entire races to beggars, dependent on human charity.
Roman jumped as a hand landed on his shoulder.
“Don’t think we’re ungrateful because of your presence,” the man who’d bought them drinks said. “You help keep the Purples in their place and...why, I hear that some of them are rejecting the benefits of civilization and are taking off to the wildness and hiding and...”
It took all the self-control Roman had not to put one of his fists next to the man’s nose. It would have been easy. The man was half-drunk, and Roman had barely touched his beer—overpriced, tasting suspiciously like it had come out of the wrong end of a horse—and it was clear that the man had no formal fighting training. Yes, he’d been warned not to cause friction with the locals, but how much nonsense could he take?
“Thank you for your words of wisdom,” Corporal Hastings said. Unlike Elf, the burly Marine exuded an air of menace. “Go away.”
The man looked at him with wide eyes, and then stumbled away, tripping over a chair in his haste.
Roman watched him go, wondering just how much of that had been an act. The settlers had been very welcoming to the Navy crewmen on leave, but there was something unsettling about their demeanor. It occurred to Roman for the first time that the settlers were hugely outnumbered by the Purples. If the Purples had revolution and mass slaughter in mind, the only thing keeping them back was orbital bombardment…and Marine Regiments from the Federation Navy.
“Thank you,” he said sincerely.
Hastings made a show of saluting. Traditionally, Marines only reported to captains and Roman was no longer even an acting captain. On the other hand, he’d earned respect from officers and men who were many years his senior.
“Why...?” Roman wasn’t able to finish the thought.
“That’s a fairly typical attitude for a settler,” Elf said seriously. “They’re the ones who don’t feel like breaking the ground on a new planet, so they find their way to a system where the locals will do all the work—if they know what is good for them. And if they don’t know, the settlers will be happy to break some heads until the locals realize where their best interests lie. Along the Rim, there are places where humans and aliens live together in perfect harmony—but not here, and certainly not formally. The aliens have no rights on their own planets.”
Roman looked toward the bartender. She mopped the counter, seeming to pay no attention to them at all. A pair of males—smaller, nasty-looking humanoids—were running around in back, jumping onto the counter to look at the human visitors. Roman shuddered at the look on their faces, the complete absence of anything but rapidly shifting emotion. The females, according to the files, traded males, effectively as pets. And yet, when a female Purple entered mating season, she was compelled to submit to a creature that was little more than an animal. The females had even bred males in hopes of improving the breed, Roman had learned, although the human settlers had soon put a stop to that.
“Ah, forget them,” Blake Raistlin said. Like Roman, he’d been promised promotion after heroic service on the superdreadnaught Thunderous. Unlike Roman, it hadn’t come through yet, not even with his family connections. Roman had heard that Raistlin’s father had been unable to secure him a posting to Enterprise—Admiral Parkinson had apparently hated Raistlin’s father—and it might well have saved his life. “I could do with another round of drinks. Who’s buying?”
> Roman studied the pale yellow liquid that passed for beer and shook his head. “Not me,” he said, thinking wistfully of battle. “How do you think they make this crap?”
“They taught us how to make it,” an oddly musical voice said. Roman turned to see the alien bartender looming over him. Up close, she smelled of sweet flowers and something he couldn’t identify, almost like human perfume. “We grow the plants for them in a poor field and then turn it into drink for them. They cannot get enough of it.”
“Well, neither can we,” Raistlin said quickly. “Another round of drinks, and don’t spare the alcohol. We have a genuine set of war heroes at the table.”
If the bartender was impressed, she didn’t show it. Instead, she collected the empty glasses and headed back toward the bar. The twitch in her rear had to be an affectation she’d picked up from the settlers, Roman told himself. She couldn’t be trying to tempt them with the possibility of alien sex, could she? Or perhaps she was—there were plenty of stories about human-alien sexual relationships, even though they were the last, great taboo. A poor settler, unable to afford a wife, might just be tempted by an alien...
He pushed the thought aside before it made him throw up. It was far more likely that some of the other rumors about settlers—and RockRats—were true. Back at the Academy, he’d discovered that some of Earth’s citizens still believed that RockRats were all homosexuals, a stereotype that hadn’t been true for almost two thousand years. If ever.
“You saved an entire ship,” Raistlin said cheerfully. He made a show of lifting his glass. “Cheers, gentlemen; he served on Enterprise.”
Roman flushed. “I need some air,” he said, pulling himself to his feet. Why did his legs feel unsteady? “I’ll see you back at the lodge.”
“Unless you find someone and go home with her,” Raistlin called. “Enjoy yourself!”
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