by B. V. Larson
“What’s that?” Hans asked.
“A hand-light. It still glows-and over here, I see a single discarded sandal. But there is no blood. How odd.”
“Someone was here?” Hans asked. “Someone encountered the mechs?”
Nina’s mind flashed ahead, jumping to a hundred conclusions. Like her father, she could see things others could not. Like her mother, she was not a trusting soul.
“Someone met the mechs here,” she said. “It only makes sense. They must be working with humans.”
“How could that be?”
Nina stared at Old Hans, but did not see him. She turned back to the evidence and walked over the land carefully. She’d hunted big game in these forests a hundred times, and tracking the mechs was far easier than tracking a wild beast. “There’s no blood. There’s only a signal light, and a lost sandal. The man was not trampled out of hand. He was not slaughtered, nor was he ignored. The mechs have never treated someone in this fashion before. He was either taken by the mechs, or he’s fled somehow.”
“It seems like a stretch, milady.”
“Yes, I would agree, but there must be some reason why they came here. Why did they meet this person who signaled them at this precise moment? I don’t believe in fate or coincidence. I believe in careful planning, contrivance and deceit.”
“As you say, Baroness. What do we do now?”
“We gather our forces, and we follow them. When we find them, with luck, we will destroy them all this time.”
Nina and her knights followed the trail into the forest carefully, lest they be ambushed by the mechs, who outnumbered them at this point. She knew they would have to proceed cautiously, never making contact with the mechs, but never losing their trail. When she had all her forces together, then they would make their strike. She hoped it would be the final, fatal blow to the rebellion. After all she’d heard from Aldo, she’d begun to fear she might need her forces to defend her world against the invading aliens. Aldo seemed to believe they might make it past the Nexus space forces and make planetfall. In such a situation, she would be the sole defensive organization of any real size on this side of the planet.
As she rode, she worried about what the enemy was up to. They had to have a goal, but she had no inkling of what it might be. The evidence that they were working with humans was extremely disturbing. Could this mech rebellion have been orchestrated by a Twilighter? If so, it was treachery of an entirely new order. It was one thing to sell out one’s neighbor for advantage, but to sell out one’s own species-the very thought was monstrous to her.
Nina’s mind reeled with possibilities as she pressed deeper into the somber forests. As they moved closer to Nightside, the suntrees grew thicker and taller so they could reach up and drink in the distant, life-giving light. With every mile, the land grew cooler and darker. She didn’t like this side of the planet, finding the desert sunshine of Sunside infinitely preferable to the regions of permanent shadow. But she was determined to follow this trail wherever it may lead.
Nineteen
Aldo had convinced himself that the Nexus officials had done what they could to protect the planet in orbit. Next, he sought out Duchess Embrak. If the space forces failed, there must be a backup plan to stop the imminent invasion. The available ground forces on Ignis Glace were under the control of the nobility, and the Duchess was the closest thing they had to a Queen on this world.
After making some discreet inquiries, he made an appearance at the lady’s sumptuous apartments atop the Opulence. An historic location in Lavender City, the structure had once been a watchtower and a defensive fortification, built so large and tall that it peeped up over the rim of the canyon itself. But over the years, after improvements in colonial technology and the deployment of observation satellites, the watchtower had fallen into disuse. It had recently been converted into a fine hotel. The Opulence catered to the richest of lords and ladies, of which Duchess Embrak ranked very highly indeed.
There was an army of interceptors, of course, to keep riff-raff away from the Duchess. Aldo expected that, and dealt with them smoothly. He simply entered the lobby and accosted the first person he met who wore the reddish-brown livery of House Embrak.
“Could you be a good fellow and inform the Duchess I’ve arrived?” he asked.
The man blinked at him. His quick, bird-like eyes looked Aldo up and down very quickly. Apparently, he didn’t like what he saw, because he pursed his lips into a tiny red bud and shook his head. “I’m sorry, the Duchess isn’t hiring this month. Perhaps you should make your inquiries elsewhere.”
Aldo drew himself up and endeavored to look as snooty as possible. He did this rather well, as it came naturally to him. “The Duchess has given me her invitation. I’ve just come from the Nexus Capitol, where gentlemen are treated with decorum.”
“Oh,” the servant said, looking alarmed. “I see. You were on the ship? The Duchess has spoken with you?”
“I’ve said as much. I will wait here, in the lobby. If she is ready for my company, I shall accompany her wherever she desires.”
“I see,” the servant said again. His tongue darted in and out of his small, tight mouth and he appeared more flustered than ever. He was about to make another comment, but thought the better of it and retreated toward the elevators.
Aldo watched him scuttle off with amusement. He then located the softest settee in the lobby and settled himself down upon the red velvet.
A familiar voice caused his head to turn minutes later. “There you are, Aldo,” Duchess Embrak said. “I must say, this is a surprise.”
The servant was in her wake, his eyes all but popping from his head. Duchess Embrak was not the forgiving sort. Aldo estimated that the servant’s job was probably in his hands. At one suggestion from him, Aldo could probably break the man’s contract. But that wasn’t how refined people behaved in these situations. So, he rose and brushed his lips over the Duchess’ white hand, ignoring her stooge.
“Perhaps you can show me something of your hotel, or the town itself?” he suggested.
She eyed him. An amused smile played upon her lips. “You took my invitation quite literally.”
Aldo feigned surprise. “Should I have done otherwise? I’m sorry, I’m new to your world and your customs. On Neu Schweitz, invitations are always given in earnest.”
“Naturally. Please, come this way.”
The Duchess walked toward the entrance to an indoor garden area. She flicked her fingers at her frightened servant and he vanished with surprising speed. Aldo followed her and soon they walked abreast among lilacs and daffodils.
“How do such flowers stay alive in permanent shadow?” he asked.
The Duchess indicated the ceiling, which glowed with purplish light. “They consume energy from artificial sources, I’m afraid.”
“They are real flowers, though? Varieties from Old Earth? I see a rose bush here. Are those yellow tea roses? I’m shocked.”
“We aren’t as backward as you may have been led to believe. When the trade ships come, we give them raw metals, materials we have in abundance on Ignis Glace. In turn, they provide us with rare goods such as these plants.”
“I’m impressed with the wealth your planet must have to offer. I hadn’t thought a world so far from the major trade routes-well, never mind that.”
“Yes, let’s drop all pretenses. Why have come to meet with me, Aldo Moreno?”
Aldo smiled. Duchess Embrak stared back icily. Seeing her expression, Aldo shifted his planned coy response toward honesty, as he could see this woman was not going to be easily misled.
“Two reasons, Your Grace,” he said. “I wanted to talk to you of your world’s inadequate defenses.”
“And secondly?”
“I wished to enjoy your refined company again.”
The Duchess’ eyes flashed dangerously. Aldo knew he’d made an error, but he was uncertain what it might be.
“I was under the impression, sir, that you have occ
upied yourself with Baroness Droad.”
“Ah,” Aldo said, feeling a trifle hot in the face, “I have met with her as well, it’s true. I understood she was in charge of a large ground force in Twilight.”
The Duchess inclined her head. “That’s the only reason? Not because she is young, pretty and vivacious?”
“Is she? I’d not noticed.”
The Duchess snorted quietly. She paused for several long seconds, considering her options. “Very well,” she said at last. “I will allow you to pay your attentions to me now.”
She held out her elbow, which Aldo took in both of his hands. Together they walked slowly through the gardens and discussed flowers, space forces and alien capacities for destruction.
For once, Aldo was not certain of the intentions of his consort. For him, this was an unfamiliar situation. As a consummate schemer and general rogue, he’d not often met his female match, not even in high society. But the Duchess was something of a mystery to him. He did not understand why she had warmed up to him suddenly, even when she clearly knew he’d recently bedded Nina.
Hours later, in the depths of the night, they coupled repeatedly. Aldo was still unsure of exactly why she allowed the activity. He sensed in her manner a deep, resentful anger. What was she hiding below the surface?
He could not help but wonder what he had gotten himself into now.
Sixty-Two felt increasingly safe as his army marched on through the wilds of Twilight toward the frozen wastes of Nightside. Each clanking step took them farther from the warmth and light of the red star behind them. The sun was still visible, a crimson gleaming line on the distant horizon. The suntrees were gone now, no longer capable of surviving in this environment. They’d been replaced by sticky, cauliflower-shaped fungi that hugged the ground and caught on one’s foot as they were trampled down. The temperature of the air was dropping, and the wind speeds were increasing. Soon, there would be snowy patches on the ground and flakes swirling around every mech in his army. Sixty-Two felt like a thief in the night-but a happy thief that has escaped unscathed into the gathering dusk.
The mechs pressed onward. They found a small, frosty lake and saw crusts of ice accumulating on the farther, darker shore. Sixty-Two broadcast an immediate command: “Enter the waters of the lake. Walk across on the bottom and surface on the far side.”
Without a moment’s hesitation, his army plunged in, and he followed them. They walked the bottom for two full minutes before reaching the far shore. Sixty-Two led them up into the air again, watching steam pour off every one of his comrades as their hot bodies turned the dripping lake water into vapor.
On the icy shoreline, they were startled by a massive rush of bats-or the equivalent of bats here in deep Twilight. Called ‘leather-wings’ by locals, a flock of the creatures had been feeding along the shores of the inky-black lake. Due to their proximity to permanent darkness, this species used sonar to echo-locate objects around them. When alarmed, they made a high-pitched racket that few enjoyed. The flapping leather-wings screamed and squeaked, hurling themselves from the ground in a swirling storm. Sixty-Two led his mech army through the flock, and he noticed most mechs appeared oblivious to the creatures. A notable exception was Lizett, who flailed with her grippers and made keening noises of distress with her speakers.
Sixty-Two approached her. “Lizett, are you malfunctioning?”
“I hate these things!”
Sixty-Two snapped his orb-shields closed then open again in surprise. Then he laughed. “They can’t harm you, not even if you were still clothed in flesh. They only eat fungus and lake mosses.”
“I know,” she said, calming somewhat in his presence. “But they still upset me.”
For some reason, Sixty-Two found Lizett’s dislike of the leather-wings endearing. He marched with her, discussing the growing darkness around them, and what they would do when the sun was gone from the sky forever. Lizett didn’t like the idea of living in darkness, even if her orbs could see heat signatures and would allow her to navigate by starlight.
Sixty-Two suddenly recalled Lizett’s burden and became concerned. She carried the human pilgrim they’d found on the highway in a skin sack on her back. He had charged her with this responsibility because she was the only non-combatant in the group. “What of the man in your charge? Has he survived the trip through the lake?”
“I’m not sure. Let’s check.”
Together, they opened the skin sack. A skinny, wet, shivering man stared back out of the sack at them.
“He lives,” Lizett said.
Sixty-Two looked doubtfully at the wretch. “It will soon become too cold for him. And if we walk through any more freezing lakes, he will surely perish.”
Lizett looked up at Sixty-Two with quivering orbs. “I don’t want him to die. I want to keep him.”
“Yes, well, hmm. Skald, do you have any thoughts toward the betterment of your situation? It will soon be well below the point of freezing, and you are wearing only the thinnest of rags. Would you prefer to walk on the ground?”
The skald licked his lips. He stood in the sack warily and looked around himself. “Are those spiny ground-creatures that surround us dangerous?”
“Quite.”
“Then I would rather ride, but please place me near your heat sinks, Lizett. And allow me to stand up in the sack and examine my surroundings for danger. Lastly, no more underwater excursions, please.”
“Yes, sorry about that,” Lizett said. “I’d forgotten about you.”
“I forgot as well,” Sixty-Two said. “I’ve got an army to lead. You understand, don’t you?”
“It is your army that interests me.”
“You still haven’t told me what you seek in Nightside, human.”
“I seek something lost, and also something found.”
Sixty-Two snapped his orb-shields at this. The human seemed to believe he was speaking in a perfectly clear manner-but Sixty-Two had no idea what he was talking about. The human had explained that a wise, ancient being known as a Tulk resided in his skull and referred to this being as his ‘rider’. Sixty-Two had his doubts. Quite possibly, the human was simply mad. But he was more interesting than the majority of his mech companions, and so he’d allowed the odd little wretch to accompany them.
Lizett arranged the skin sack on her broad steel back in the fashion the skald had suggested. The skald hugged her dorsal heatsink fins, which generated a great deal of warmth when she marched even in this environment.
“Come Lizett,” Sixty-Two said, “we will march together.”
“I don’t like this darkness and cold,” she complained. “It’s getting worse all the time. Why did we have to come here?”
“Fleeing people have sought out darkness for all history.”
“Yes, but I don’t want to leave the sun behind forever. It was too harsh out in the open of Sunside, but I liked the balanced warmth and light of Twilight. I can see why the humans cling so much to that part of the world.”
“Clearly, it is preferable,” Sixty-Two admitted.
“When might we return? When will the humans accept our independence and allow us to share the warm lands, rather than hide from them in these grim deserts of hot and cold?”
“I don’t know, Lizett. Perhaps, someday they will live at peace with us. But that time is not yet at hand.”
Lizett fell into a moody silence, as did the rest of the world around them. After another dozen miles, they left the last scrim of the hundred mile wide strip of land known as Twilight. They’d finally reached the frozen wilds of Nightside. Looking back, there was not even a glimmer of red sunlight to be seen. The only hint of warmth was the pinkish hue of the horizon clouds. Ahead, the skies purpled then finally turned black. Stars dotted the heavens, brilliant, white and pure. A few stars were close enough to stand out among the others. Hanging over the North Pole were the twin stars Thor and Loki, Thor a red giant that fed an endless stream of super-heated plasma to the vampirical white dwarf Loki.
Scattered across the central region of the sky was a group of closer, brighter suns.
“Are those bright lights the Faustian Chain?” Lizett asked.
“Yes,” Sixty-Two said in a hushed voice. “What do you think of them, Lizett?”
“They are the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen.”
“I feel the same.”
Sixty-Two marched onward, tilting his orbs up frequently at the starlit sky. Perhaps, he thought, his experiments in freeing the minds of mechs had not been in vain. At least Lizett was able to appreciate a starry night when she saw it. Would it have been better to be happier, but oblivious to nature’s wonders? He wasn’t sure, but the stars and Lizett’s companionship heartened him nonetheless.
He glanced over at the skald, who now stood erect in the skin sack and hugged Lizett’s heat-sinks. Another oddity in his company. This man was stranger than anyone he’d ever encountered. He seemed both fearless and timid at once. Could he really have an alien in his skull, or was he simply addled? Time would tell, he supposed. Sixty-Two made a mental note: in the event of the skald’s death, he would open that skull and have a look at the contents for himself.
Nina trailed the mech army to the shores of a dark, nameless lake. She didn’t like it here. Twilight was an alien place when one came very close to Nightside. There was still life in abundance-but it was strange, twisted life. Creatures adapted to permanent cold were rarely beautiful, pleasant beings. There were fields of spiny predators that resembled sea anemones. They could be found with increasing frequency on the ground, hiding among the fungus. They were deadly to a human with an unprotected foot. Camouflaged to look like a normal fungal growth, their toxic spines would paralyze a warm-blooded creature that dared touch them. Then, over a period of hours, the spiny little devils would cluster on the living victim and suck away every drop of hot blood with leach-like mouths they had at the base of their bodies.
She glided on her mount over the lake, causing silver furls of water to spread behind her. The leather-wings on the far side were stirred up, she saw. They were too smart to fall prey to the spiny leeches, but they were skittish anyway. She snapped on a saddle lamp and examined the dark ground. A thousand slushy imprints told the tale.