Of Fire and Night

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Of Fire and Night Page 23

by Kevin J. Anderson


  “We have six suns remaining, and the Ildiran Empire will endure,” Yazra’h said, as if she could make it so by commanding it. “The Empire must endure.”

  Tal O’nh added his support. “A Solar Navy officer lives for nothing else.”

  Anton knew that these words of encouragement were meant for the Ildirans on board, especially the young Designate, but he took heart from them nevertheless. It occurred to him that beneath Yazra’h’s obvious physical strength, she was wiser than most people he had met. A scholar knew how to spot such things.

  57

  ORLI COVITZ

  The mixed group headed through the Klikiss transportal to their new home. This place would be a fresh start, a second chance. With an odd sense of déjà vu, the girl lifted her chin, gathered her courage, and walked into the flat stone window. An instant later she walked out onto another new settlement world.

  Llaro.

  After all she’d been through, Orli Covitz wasn’t sure about going to another former Klikiss world, but she didn’t know where else she could live. Her overly optimistic father would have called Llaro a great opportunity. But he was dead now, along with everyone else on Corribus. She tried not to think about it.

  Nevertheless, Orli had decided to join the Crenna refugees in their relocation. She had few possessions: her salvaged music synthesizer strips, some clothes, and a lot of bad memories. She was fourteen, an orphan, and a survivor.

  Since reports about the obliteration of the Corribus colony had posted her waifish face across every conceivable newsnet, Orli had hoped that her real mother might reemerge. But nobody could find her. Orli shrugged. The woman had never been much of a mother anyway. Orli was better off by herself. Even here.

  The lavender skies were lovely: pastel colors over an arid landscape. A relatively ambitious settlement had already been put in place by the initial wave of colonists and EDF soldiers. Standing nearby, her friend Mr. Steinman sniffed the air. “Looks adequate, with room to spread out. I still can’t get over my headache from all that noise on Earth.”

  “I hope we don’t have to eat furry crickets,” Orli said with a grimace.

  “Don’t kid yourself. We’ll find something just as nasty here.”

  Soldiers stood around the transportal. Military barracks surrounded the alien ruins containing the stone trapezoid, as if to prevent colonists from making a break for the transportal and slipping away. That wasn’t a good sign.

  A group of people came forward to greet them. Most wore strange costumes, garishly embroidered or adorned with colorful scarves, quite different from the plain but serviceable jumpsuits she was familiar with from Dremen or Corribus. And with many more pockets.

  “Never expected to see so many Roamers here,” Steinman said.

  Orli soon got the impression that she and the Crenna refugees were the only ones actually happy to be on Llaro. It turned out the Roamers were prisoners of war rounded up during various EDF raids, and they were naturally frustrated and miserable. The original settlers resented having their promised land turned into a POW camp, and the EDF personnel felt stuck in an isolated outpost babysitting a bunch of colonists. Nobody liked it here.

  But Orli and the people from Crenna had no place else to go.

  The leader of the Roamer detainees, a potbellied man named Roberto Clarin, crossed his arms over his chest, trying to make his displeasure as plain as possible. “Shizz, this is more of their stupid plan to integrate us into Hansa society. The Big Goose thinks that if we’re satisfied with this place, we’ll just forget everything they did to us.”

  Thinking of her own struggles, how many new starts and setbacks she and her father had faced, Orli studied the Roamer man. “No one can make you forget the bad things that happen, mister. But you’ve got to move ahead. Otherwise, the memories are like quicksand.”

  Clarin looked down at the girl and chuckled. “By the Guiding Star, I hope all the newbies are like you, kid.”

  After passing through the transportal, the fresh arrivals inventoried their sacks of clothes and keepsakes, Hansa-issued tools, packages of favorite foods, souvenirs they had salvaged from their world before it had frozen over. Orli clutched her satchel, feeling the flexible bulk of the cheap music synthesizers.

  The whole gathering soon became a swap meet. The Roamers and first settlers were eager to see what new items the Crenna refugees had brought. Introductions were made all around, and Orli’s mind quickly blurred with the dizzying names and clans and connections.

  Before long, everyone pitched in to erect prefab structures as temporary homes for the Crenna settlers. Orli wondered whether she might have a small hut to herself, or be adopted by one of the colonist families. She wasn’t sure what she wanted. She wasn’t really a child anymore. Not really.

  Mayor Ruis, representing the people of Crenna, met with the Roamers and the council head of the original settlers. “I promise we’ll do everything possible to make ourselves self-sufficient.” With an infectious grin, he turned to a tall, quiet man with dark brown skin. “We’ve got plenty of expertise among us, so we won’t be a drain. We can get through anything together. Right, Davlin?”

  The other man answered with a thin smile that wrinkled a crosshatching of scars on his left cheek. “Yes, we do have a considerable ability to solve problems.” He lowered his voice to Ruis, though Orli could still hear what he said. “But we’d better think of a new name for me, Mayor, if I’m going to stay here with you. I’d rather the Chairman doesn’t find out that I’m still alive.”

  58

  CHAIRMAN BASIL WENCESLAS

  Accompanied by Deputy Cain, Basil rode a shuttle up to the battered Juggernaut that General Lanyan had liberated from the Soldier compies. He studied notes on his datapad, ignoring the pilot’s announcement that they would be aboard the Goliath in ten minutes.

  “I’ll have my report to you the moment it’s finished, sir,” Cain said. “I have assigned focus groups to discuss various aspects of the aftermath.” Careful in his duties to the point of being obsessive, the deputy always provided well-considered conclusions with all the supporting evidence Basil needed for making a decision.

  With a final glance at the disheartening summary numbers, Basil dimmed the display. “I am not looking forward to the final tally of this disaster, Mr. Cain. I can’t begin to estimate the fallout—if we survive the next few months.”

  When the Grid 0 flagship loomed before them, Basil felt nauseated to see its singed hull plates from the recent skirmish. The only capital ship left of the main battle group! If Lanyan had stayed a little longer, fought a little harder, could more of the hijacked vessels have been retrieved? Or would the EDF just have lost this one, too?

  He suspected the General had made the correct decision. The Hansa media staff would have to bury the knowledge that so many trainees had been left in the clutches of the enemy. Just like at the battle of Osquivel, he thought. And that one had recently come back to bite them with the return of unexpected survivors and the embarrassing altruism of the Roamers.

  A protocol officer in a rumpled uniform hurried to greet them in the Juggernaut’s secondary landing bay. “Let me show you to the bridge, sirs.” He brushed self-consciously at wrinkles in his shirt. “I apologize for the mess. We’ve been working double duty to effect repairs.”

  Basil scowled. “That goes without saying. Save the small talk until after we’ve received the General’s report.”

  When the three men arrived on the Goliath’s bridge, the disorder made Basil wince. Lanyan was usually a stickler for regulation neatness, but though the General was currently on deck, crewmen bustled back and forth as if he weren’t there, calling to each other, tossing tools. Workers and officers alike lifted debris and installed components without regard to their relative ranks. Circuitry welders flashed fountains of sparks. The air had an acrid tang of oily smoke, hot metal, and something unidentifiable that was vague and unpleasant.

  “General!” The protocol officer raised his voic
e. “General Lanyan! The Chairman is here.”

  Lanyan initialed an inspection pad that an ensign pushed in front of him, then swiveled his chair. A shadow of beard stubble covered his face (which was also surprising, since he usually kept his face so smooth it looked slippery). He had taken off his uniform jacket and wore an unmarked workshirt with the sleeves rolled up.

  “Mr. Chairman, Mr. Deputy, I appreciate your coming up to orbit for this meeting.” He briskly shook Basil’s hand, then Cain’s. His ice-blue eyes were bloodshot. “As you can see, I couldn’t spare even a few hours to go down to Hansa HQ. We’ve got to get our asses moving and pull everything together. Ships keep trickling in, but not nearly enough for anything close to a thorough defense of Earth, let alone other Hansa planets. By now the compies have seized most of our grid battleships, and if they all come barreling back here . . . well, let’s just say we want to be as ready for them as we can.”

  “Deputy Cain is compiling a thorough assessment.”

  Cain activated his datapad and sorted the numbers for display, but before he could deliver his summary, Lanyan ran to the sensor station, shouting, “I told you not to deactivate that system! I don’t care what else you have to bypass, but I need redundancy on our weapons trackers.”

  “But it’s for the f-food synthesizer, sir,” said the amazed-looking ensign, who struggled not to stutter. “W-We’ve already sent for replacement parts. They’ll be here from the Moon base within the day.”

  “And what if the compies come back within the hour? Would you rather have jazers or chipped beef?”

  “U-Understood, General.”

  Lanyan turned back to Basil. “I’m sorry, Mr. Chairman. Where were we?”

  “I was about to summarize what we know,” Cain said. The deputy might not have the hard edge necessary to be a good leader, but at least he was competent. “By our best projections, we’ve lost approximately seventy percent of our military in the past few days.”

  The General looked as if he were in physical pain. “And seven of my grid admirals. Unless our crewmen managed to scuttle their own ships, we have to assume those battle groups are now controlled by Soldier compies. As far as we know, only Admirals Diente, San Luis, and Pike survived.”

  Cain did not do a good job at sounding optimistic. “It is possible that a few more are cut off from communications and simply not responding. However, I’d prefer not to have an unrealistically rosy picture of the situation.”

  “Unrealistically rosy picture?” Basil raised his eyebrows.

  Lanyan paced around his chair. “What the bloody hell do the clankers want? What set them off? Are they really controlled by the Klikiss robots?”

  Basil took the datapad from Cain, switched to a new screen, and motioned toward the General. “Here is what we’re going to do. In the old days, they called it ‘circling the wagons’—a defensive posture adopted in dire times. We need to get every single functional ship into position around this solar system.”

  “Even small civilian craft, Mr. Chairman?” Cain asked. “That could cause a disproportionate amount of unrest among the public.”

  “They can do their part, just like everyone else. We know unarmed commercial vessels won’t stand a chance against the drogues or our own hijacked EDF ships, but they can sound an alarm if any enemy comes toward Earth. Set them up as picket ships.”

  “We could establish automatic tripwire satellites, too,” Cain suggested. “It’ll increase our coverage, improve resolution and response time.”

  Lanyan said, “Distant early warning? That’ll only tell us when to start praying. We don’t have much of anything left to fight with. If any significant force comes here, we’re toast. Burnt toast.”

  Suddenly several of the Goliath’s bridge stations lit up with a sparkle of alarms. Announcements chattered over the speakers, signals from outlying picket ships. “Incoming vessels, General! Three of them.”

  “What are they? How big?”

  “The size of Manta cruisers, sir. Broadcasting EDF identification signals.”

  “That doesn’t mean a damn thing anymore,” Lanyan growled. “Send intercept ships with enough firepower to snuff the intruders if they turn out to be bad guys.”

  Though seasoned repair techs continued to work, two stations were up and running, displaying a tactical plot of the incoming bogeys and the intercept vessels scrambling from defensive points around the Earth system. To their vast relief, the intercept ships broke off. “They’re ours! Three Mantas genuinely piloted by humans. They escaped from Grid 7.”

  “How can you be sure?” Basil said in a low voice.

  “We’ve spoken to them directly. No doubt about it.”

  “I didn’t doubt Admiral Wu-Lin either,” Lanyan said, “and it cost us plenty. Have someone go aboard and verify. Personally. Don’t believe it until you see the flesh and blood with your own eyes.”

  Before long, the announcement was confirmed. “It really is good news! A hell of a slaughter over here, but it looks like the good guys won this round. One Manta has only seven human survivors—including Admiral Willis! They’ve piloted the ship here after linking their systems to one of the other cruisers.”

  A new voice came over the comm circuit, a salty, grandmotherly drawl: “Thank heavens for barfing and diarrhea—otherwise none of us would be alive. Food poisoning saved our lives, General. Funny how things work out.”

  “Please explain, Admiral Willis,” Lanyan said.

  “Something went wrong with the Jupiter’s food-processing systems, and a wave of salmonella knocked an entire shift out of commission. I couldn’t afford to have my Juggernaut drastically understaffed, so I drew the bulk of the Soldier compies from the other grid ships for added manpower, primarily to do menial work in the overflow sickbays we set up. Why not let the clankers clean up all the shit and puke, right?

  “Anyway, I was over on one of my Mantas inspecting and rearranging the reduced crews when the compies went nuts. There were so many of them on the Juggernaut, they took over the Jupiter in a snap, but at least we had a fighting chance on a few of the other cruisers, where the compy complement was reduced. Three battered Mantas—that’s all I could bring back. The rest of Grid 7 is in the hands of the enemy. Makes me want to crap my pants, food poisoning or no food poisoning.”

  Lanyan looked at Basil, oddly relieved. “Admiral, at least you managed to limp home. You don’t know how much those Mantas mean to us right now. We damn well need every piece of equipment, even if it needs some fixing.”

  “We’ve done all that duct tape can do over here, General,” Willis said.

  Basil looked at the repair crews still busy on the Goliath’s stripped-down bridge. The task would get larger and larger as more pieces of equipment crawled home. “Put all skilled space construction crewmembers on the job. I don’t care what else they’re doing or whom they belong to. No excuses. We need everybody. Most of our spacedock facilities are out in the asteroid belt, but I’d feel more comfortable keeping any functional ships closer to home.”

  “Give us the parts, and my own people can make all basic repairs here, Mr. Chairman.”

  “Good.” Basil leaned close to his datapad again. “If only a third of the EDF remains, then I’m issuing a complete reactivation order. Every soldier from any branch of the service, whether on active or inactive duty, any retired personnel, anyone making a fine living as a consultant in the commercial sector—I want them all back. And we need to recall any EDF battleships still under human control, no matter where they are. Every single vessel that survived the robot insurrection needs to come back home. Now. We’re talking about the full-fledged defense of planet Earth.”

  Cain frowned, clearly considering the consequences. “Mr. Chairman, we may have cut off supply runs, but we still maintain a presence at colonies that signed the Charter. Your order would force us to abandon every Hansa colony to its fate.”

  “They’ll be just swinging in the wind,” Lanyan said. “They’ll have no protect
ion against either the hydrogues or the robots.”

  “Focus on the big picture, gentlemen. Earth is our highest priority.”

  Lanyan did not look pleased with the instructions either, but he nodded slowly, scratching the itchy bristles of his beard stubble. “You are defining those other worlds as expendable, correct?”

  Basil knew that the bridge crewmembers were eavesdropping, but unlike so many other parts of his administration, this was not something that could be kept secret for long. “Without the Earth there is no Terran Hanseatic League. We have to set priorities.”

  59

  PATRICK FITZPATRICK III

  Maureen Fitzpatrick kept state-of-the-art vehicles for her own purposes: short-range flyers, ground cars, even one elegant spaceworthy yacht equipped with an Ildiran stardrive and a full tank of ekti. But Patrick preferred antique automobiles, mainly because the grease, oil, and sheer clutter frustrated his grandmother no end.

  Years ago the Battleaxe had denied him that hobby because greasy hands and dirty fingernails offended her sensibilities. Now, though, she had actually acquired several cars for him to tinker with, encouraging his “eccentric pursuits,” just to keep him out of trouble.

  Patrick wanted to be doing something much more significant. He wanted to be talking to interviewers, expressing a positive view of what the Roamers had done to the EDF survivors. But Maureen now kept him safely hidden away in the mansion where no one could see him, while she scheduled him with “the best therapists in the world.”

  It had been only a few days since the welcome-home party. He had tried to make postings and schedule interviews in his crusade to defend the Roamers, but in the sudden shock and confusion of the Soldier compy revolt, the returning captives from Osquivel were no longer the story of the hour. The whole EDF had fallen apart, compies had turned against their creators, millions were dead, and killer robots were surely coming to Earth. His grandmother didn’t even need to pull strings to keep him gagged: Nobody cared about alleged injustices to Roamer clans.

 

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