The Given Sacrifice

Home > Science > The Given Sacrifice > Page 19
The Given Sacrifice Page 19

by S. M. Stirling


  “Seemed longer, sir. Particularly considering how hard I hit him to begin with.”

  “It eroded my natural skepticism a little. Not as much as seeing what Corporal Salander says he saw would, but a bit.”

  Wellman turned those tired, sharp eyes on Cole again.

  “So you’re going to let the enemy into the city?” he said a few minutes later, his face flatly unreadable.

  “Captain, the Cutters are the enemy, and they’re already in the city. And three-quarters of the army around Boise are our own people. The rest are Mackenzies and Bearkillers, mostly,” he went on. “They’re disciplined troops, they’re not going to sack the place.”

  “Bearkillers are very well disciplined,” Alyssa said. “That’s what I am, by the way. There aren’t any Associates within a day’s march of Boise right now—Rudi . . . His Majesty . . . is keeping them out of the picture because he knows they’re unpopular. Not that the Grand Constable would let them get out of hand. Basically Frederick Thurston is running the siege.”

  Cole went on: “I’ve met Fred Thurston, sir, and I trust him to keep his word, and he’s promising strict order and a general amnesty except for specific crimes, and a free election.”

  “And what does King Artos say to that?”

  There was an official poster not far away, showing a bad artist’s conception of Rudi Mackenzie in plate armor, flogging emaciated serfs pulling a wagon. The way things had been since the old general died and Martin Thurston took over, you were well-advised to buy the latest and stick them up. You never knew if someone was reporting to the NatPols. . . .

  “Well, he says that’s exactly what he wants too, sir, and he’s said it publicly. It’s his policy that every member of the High Kingdom gets full internal autonomy. Boise won’t be part of Montival unless we decide that on our own in a plebiscite, and we’re to be completely self-governing with our own laws within our borders as of the old general’s death if we vote yes. And I believe him too, sir. He’s . . . well, he’s . . . quite impressive. Sir.”

  Unexpectedly, Wellman smiled slightly. “That’s what the old general said, too, about Rudi Mackenzie,” he said. “He met the young man a couple of years ago, just before he died himself at the battle of Wendell. I wasn’t there for that. Maybe if I’d been at Wendell I could have saved . . . never mind. Go ahead.”

  “I mean, hell, I intend to vote for Fred Thurston, and to vote for joining Montival,” Cole said bluntly. “Assuming I live that long. The old general wanted to reunite the country, but he couldn’t. Montival, the High Kingdom . . . well, it’s not the way he wanted to do it, but it’s going to be a great big chunk reunited, with some of the same stuff he was for. No more fighting our neighbors, for starters. Freedom of religion, and I sure as s . . . shoot know the Cutters don’t have that in mind. And no slavery allowed—”

  He jerked his head at the poster. “I mean, that’s complete bullshit, sir. Everyone in Montival can move if they want to—it’s one of the few laws that they have that applies everywhere. Which is also something the Cutters don’t have in mind, they don’t even call their slaves something different like they do in some places, they just outright call ’em slaves. Apart from all that thing about how half the human race are Spawn of the Nephilim stuff and it’s abomination if women wear pants and who knows what else.”

  Wellman closed his eyes for a moment. “You know,” he went on quietly, “I stayed in the Army because of Lawrence Thurston. I never did trust Martin or the men around him, but I didn’t want to believe his own son would . . .”

  “Captain Wellman, I talked to the First Lady . . . I mean the old General’s wife . . . hell, I talked to Martin’s wife. They agreed that Martin killed the old general in the confusion at Wendell to cover up his coup; and that he was . . . changed, somehow. After he met Sethaz, the Prophet. He went from being an ordinary evil son-of-a-bitch to . . . something else.”

  “Yeah, I noticed that,” Wellman said dryly. Then he shook his head: “Witches, spells, prophecies, red-headed kings with magic swords . . . Christ. What’s next, dragons? And I never even liked playing D&D.”

  Silence fell for about three minutes while Cole searched his memory for the obscure ancient reference to distract himself from the way the time stretched out. Then Wellman sighed again and looked at Sergeant Halford.

  “Jack?” he said, startling everyone by using the man’s first name.

  That seemed to be some sort of signal; Halford’s face lost its military stiffness for a moment.

  “Kid’s right,” he said. “Time to get it over with.”

  “You’ve got a point,” Wellman said, turning back to Cole. “There’s only one way this war is going to end, anyway; let’s get it done before the country gets ripped up any worse than it has. Where is this place?”

  Cole exchanged another look with Alyssa, and she nodded slightly. They weren’t supposed to tell anyone, but it was the only way to pull this off.

  He gave the directions. Wellman grinned, this time a mirthless carnivore expression.

  “Just in case you hadn’t noticed, corporal, there’s a Cutter observation post on the roof of that building.”

  Cole gulped; he hadn’t.

  Wellman went on: “But hey, sneaking around is supposed to be what Special Forces do, right? Let’s go do it.”

  • • •

  Mary got within six paces of Ingolf before he realized she was there. He didn’t start, which must have disappointed her, but she silently touched his forearm and moved her fingers in front of his eyes:

  Come.

  He followed, slowly—there just wasn’t any other way to move quietly in woods at night, especially unfamiliar woods. He did start when something the size of a medium dog scurried away noisily through the underbrush with a crackling and rustling; probably a raccoon. It didn’t have to do anything but run like hell, a desire which he viewed with profound sympathy. Up from the edge of the river the trees were smaller and scrubby, grown up since the Change except for a few that had been planted in the old days for shade and ornament. The only thing left of buildings was a few snags of wall. . . .

  And the Dúnedain leaders were grouped around one of those, unmistakable from the sketches at the briefing. Ingolf came up and went down on one knee; the others were too, or making like snakes on their bellies—this was only a hundred yards from the wall, although when you looked back you saw that there was artfully arranged dead ground most of the way to the river. Cole Salander was there, and Alyssa Larsson, neither of whom he’d expected to see alive again, deep down. And a man he didn’t recognize, in Boise’s Special Forces summer camouflage uniform. That wasn’t part of the plan; the two were supposed to guide the assault force in by themselves.

  As he came close he heard Alleyne Loring say something in Sindarin, his mellifluous aristo-English accent obvious even through the alien syllables. The only other one like it Ingolf had ever heard was Alleyne’s elderly father, and it had made some old books he’d read make more sense. Alyssa answered abruptly and in English:

  “Yes, of course they’re trustworthy, Uncle Alleyne—that’s why they sent both of us, to show that we’re not under threat. Now, are we going to do this?”

  “You’re not, we are, Pilot Officer,” Loring said. “Salander, you’re with . . . Mary, Ritva, Ingolf, Ian. John, feed a link in after them.”

  “Lead it in, more like,” the big man said imperturbably in his soft burring accent that rendered more like as murr loik.

  Loring nodded. “Confirm that all’s well on the other end and relay the code.”

  Alyssa didn’t complain, though even in the darkness he thought he could see she’d like to.

  In the soup again, Ingolf thought. Christ, the things I do. . . .

  The hidden door was cleverly concealed; an aluminum slab had random pieces of rock and brick fixed to it, and enough soil to grow honest-to-goodness plants, all cunningly arranged to overlap the opening. A counterweighted lever system opened it from within. />
  Mary flashed Ingolf a thumbs-up as she followed her sister in; all he could see was an indistinct flash of one blue eye behind her mask. She made the same gesture to Alyssa, who was a cousin—daughter of her mother’s brother—and got the purse-lipped glare and elevated middle finger of resentment as she passed. Alyssa mouthed something silently; no way of telling what, but something along the lines of you big blond horse wouldn’t have surprised him.

  Fred Thurston had described the tunnel concisely, and Ingolf’s hands and feet found the metal rungs set into the concrete wall without trouble.

  “Go,” he said softly, as Ian landed beside him.

  His voice fell into the void with the flatness of still enclosed air. The near-absolute dark grew worse still as the five went forward, each guiding themselves with a hand on the wall. The scent of damp concrete and old stagnant water was strong in the chilly air, and occasionally his boots made a tack sound in a shallow film of it as they slanted downward towards the bottom of the tunnel’s curve. It was probably some sort of pre-Change engineering work mostly, and he could almost feel the monstrous weight of the city wall above. Perhaps it went by an old building’s foundations that were taking the weight. He certainly hoped so.

  There must be drainage, but it was far from perfect, and the film of water turned to a shallow puddle when they reached the bottom. He could feel it when the floor started to climb again, you always could, especially when you were in full gear—even a slope invisible to the eye was all too obvious to the legs. Everyone drew a weapon, mostly daggers; Ingolf thought of his bowie and decided on the tomahawk he kept tucked through a loop at the back of his belt. If it came to it, he wanted something handy in close quarters, and the light axe had stood him in good stead before.

  Knife-fights in the dark, in a cave. Wouldn’t that be a treat, not knowing who you were hitting. Christ, the things I do. . . .

  The tunnel was fairly broad, enough for three men to move abreast and high enough that he could only just touch the top with the poll of his belt-axe when he put an arm up. In the darkness it was impossible to tell whether it was pre-Change, or something the elder Thurston had installed to have up his sleeve. Apparently the workmen hadn’t talked, his elder son hadn’t told anyone before he died, and the secret remained safe with the younger. That would end tonight, one way or another.

  From what Fred said, his dad arranged this when his grip on Boise was still shaky and kept it close because it might turn out handy. It’s doable for the numbers we have planned, but it’s still going to be tight, he thought, as they came to a halt as much by instinct as anything else.

  Cole Salander tapped out a sequence somewhere in the blackness ahead, softly, knuckle on solid-sounding metal. There was a breath of warmer air and . . . not exactly light, but not-quite-total darkness. Then a small glimpse of genuine light above them, a beam from a bull’s-eye lantern, the dull gleam of roughened piping set in the wall for climbing, and a voice:

  “Up here, and quick. There are Cutters on the roof three stories up, so keep it quiet.”

  Oh, joy, Ingolf thought. We’ve got enemy ass right over our heads ready to dump on us. This night just gets better and better. Christ, the things I do. . . .

  Mary and Ritva went up first, climbing with the light silent grace of cats. Ian Kovalevsky followed, and then Ingolf, noting in passing that the trapdoor was a solid block of concrete with a square of worn old-style synthetic glued to its top. That would overlap onto the surface beyond, concealing any line, and the trap itself was beveled in all around the edge, fitting into a similar circuit in the floor. A counterweighted lever mechanism raised it; the thing was four feet on a side, and far too heavy to lift by hand. A splendid little asset, now being expended for its one and only use, fulfilling the purpose for which it had been made.

  They were in a walk-in closet as they came out; that gave onto a smallish room that had probably been an office once, though probably not now since it had neither gaslights nor an exterior window. Beyond the frosted-glass cubicle was a sense of shadowy gloom around them, and concrete pillars; what had been something called a parking garage before the Change, and warehouse space since, the old openings in the walls bricked up to keep out weather. He’d seen the same done elsewhere, since the ramps between the floors were perfect for moving loads around.

  “I’m Captain Wellman, Special Forces. This is it?” a man a bit older than Ingolf said, as the two women checked the situation outside and then turned to whisper a code word down the way they’d come; he had Captain’s bars, the same sort as a lot of the National Guard insignia in the Midwest, likewise derived from the old American army.

  “Ingolf Vogeler, Captain Wellman,” Ingolf said softly, sketching a salute after he sheathed his weapon.

  Carrying an axe to your first conversation was tactless. He could see that the Boisean officer recognized the name, if not his face. It was a little disconcerting how often that was happening these days. He’d been well known at home in Readstown, of course, but he’d been the Sheriff’s son there. And anyway, Readstown was a very small puddle to be a bullfrog in, and over the wandering years since then he’d gotten used to being just another stranger to everyone except the people he was working with. In Montival he was one of the people who’d been on the Quest, Ingolf the Wanderer according to some bards he’d like to strangle. A certain degree of fame had its drawbacks, and he made a mental note to figure the likelihood of being known into his calculations.

  “Pardon me if we’re not being entirely trusting,” he said. “Last-minute changes of plan in a major operation give me hives.”

  That got a smile, a slight unwilling twitch of the lips, and a nod as from one professional to another.

  More of the Dúnedain came up through the opening in the floor, and then the unmistakable troll shape of John Hordle. He gave a gesture, holding up two fingers. Ingolf winced slightly. That meant both-of-you-know-who were on the way across the river along with the assault echelon, and that was so dangerous he didn’t even say the names to himself.

  It’s amazing how much more protective I’ve gotten about Rudi than I was when it was just the nine of us out in the wildlands. Maybe there’s something to the way he complains that being king is a lot less fun than becoming king.

  They were committed now. Wellman nodded at Hordle too, evidently recognizing him on sight. That wasn’t very surprising, particularly considering how distinctive the man was; the Dúnedain were Montival’s equivalent of Wellman’s outfit, after all. He seemed to know his job, which would include finding out all he could about his probable opposition.

  A hard-looking dark man had a map spread out on the floor. Ingolf pegged him instantly for a long-service NCO. They knelt beside it, and Cole’s former superior did too. This hadn’t been part of the original plan, but you used what came to hand. A quick glance saw four other men keeping watch through narrow slits in bricked-up arches, with pairs of Ranger archers joining them and others spreading out through the space. The bull’s-eye clicked on, opened just enough to show the details.

  The map was of Boise, about the same as the ones Ingolf had been studying. The quality was very high, fine-line engraving on excellent paper waterproofed with wax. Ingolf heartily approved, remembering times when it had all gone down the three-holer because someone got lost or didn’t know where something was . . . or worse still, where they were, or worst of all was convinced they were somewhere they really weren’t.

  “We’re here,” Wellman said, tapping the corner of South Capitol and West Myrtle. “Which I assume you knew before you came through.”

  South Capitol ran southwest from—logically enough—the old State Capitol building, ending in the main gate complex; Myrtle ran northwest to southeast, crossing it in a good sensible grid. The building he touched was a rectangular mass a block long and half a block wide. It never hurt to spend a little more effort getting a good grasp on the area you had to operate.

  The Boisean pointed upward. “Three stories up
. At that level, it’s a flat roof for half the area, and then this section goes up another six.”

  He put a sketch down by the map. The higher section was L-shaped, with the bottom of the L facing Myrtle.

  “The part we’re in now was rental storage until trade went to hell. The upper section is government offices except for the last two floors, which are long-term records storage.”

  Everyone nodded; the higher parts of still-occupied ancient buildings tended to be used for purposes which didn’t require climbing that many stairs multiple times a day. Dumping old tax records to be slowly nibbled into oblivion by mice was a typical one. There were ways to use the old elevator shafts, but they were all expensive, usually treated as luxuries for rulers and the very wealthy or employed for military necessities.

  Wellman went on: “All deserted at this time of night, even the janitors have gone home.”

  Well, that’s nice to know. There had been no way to check on little details like that from the outside, and the devil was in the details. Maybe Wellman getting involved was a good thing.

  “The problem is that there’s a Cutter detachment on the flat roof right above us, keeping an eye on things; they’ve got a perimeter like that around all the approach roads to the gates on the inside, I presume exactly to guard against an attempt from within the city to rush one and open it. They’ve got a signal fire ready to go, and cowhorn trumpets. They report by blowing a signal every hour. It’s not as bad as a night heliograph, but it’s workable. Nine men, three placed so and three mobile and three resting. They’re relieved at sunset, midnight and dawn.”

  His finger traced South Capitol towards the gate, tapping to either side of the road. “These used to be parking lots. They’re mixed-use row housing now, three stories, workshops and stores on the bottom and people living over. Nothing to worry about, the people will probably keep their heads down until they know what’s happening.”

  Ingolf nodded. That sort of infilling was standard practice in modern walled towns. Space was always at a premium; the whole point of a wall was defense, but the number of men required to hold it went up geometrically as you increased the area enclosed by the perimeter. Fortified settlements were always as densely packed as water supply and hygiene allowed. Besides their sheer ludicrous size, pre-Change cities seemed to have come in two varieties: insanely overbuilt, or insanely dispersed and spread out. Or both. Usually both, in fact.

 

‹ Prev