by Rick Partlow
Jason shook his head. “That can’t be all there is to it. Even if you’re right—even if some of the Russians did escape to the Belt, and even if they were somehow captured by some alien intelligence who used them to produce these biomechs, why wait a hundred years to make a move? Why copy the Russian technology if they could get as close to us as the Belt? Why not just snatch a modern cargo hauler and use that technology?”
“He’s right,” Kovalev agreed. “I can believe that the DNA and the weapons came from Antonov’s ships, but that is not the whole story. If you are right about everything else you say…” He frowned, as taciturn as Jason had seen him. “There was another rumor my grandfather heard in the days before the War. He never really believed it, but its spread was severely discouraged—men and women who told it disappeared—so he did not forget it.” His face contorted, as if he didn’t want to continue. “The first mission to the asteroid belt, there was much publicity surrounding it. It was more of a political statement than a scientific expedition—Mother Russia regaining her ascendancy and all that. There was much embarrassment when contact was lost with the two ships. Officially they were listed as lost, but my grandfather heard from a woman involved with the training that she saw one of the men who was on one of the ships.” Kovalev’s heavy breathing had sent him floating off to one side and he came up against the far wall unprepared, grunting as he grasped for a handhold.
“Sorry,” he said, wincing. “This woman said she saw the man being rushed from a landing shuttle to a security vehicle. She asked around with a friend she knew who was the local intelligence officer. He had heard something—he said one of the ships had come back. The crew said they had… fallen? Fallen through a hole in space somewhere in the asteroid belt. Both ships had gone through this hole, but only they had arrived on the other side.”
“A hole in space?” Cerrano repeated dubiously. “As a physicist, don’t you find that a bit hard to swallow?”
“As a physicist, Ms. Cerrano,” Kovalev said, staring at her, his good-natured long-windedness quashed by the eerie atmosphere which had descended upon the occupants of the bay, “I know about such possibilities as singularities, wormholes and many things I would find ‘hard to swallow.’ But many of them exist, nonetheless.”
“This gateway,” Shannon asked him. “It was supposed to lead to another solar system?”
“My grandfather’s colleague assumed so, but she disappeared before she could tell him anything else.”
“So let me get this straight.” Jason held up a hand, face screwed up in consternation. “You’re saying that over a hundred years ago, a Russian spaceship stumbled upon some kind of gate somewhere in the asteroid belt that transported them to another star system. They came back, but before anything could be done about it, the Sino-Russian War breaks out and Antonov took a ship and went back through that hole. Then, somewhere on the other side, something got hold of him and his crew and his technology, a century later, and decided to use it to invade a colony world to loot a few computers?”
“Yes, that’s the troubling part.” Munfimi agreed. “Even assuming the other details are true, which is quite a leap—forgive me, Dr. Kovalev—then we still fall upon the question, why attack Aphrodite? If they needed resupply, why not simply continue to hijack our ships, as they obviously have been? They must surely have expended more resources attacking this colony than they recouped in their occupation.”
“Yeah,” Lambert agreed. “And after we blew the spaceport, they didn’t even try to reestablish a beachhead—they just pulled out. What’s with that?”
“Oh, my God.”
All heads turned at Jason’s almost involuntary utterance. His face seemed pale, his eyes staring intently into space.
“Anybody ever heard,” McKay asked quietly, “of the Spanish Civil War?”
“Shit, you’re right,” Shannon blurted.
“What?” Munfimi wanted to know. “What’s this got to do with Spain?”
“You know about World War Two?” Jason asked the man. “Hitler, the Nazis, the Holocaust?” The xenobiologist nodded. “Back before the war started, Hitler installed a puppet government in power in Spain. The Democrats rebelled against it, and Hitler used the revolution as an opportunity to test his military machine before he threw it at the rest of Europe. Kind of a dress rehearsal.”
“Do you really think that’s it, sir?” Lambert asked him, seeming worried. “I mean, we’re assuming an awful lot, aren’t we?”
“Yeah, and assuming usually makes an ASS out of U and ME, I know,” Jason acknowledged. “But Colonel Mellanby sent us out here to get some answers, and this is as close as we’ve come.”
“You think they did this as a… ‘dress rehearsal,’ then?” Kovalev asked him. “But a rehearsal for what?”
“There’s only one target worth that kind of effort,” Jason explained. “And that’s Earth.”
Chapter Fifteen
“Once we have a war, there is only one thing left to do. It must be won. For defeat brings worse things than any that can ever happen in war.”
—Ernest Hemingway
Shannon sipped carefully at her cappuccino, watching the pedestrians stroll casually through Reagan Plaza, reveling in the unseasonable warmth of the New York autumn.
They don’t know, she thought. They’re walking around with their heads up their ass like it’s any other day.
“Would you like anything else?” the waiter asked her. This was one of Capital City’s more upscale street bistros, with real live people to wait on you instead of the usual robot serving carts and computerized menu screens.
She shook her head. “I’m waiting for someone.”
He gave a disinterested nod and wandered off to find a better tipper, leaving her alone with her thoughts. It seemed odd to be back on Earth again so soon, as if she’d stepped right off the arid plains of Aphrodite and onto the streets of Capital City. It had happened almost that fast.
“Somebody has to go back,” Jason had said, out of thin air, as they lay together in his small cabin aboard the research base. “Colonel Mellanby needs to hear what we’ve found out.”
“It should be one of us,” she agreed, turning over to face him. His hair was tousled and unruly from their lovemaking, making the serious expression he wore seem strangely incongruous. “One can take the courier and the other can stay and wrap up the investigation, then bring back the Patton.”
“Who goes?” He grimaced, obviously disliking the idea but knowing she was right.
“I’ll go,” she volunteered.
“Are you sure?”
“I’ve had enough of being a leader of men to last me a while,” she said.
“What if we’re too late?” Jason’s eyes stared through the walls, trying to see all the way back home. “What if they’ve already done it?”
“Then I won’t stay long,” she answered, smiling.
He glanced back at her, something behind his eyes even more serious than the idea of an alien invader.
“Be careful, okay?” he said quietly. “I… I love you.”
“I’ll be careful,” she told him, burying her face in the crook of his arm. “I promise.”
She still wondered, sitting there nearly two months later in a corner of Reagan Plaza, why she had avoided telling him her feelings. The question had haunted her strung-out g-sleep dreams, and had been on her mind even as she sat in Colonel Mellanby’s office up in Republic Spacefleet Headquarters this morning.
He’d listened to her report in silence, eyes as cold as flint, not showing a bit of surprise—as if he’d come up with this idea months ago and was only waiting for her to come a couple dozen light years and confirm it.
“I know there’s a lot of unanswered questions in our theory,” she’d concluded, “but we felt like we should get what we had to you now and let you make the call, sir.”
“You did the right thing,” he told her. “I’m not a hundred percent sold on this link to the Russians, but at least
two things are abundantly clear. Whoever was behind the attack on Aphrodite knows enough about us to use our genetic material to create these biomechs.” He sat back in his chair, his expression as close to worried as she’d ever seen it. “And secondly, McKay’s right about the purpose of the attack. It makes no sense as anything but a practice run for an invasion of Earth.”
“What are we going to do, sir?” Shannon asked, hoping he would have an answer that she hadn’t thought of yet.
“What I’m going to do,” he said, rising from his chair so abruptly it startled her, “is get myself an immediate audience with President Jameson and apprize him of the situation. After that, your guess is as good as mine.”
“What about me, sir?” she asked him, hopping to her feet as he strode quickly to the door.
“Take some leave, Lieutenant, but don’t lose your comlink, in case anything comes up.” He paused just a step away from her, fixing her with a curious glance. “What is it, Lieutenant?”
“Sir?” She shook her head, confused. She felt intensely uncomfortable this close to him, as if she were hand-feeding an uncaged leopard.
“You’ve got something beside this threat report on your mind. And anything serious enough to preoccupy you when we’re facing a possible attack from aliens has to be worth my attention.”
She swallowed hard, not accustomed to having her feelings so easily read.
“It’s…,” she stuttered, feeling as if she were compelled to answer him. “It’s about Jason, sir… Captain McKay.”
“He’s a good man,” Mellanby agreed, as if he hadn’t picked up her train of thought. “I trust you two have developed a good working relationship?” There was a glint in his eye that she would have described as mischievous on someone lacking his reputation.
“Well, yes,” she answered quickly, fighting a sinking feeling that this conversation was rapidly spinning out of control. “That’s… I mean, we’ve become very close…”
“I would hope so,” the Snake said with a grin. “After all, you’ll be working together for a long time—quite possibly the rest of your careers.” She began to shake her head, still believing he was missing her point, but she was interrupted by his quiet, surprisingly friendly laugh. “Shannon,” he said, using her first name for the first time since she’d known him, “whatever is between you and Jason personally is your own business, as long as it doesn’t interfere with your performance. And as far as I can determine, it hasn’t as yet. Does that assuage your concerns?”
“Yes, sir.” She smiled gratefully. “Thank you.”
“Go take some leave,” he ordered, then stepped purposefully out the door, leaving her alone in his office.
She’d followed his advice, calling her mother in Ireland to let her know she’d be visiting within a couple days—and making one more call, to wrap up some unfinished business.
Shannon looked up from her glass and saw that unfinished business striding across the plaza, backlit by the setting sun, dressed in black. She had a sudden urge to run to him, to throw herself into his arms and run away to some secluded spot for an afternoon of passion. But something stood in her way: something with brown hair and earnest grey eyes and a crooked smile—something called love.
She stood as Nathan Tanaka approached, pulling off his mirrored sunglasses.
“I did not think,” he said, kissing her hand lightly, “that I would be seeing you again so soon—if ever.”
“Neither did I,” she admitted, feeling her way back into her chair and waving him into the seat opposite her. “I felt I should apologize for the way I treated you back on Aphrodite.”
“There is nothing to apologize for, Shannon,” he told her. “I don’t believe either of us exchanged marriage vows or promises of faithfulness, unless I was asleep.”
Shannon chuckled softly, covering his hand with hers.
“I know,” she agreed. “We were both consenting adults with no illusions about sex. But there was no excuse for my avoiding you.”
“You and Captain McKay had a lot of catching up to do,” Nathan reasoned. “I would not have begrudged you that time together. I could see in your eyes the feelings between you. Even when we were together, I could see it.”
“Could you?” Shannon fought back a blush, even more embarrassed by the fact that she was embarrassed.
“Don’t worry, Shannon,” he assured her. “You were not a giddy teenager, by any stretch of the imagination. Reading people’s faces is a skill necessary to one in my profession. My father used to say that not even a samurai could guard his eyes.”
“Do you ever see him?” she asked. “Or your mother?”
“Mother visits once a year.” His face softened, his voice becoming as close to wistful as she’d heard from him. “Father died over ten years ago. He was guarding a corporate executive during a visit to the Mars colony. He was killed in an attack on the mine facilities by Martian separatists.”
“I’m sorry,” she said, squeezing his hand. “That must have been rough on your mother.”
“Not as bad as the thought of the same thing happening to me,” he replied. “She has asked me at least once every year since his death to retire to Japan, to teach the young men and women of the clan.”
“But you have to stay with Valerie,” Shannon said, mouth turning down almost imperceptibly. “How is the little princess?”
“Visibly pregnant and almost invisible socially.” Tanaka didn’t seem comfortable with the subject. “Actually, she’s here in the Capital, with Mr. Mulrooney and the Senator, listening to the President’s End-of-Session Address—they’re to go to Luna after the recess and stay till her baby is delivered. It seems it will be an easier delivery in the lighter gravity.”
“Guess I caught you just in time, then,” Shannon concluded, taking a sip of her drink.
He nodded. “Another six hours, and I would have been on the shuttle with them.”
“Should be a fun vacation,” she sniffed. “I’ll bet Mulrooney’s loving this.”
“It is a difficult time,” Nathan admitted. “But Ms. O’Keefe is handling it as well as can be expected.” He glanced at his watch. “I should really be getting back to the Center.”
“And I need to catch a flight,” she said, sliding back her chair and coming to her feet. “I just wanted to talk to you first.”
“I hope you and Jason have much happiness.” Tanaka stood, taking her hand. “He is a good man—you are truly worthy of each other.”
“Thank you, Nathan.” She pulled him into a kiss, with all of the feeling, if not the desire, they’d shared once before. “I hope,” she told him as she slipped out of his arms, “that you find someone worthy of you.”
“To find two such women in one lifetime,” he said with a shake his head, “would surely be a miracle. Take care, Shannon.”
She gave him one last smile, then turned, without another word, and walked away. Yet she couldn’t help but think that she wasn’t just walking away from something—she was also walking toward something.
So intent was she on walking toward something that she didn’t hear Tanaka’s shouted warning, didn’t notice the huge shadow passing overhead until the bodyguard slammed into her from behind, knocking her out of the way just as the thing plowed into the tiled surface of Reagan Plaza. Hitting the ground with a flare of pain from her hip and shoulder, Shannon cursed reflexively but was unable to hear her own voice above the shriek of tearing metal as another of the teardrop-shaped, bat-winged craft slammed directly into the Freedom Tower at the center of the plaza, sending the skeletal structure toppling like a felled oak into the awning of one of the outdoor bistros.
For a horrible, frozen moment, all Shannon could manage was to stare wide-eyed at the black shapes of the Invader drop pods swooping down over Capital City like vultures on a rotting corpse, and amid the terrified screams of the onlookers and the muffled bangs of explosive bolts ominously detonating, all she could hear was a wailing voice screaming in her head—“Too lat
e! We were too late!”
“Shannon, come on!” Nathan jerked her to her feet. “We have to get to the Senate!”
Snapping out of her fugue, she glanced disorientedly from the bifurcating pods to Tanaka’s desperate frown.
“The Senator,” she realized.
“Not just the Senator,” he corrected. “The President!”
“Oh, my God,” she hissed, scrambling to her feet. No sooner had she moved than a burst of gunfire ripped into the section of pavement she’d occupied only a heartbeat before, the ricochets spanging off the fusion-form cement in every direction.
Nathan and Shannon darted behind the low wall of a fountain, out of sight of the squad of Invader biomechs who’d emerged from the nearest pod. The fusillade followed them, spraying water and chips of sculpted marble cherub over their backs as they hugged the pavement. Shannon clawed at the cargo pocket of her utility fatigues, grasping desperately for the compact handgun concealed there, but the firing suddenly cut off.
Nathan risked a glance around the edge of the fountain wall and saw the squad of Invaders jogging off in a loose wedge out of the plaza, following at least three other groups of the biomechs whose pods had fallen into the square.
“They’re going,” Shannon breathed, finally freeing the pistol from the folds of her pocket.
“They’ve been called away,” Nathan deduced. “They’re being directed.”
“To the Senate?” she guessed.
“We have to get there first.” He pulled her to her feet and led her out of the plaza at a sprint.
* * *
President Gregory Jameson surveyed his audience, looking over the faces of the collected representatives of every nation on Earth, as well as the larger orbital colonies, Luna Dome and the Martian Habitats. In some ways, this was his favorite day of the year, because he was presiding over the best the human race had to offer—it made him proud and full of hope. In other ways, it was his favorite day of the year because he wouldn’t have to listen to the incessant whining of the biggest bunch of Goddamned selfish crybabies in the universe.