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Call of Courage: 7 Novels of the Galactic Frontier

Page 157

by C. Gockel


  “Look what you did, you stupid bitch,” one of his men said. “What the hell was that about?”

  Beryl explored a gash across his eyebrow and then looked at his blood-covered hands. “Let her go,” he said.

  “Captain?”

  “You fucking heard me.”

  Nova nearly fell when the soldier released her with an angry shove. She breathed in sobbing gasps, her hands on her knees, furious and exhausted. “Those are civilians trying to get me out of this place. Why did you open fire? Look at this!”

  “He raised his weapon,” Beryl said and then seemed to realize that he sounded defensive. “As far as we saw, they were rebels. Our orders are to retrieve you. Now get your ass in motion and back to base.”

  “I’m done taking orders from you,” she said and paid no attention to the looks of astonishment among his men. She knelt beside the unconscious Coria. “We’re taking her with us. And anyone else who’s still alive.” She glared at Beryl. “Do you get that?”

  He grasped the back of her suit and hauled her to her feet. “You are pushing your luck,” he said. “We’ll just assume you’ve lost your fucking mind.” He turned to his men. “Grell. Silas. Double-time to the gate and bring an evac back here.”

  The hours that followed passed like a feverish dream. Too weak to continue the trek to the base, Nova was made to sit in the shade while the soldiers stood guard. She did not recall talking to any of them or seeing Beryl after this. Someone eventually pulled up with a skimmer and the few survivors of this latest massacre were taken away.

  The medics at the base received her, someone propped her up while she took a long shower and then she was tucked into a cot in the garrison’s well-equipped hospital compound. Coria was also there, asleep or unconscious, and an armed guard stood by the tent entrance. Nova was treated for dehydration and finally allowed to sleep before she remembered to ask why they had posted the guard.

  The following day brought a bedside debrief. And another, conducted by someone else. She talked about Sergeant Reko and Arter and the conditions at the crude med station near the slums. She tried to recall the location of the anti-aircraft guns they had seen in the hills and that still hadn’t been found. She asked about Coria, who was no longer in the hospital tent, and was not given an answer. Then she was left alone again, feeling restless and ready to leave this place.

  At the end of that day several officers entered the tent. She sat up and put her feet on the floor as did two of the more able patients that shared her space.

  “At ease,” they were told as the general approached.

  “Yessir,” Nova said, not at all at ease to be sitting here in a hospital gown while General Patrina Ausan stood before her. The Centauri, who once spoke at the flight academy on Magra while Nova was still a greenie, had been an inspiration for her since her image first appeared on the massive overhead screen of the lecture hall. Now she was leading Air Command’s primary base on the other side of Bellac Tau, making the new skyranch her responsibility. Nova had to remind herself to stop gawking at the woman.

  “I heard you were still lazing around, Lieutenant.”

  “I… um what?” Nova stammered.

  The general surprised her by sitting on the edge of the cot. Her glossy black hair was tightly bound and the uniform more crisp than any fabric had the right to be in this weather. Nova wondered, not for the first time, how senior officers managed this. “I’d say it’s well deserved,” Ausan said. “How are you feeling?”

  Nova blinked up at an adjutant waiting by the door and then back at the general. “I’m recovered. I wasn’t injured. Just exhausted. Ready to return to duty, General.”

  “We’ll let the doctors decide that, Whiteside. I want to commend you for your warning about the attack on the ridge. We got reinforcements out there just in time. And you were correct. One of the captives there turned out to be a very important Arawaj rebel, most notable for the fact that he’s working directly for Tharron himself.”

  Nova whistled. Tharron’s position as the absolute leader of the Shri-Lan made him Air Command’s most desired target. “Thank you, General. I’m glad I was able to help. I’m afraid not much else went according to plan back there.”

  “Yes, well, we cannot gleefully call this a victory. The militants have been routed from Shon Gat and the hill villages but the price was too steep.” The Centauri stood up again. “You’ll return to your base in the morning. When you’ve been declared fit you’ll rejoin your squad and head for the jumpsite.” She smiled. “I think we can use someone with your resourcefulness up there.”

  Nova was certain that the broad grin that spread over her face made her look just a bit foolish. “Thank you, General.” She bit her lip. “May I… may I ask, um…”

  The officer raised an eyebrow.

  “There was someone, a Human, who helped us. At the hospital. When we went out to send the message. And later, when we escaped. He was lost. And injured. I wonder what became of him.”

  “What is his name?”

  “Nathon something Djari. Goes by Djari. He’s applied to work on the skyranch so we probably have a record of him here.”

  Ausan’s lip twitched in amusement. “And you’d like to see him make his way there?”

  “Well, yes. But mainly I’m just worried about how he’s doing.”

  The Centauri nodded to her aide who got busy with his data sleeve. “We’ll see what we can find. You just get rested up, Lieutenant.”

  “Yessir.” Nova watched the general leave through the tent flap held aside for her and then nearly collide with a soldier trying to enter. He stood aside and saluted as she passed him without comment.

  “Gods, Rander, you idiot,” Nova said. “You almost knocked her over.”

  The sergeant looked over his shoulder and shrugged. “I don’t think Lady Patrina is so easily knocked over.” He flopped onto her cot far more casually than their commander had just done. “How come you rate your own bedside general?” He gave her a bowl of pudding filched from the mess hall.

  She accepted the bowl and decided not to scold him for scattering dust over her sheets. She had recently become very fond of clean bedding. “Congratulating me, I guess. No one even told me why she’s out here.”

  “Mopping up this mess, of course. Plus she found out that Major Trakkas is shuffling his pilots to places they have no business being and I think that irked her plenty. I hear she almost had his stripes when she heard you were MIA. Misplacing a pilot is a bit of a problem, I guess. You people are expensive.”

  “Is that why he sent that commando after me? With Beryl at the helm?”

  “Yah. They caught your signal. Nothing more fun for Beryl’s bunch than tracking rebels. Must have been a party for them. They never seem to get prisoners back in one piece. Going to finish that?”

  “Yes. Hands off.” Nova savored the sweet treat. “Sending Beryl must seem amusing to him.”

  “To Major Trakkas? Why?”

  Nova shrugged. “Long story.”

  “Give me some gossip, Loot! I heard you punched him out.”

  “You guys are like little old ladies. I barely touched him.” Nova stared into her pudding. No one had mentioned her attack on Captain Beryl. No one had asked about the death of those civilians. Collateral damage in shades of gray where both of them had stepped over the line. A matter best left in the dark, perhaps.

  Sergeant Rander reached over to nudge her hand, bandaged where the skin of her knuckles had split on Beryl’s teeth. “He got sent out with his squad, but when I saw him his face was a shiny purple mush. An improvement, some say.”

  She shook her head to push the memory aside. “I’m out of here, too. Guess I’m getting my plane back, finally. The general said we’re heading up to guard the jumpsite. I can’t wait to get off this rock and back out into space.” She set the empty bowl on a table beside her cot. “I’m sorry about Reko. Tell the others he did his job. There wasn’t any way he could have avoided getting shot.”
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  Rander winced. “Yeah, I know. We were briefed. He was a good soldier. We lost thirty-two troops, plus Beamer’s unit in the hills. Almost two hundred civilians. As many shipped off to hospitals. Could have been worse, I guess.”

  “Could have been better, too.”

  Chapter Six

  “This is the fourth time I’ve brought this ship in here and you people ask me the same thing every single time. It gets tiresome.”

  Nova kept her eyes on the cockpit data display scrolling a list of the new arrival’s inventory. Her scanners reported a shipment of foodstuffs not found on Bellac Tau along with barrels of liquor from Feyd and what scanned like bales of fabrics, possibly clothing. There were also about a dozen passengers in one of the cabins of the transport they had waylaid as it emerged from the jumpsite. Her findings were confirmed by the sensors of Lieutenant Rolyn’s Kite on the other side of the ship.

  “Yes, sir,” she said.

  “You know I have to go through all this at customs,” the captain of the trader complained.

  “Your destination is Siolet, then?” Nova entered the name of Bellac Tau’s largest city into her system. Besides housing the Union’s main base there, it was also its primary trade hub. “Not the skyranch?”

  “You know damn well I’m going to Siolet! Why don’t you go chase rebels instead of bothering traders?”

  “Rebel activity has increased in this sub-sector, sir. Your safety is our primary concern. Do you require an escort to the planet?”

  “Your rebels aren’t going to chase me for my dresses. I told you I’m going to Siolet. I don’t need you to follow me to make sure of that.”

  Her shift partner cut in, unheard by the civilian. “You’re so polite, Whiteside. He’s going to pop a vein for sure.”

  She grinned. “Anything on voice?”

  “Yeah. Human. Not so much irritated as scared spitless. Spiking all over the place. Can’t see what he’s hiding in there, though. Those could be slaves.”

  “Let Ground handle this one.” Nova returned her attention to the trader. “It’s no trouble at all, sir. We’re glad to help you arrive safely.” She watched Lieutenant Sool pull forward and take up position beside the transport ship, ready to escort it to the surface. “We wish you and your crew a very pleasant stay on Bellac Tau.”

  Nova closed the com link and sent their findings to the Air Command carrier hovering not far from the jumpsite. Their squadron had patrolled this area for fifty of Bellac’s short days in anticipation of saboteurs that might have dodged patrols on the other side. The Union relay station near the jumpsite, like the skyranch also still under construction, made an attractive target. Once it was guarded by a permanent Air Command detail, the squadrons would leave for their next assignment.

  “You’re a wicked woman, Whiteside,” Rolyn said.

  Nova signaled him to return to the jumpsite to join the rest of their flight and await the next arrival. “We were told to be courteous, weren’t we? Been a quiet day, sort of. I like that.”

  “Since when?”

  Besides a shipment from Targon of materials for the unfinished relay, they had monitored just five arrivals during their shift. Three had exchanged polite conversation with the tedious but necessary Air Command checkpoint, one had tried to bribe them and was tagged as smuggler but harmless, and this was the only one today to complain about Union presence here. Predictably, it also seemed to be the one with the most to hide.

  To traverse these instant subspace connections between far-flung sectors required powerful shields and even more powerful processors. Commonly, massive transport fleets provided berths to lighter vessels for the passage. It made for crowded ships and chaotic inventories. The liners, meant for migration and trade, often smuggled rebels between sectors and presented the greatest challenge to Air Command patrols.

  “Black sky cruiser coming in from Bellac,” they heard Lieutenant Sulean’s voice. “Origin Panyan. In a hurry.”

  “Panyan, eh?” Heiko Boker cut in. “Not a lot of traffic coming out of that continent. Is this something new?”

  “Negative. No air fields in that jungle. Looks like our visitor took a round trip to hide home base. Piece of junk. Strange configuration.”

  “Your turn to get the story, Heiko,” Nova said.

  Boker and his wingman moved to intercept the new arrival. Nova scanned the ship while he made his respectful inquiries. “Surprised that thing made it this far,” she said over a closed band. “But fully shielded. I can’t even get a good look inside. Want to bet it’s carrying something it doesn’t want us to see? Might want to get your fangs out, Boker.”

  The squad moved into a slightly more aggressive formation as the cruiser approached the jumpsite without slowing as was expected in this area.

  “Well, he’s not talking to us,” Boker said after repeating his request for identification. “Tower?”

  “We’ve notified Siolet,” came the reply from the carrier. “Do not engage. Stand by.”

  “I feel they are lacking respect and common good manners,” Boker grumbled but stood down to let the cruiser pass. Without permission from Bellac’s governors none of them had the authority to waylay a traveler unless they were met with hostility. And until the construction was complete and the skyranch and elevator operational, Air Command had no authority to shut down the jumpsite’s guide beacons.

  “What did I just see?” Rolyn yelled.

  The others, too, took a moment to realize that the large cruiser had disengaged two smaller ships, no bigger than the Kites themselves. The main body veered and headed for the jumpsite’s relay construction, firing as it approached on a collision course. The separated components streaked toward the jumpsite itself.

  “It’s going to ram the relay,” the Air Boss transmitted. “We’ve got this. Engage the two bogeys.”

  Nova whipped her Kite around and raced after the escaping ships.

  “Beacons are responding. Jumpsite is opening,” Boker said. “I’m right behind you, Whiteside.”

  Indeed, their systems warned them that someone aboard the fleeing ships had tapped into the beacons that allowed navigators to enter subspace. The site opened, soon large enough to allow them to enter.

  “Who the hell’s aboard this thing? What fucking nerve!” Boker yelled. He fired into the lead ship’s shields. The other vessel, not busy with opening this gateway to Magra, returned his fire and kept all of them dodging and weaving in their wake.

  “Going in,” Nova said.

  “Shit,” Rolyn replied. They were all aware of his aversion to traveling through subspace. It was a common phobia, even among pilots.

  “Stay here, Rolyn,” they now heard Captain Dakad from the carrier. “Boker, Sulean, Nieri, Whiteside. Go.”

  Nova set her course to follow the lead ship into the breach at ever-increasing velocity, letting them use up their coolants to calculate the passage. Sulean’s guns streaked past her and the second ship spun away, disabled. “Nice shot, we’re going—”

  Nova’s remaining words were only in her head. They had passed the threshold into the ‘Big Empty’ and hurtled into the frightening nothing-void of subspace. She saw nothing, or at least there was nothing that her brain seemed to recognize any more. Felt nothing. Heard nothing. She was unable to move and only her thoughts felt alive, reaching a panic state that, for some, could cause lasting damage during a long jump.

  This was not a long jump and the breach soon spewed the ships back out into real space to scramble for bearings. Nova’s neural interface grappled for the momentarily disrupted controls and she wasted no time in scanning for their quarry. It was also tumbling through space ahead of them and, as she watched, steadied and changed course.

  “Battle cruiser ahead!” Boker called.

  “I see it,” Nieri said. “Probably thought we’d take the carrier through instead of the Kites. Damn.”

  “We’ve got time,” Nova said. She reached for her console to override the power management system.


  “Time to get roasted, maybe,” Sulean answered. “We’re in range. Their range.”

  “Whiteside…” Nieri began.

  Nova punched every bit of power into her Kite, shortcutting a few routines via her interface to coax more speed from her plane. It raced ahead of the others, pushing the limits of the machine to bring the enemy fighter into her gun sights.

  “Should have just said hello when we asked, assbucket!” Boker chortled when her guns took the ship down. “Uh oh.” The cruiser had issued a swarm of Shrills in retaliation, looking like angry insects around a hive.

  “Out of here!” Nova shouted and then held her breath while her Kite seemed to make the turn back to the jumpsite far too slowly. The other three Union pilots fired past her to hold back the enemy ships as she raced toward the jumpsite. “Going negative,” she warned as the first to arrive there. She signaled the beacons and began to feed energy forward to create the opening.

  “Remind me, Whiteside, you do have your chartjumper creds, right?” Sulean asked, somewhat nervously.

  She did not reply, too focused on the mental connection with her plane. Once again, they plunged into the breach, losing all senses until they had crossed the unimaginable distance between Magra and Bellac Tau.

  The other ships awaiting them veered out of the way to let the four Kites right themselves.

  “Might be some Shrills coming through, team,” Nieri said, unruffled by any of this. “Do we still have a relay?”

  “Everyone’s accounted for, Lieutenant,” the Air Boss transmitted. “That delivery didn’t make it. Salvage team is on the way. Return to base, Sulean. You’re reading a little jittery. Status, Nieri.”

  “Enemy battle cruiser over there,” the pilot said. “Complement unknown. We took down the bogey. Whiteside’s probably a little short on coolant.”

  “Heard. We’ll alert Magra. Resume patrol pattern. We’ll send replacements early.”

  The squad hovered around the jumpsite, waiting for any sign that it might be opening to admit the enemy Shrills, perhaps even the battle cruiser, into Bellac space. It didn’t happen. Whoever had awaited the two rebels over there had decided to cut their losses.

 

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