STARSHIP:
STARSHIP:
BOOK FIVE
an
imprint of Prometheus Books
Amherst,
NY
Published 2009 by Pyr®, an imprint of
Prometheus Books
Starship: Flagship.
Book Five. Copyright
© 2009 by Mike Resnick. "The Ballad of Wilson Cole"
©
2009 by John Anealio. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication
Data
Resnick,
Michael D.
Starship—flagship / by Mike Resnick.
p. cm.
ISBN: 978-1-59102-788-1 (acid-free
paper)
1.
Space warfare—Fiction. I. Tide. II. Title: Flagship.
PS3568.E698S733
2009
813'.54—dc22
2009033113
Printed in the United States on acid-free paper
To
Carol, as always
And to Blarney, who knows why
Singapore Station—oddly
shaped, built of dozens of disparate pieces, close to seven miles long—moved
almost imperceptibly through space at the heart of the Inner Frontier. It was
not a world but merely a structure. It possessed no government yet was home to
almost twenty thousand permanent residents and a quarter million transients. A
dozen mile-long docking arms shot out from its core, giving it the appearance
of a gigantic, shining, mutated spider.
The most important location
on the three oxygen levels of the station was Duke's Place, a casino run by the
once-human individual known as the Platinum Duke. It attracted humans and
aliens for its gaming tables, its drinks, and its willingness to look the other
way when black marketeers gathered to do their business. But on this particular
day, more important things were transpiring than simply the winning and losing
of money. To the men, women, and aliens gathered in the Platinum Duke's back
room, the stakes were a lot higher than that.
Wilson Cole faced the
assemblage. He was a nondescript man, an inch or two below normal height, a few
pounds overweight, his brown hair starting to turn gray. There was nothing in
his appearance to suggest that he had been the most decorated member of the
Republic's vast military machine, or that for the past four years he had been
that same military's most wanted outlaw.
"It's time," he
said. "We leave tomorrow."
"Tomorrow?"
exclaimed a few surprised voices.
"I've received word
that the Navy has dispatched a fleet of eight hundred ships, and they should
reach Singapore Station in two days' time. So like it or not, we're in a state
of war."
"We always were,"
snorted an extremely tall, statuesque redhead.
"Not until last month,
Val," Cole corrected her.
"Okay," said the
woman named Val. "You weren't at
war with the Republic. I was."
"It makes no
difference," he replied. "Right now we all are."
"You can't say this was
unanticipated," said a man whose face and limbs, indeed everything but his
eyes and tongue, seemed to be made of platinum.
"Of course it
wasn't," answered Cole. "But it means that it's time to go on the
offensive."
"Are you sure we're
ready?" asked a short blonde woman.
"I don't think it
matters," said Cole. "It's been forced on us." He paused.
"Look, the Navy tortured two of our officers and then destroyed an entire
planet for harboring them. So we declared the Inner Frontier off-limits, and
began picking off Navy ships one at a time whenever they'd cross the border. It
was only a matter of time before they responded in force. They did that last
month, and we beat them—at a cost of half our fleet. This time they're coming
with more than twice as many ships. What will it cost us to beat them again—
and if we do, how many ships do you think they'll send the next time? They've
got three million to choose from, and four worlds devoted to doing nothing but
building more. We have less than a thousand, and most of them have no defenses
against the kind of weaponry they'll have to face."
"If we can't hold off
eight hundred ships, or fifteen hundred, or two thousand, on our own home
ground, how the hell do you plan to conquer the Republic?" demanded the
Platinum Duke. "I trusted you, Wilson. Now you tell me you can't defend
Singapore Station."
"I can defend it," said Cole. "I'm telling you I won't defend it. We can't stay here. It
just wouldn't be worth the cost in ships and lives. If we lose, it's over; and
if we win, then we'll lose the next time, or the time after that."
"So instead you're
going to conquer the Republic, with its sixty thousand worlds and three million
military ships?" persisted the Duke sarcastically. "I'll tell you
something, Wilson: if you promote God to Gunnery Officer of the Teddy R, I'll still put my money on the
Republic."
"Wars are like safaris,"
answered Cole calmly. "The best ones are where you only have to fire one
or two shots."
"Spare me your
platitudes!" snapped the Duke. "Eight hundred ships are coming out
here for blood. They don't know that you've teamed up with the Octopus. They
don't know about the few hundred ships you recruited from the Republic itself.
They don't even know if the Theodore
Roosevelt still exists. All they know is that we annihilated their last
force at Singapore Station, and that's what they're coming to destroy."
"They're not coming to
destroy Singapore Station," chimed in the Octopus, a huge man who stood
out even among the more bizarre aliens in the room. He wore no shirt and had
six misshapen hands projecting, armless, from his rib cage, three on each side.
"Use your brain, Duke. Just make it clear that you're doing business as
usual, have your girls greet them with open arms, and keep your casinos and
bars and drug dens running around the clock. They know that Singapore Station
doesn't have motive power. Until last month they never lost a ship anywhere
near the station. The only reason they came here is because they were tipped
that Cole was here. They don't want your station. They want him—and, in all immodesty, me."
"Fine!" snarled
the Duke. "So they're not going to blow it away; they're just going to
appropriate everything I own. That makes it all okay."
"Shut up!" said
Val irritably. "If we win, we'll take it back. If we lose, you won't be
around to worry about it."
"How comforting,"
growled the Duke.
"Come off it,"
said Val. "You spent a good twenty years running rigged games and serving
watered whiskey. It's time you paid your dues."
"I thought that was
what I was doing when I let you draw them to the station last month."
"Hey, Cole!" said
Val, getting to her feet. "What say I make him the first casualty of the
war?"
"Just calm down,
Val," said Cole. "We've got serious things to talk about."
"Yeah? Well, I am
seriously offering to coldcock him."
Cole smiled and turned to
the Duke. "You have to forgive the Valkyrie. Sometimes she forgets who the
enemy is."
"Then get on with
it!" muttered Val.
"Sometimes she forgets
who the boss is, too," continued Cole. "All right, to repeat: at last
count we have eight hundred and four ships, including those that Lafferty can
make available to us. The computer can't give us an exact total for the Navy,
but it estimates three million four hundred seventeen thousand two hundred
eighty-nine as of an hour ago."
"Where is this Lafferty?" asked one of the
men at the back of the room.
"I notice that nobody
minded accepting his help last month," said Cole with a smile. The smile
vanished. "He's our contact within the Republic, and he's staying there.
They're watching any ship that approaches Singapore Station, so why let them know
they have a turncoat—actually, a few hundred turncoats—in their midst?" He
paused. "Now, even someone as bloodthirsty as Val can't really want to
take on three and a half million ships with a force of eight hundred
"Three million four
hundred thousand," she interrupted him.
"I stand corrected. If
you find those odds considerably more favorable, I'm going to have the computer
give you a course in remedial mathematics." There were a few chuckles; the
Valkyrie wasn't laughing. "Not only can't we go up against them, but it
would be foolhardy to travel in any discernible formation, or even in any
proximity to each other. We're fighting a guerrilla war, and it's a big galaxy.
If we do it right, finding us should be even harder than finding needles in a
haystack."
"That's going to make
it damnably hard to coordinate any action at all," offered another man.
"We're working on
that," answered Cole. "Christine Mboya and Malcolm Briggs are our two
computer experts. They're on the Teddy R right
now, working on a code we can use that—"
"There's never been a
code that couldn't be broken," interrupted an alien.
"You didn't let me
finish," said Cole, just the slightest hint of steel beneath the mild
response. "As I was saying, they're working on a code that will be keyed
in only to those ships that are meant to receive it, and will instantly vanish
should any other ship or computer try to decipher it."
"It'll never
work."
Cole indicated a humanoid
alien seated in the first row. "Commander Jacovic?"
The alien stood up and
turned to face the room. "The Teroni Federation has been using such codes
for four years. They exist, and they work."
"One of the advantages
we have," said Cole, "is that most of the Republic's military assets
and forces will be occupied by the Teroni Federation. It's true that they have
three and a half million ships, but about three million are engaged in this
interminable war against the Teronis."
"So it's only half a
million to eight hundred," said the Platinum Duke. "That makes it all
okay."
Val glared at him until he
lowered his gaze.
"Another advantage we
have is that my First Officer"—Cole nodded toward Jacovic—"is the
former Commander of the Fifth Teroni Fleet. Should we inadvertently come into
contact with them, he will be our spokesman."
"He's their version of you" said the Duke. "They'll
blow him away the second they identify him."
Cole shook his head.
"He resigned in disgust. I mutinied. There's a difference—perhaps not to
the ruling parties, but to the officers he may have to contact." He turned
to face the Platinum Duke. "Now, as to your last bit of arithmetic: it's
true that there are probably close to half a million Republic ships that aren't
engaged in the war with the Teroni Federation—but that's not the only real or
potential threat the Republic faces. The Canphor Twins—Canphor VI and VII—have
gone to war with them four times this millennium, and there's always a chance,
almost a certainty in fact, that one of these days they'll try it again. When
we were in the Navy, the remnants of the Sett Empire were picking up some
support on the Rim, and controlled about thirty planets. Who the hell knows
what's happened in the last four years? And there are doubtless other threats
that we know nothing about. Most of the Republic's ships will be otherwise
occupied, as long as we can keep one fact a secret."
"Only one?" said
the Duke.
Cole smiled. "Only one.
We know we're in a war with the
Republic. The longer we can keep that fact from them, the greater our chance of
success."
A man at the back of the
room stood up. "I have a question."
"Yes, Mr. Perez?"
"It's easy to keep the
fact that we're at war a secret today or tomorrow, sir, but how the hell do we
keep it a secret once we start attacking their ships inside the Republic?"
"In the beginning,
we'll pick them off one by one, just the way we did here on the Frontier. We
won't attack any force that we can't annihilate before they can get a message
off. The notion that we've reentered their territory and are engaging their
ships is too outrageous for them to give any credence to, at least if we're
careful."
"Dumb!" said Val.
"Oh?" said Cole.
"Perhaps you'd care to enlighten us."
"We could die of old
age before we kill a third of the solo ships they've got patrolling the
Republic's borders. Deluros VIII is their capital world. That's the place we should be going!"
"That's our ultimate
target," replied Cole. "How close do you think we could get as an
identifiable military force? Forty thousand light-years? Thirty-five
thousand?"
"So you think one lone
ship can sneak through?" she persisted. "I hope you're not thinking
of the Teddy R, because every
goddamned ship and officer in the Republic is on the lookout for it. The best
thing to do is put it on autopilot, fill it with exceptionally dirty pulse
bombs, and aim it at Deluros."
Cole looked amused.
"You must forgive her," he said to the room. "She's really very
kind to her cat."
"I don't have a fucking
cat!" snapped Val.
"I forgot—she ate
it," he said with a smile. Val growled an obscenity, but other than that
didn't respond. "As I was saying," Cole continued, "we'll pick
them off whenever and wherever we can, we'll sabotage their bases, and at least
half of us will be in the business not of fighting but of enlisting
disillusioned members of the Republic to our cause. We have the further
advantage that only four of our ships carry Navy design and insignia. That
means that those are the only four ships that can be taken or even identified.
If any of you run into trouble, you can cut and run, and even if your ship is
identified the Navy will never know you're part of a coordinated attack
force."
"By that same token,
the Teddy R should hang back where it
can't possibly be identified," said the Duke.
"In a perfect universe
you'd be right," said Cole. "But if this was a perfect universe, we
wouldn't be attacking the Republic."
"Okay, it's imperfect.
Why does that give you leave to attack a Republic ship and be identified?"
"We call what we have a
fleet," explained Cole, "but what it mostly is is a collection of
small ships that were never intended for military action. Most of them have
been jury-rigged and outfitted with weapons and some defenses, but the fact
remains that only three of our ships can resist a Level 4 pulse cannon or a
Level 5 laser cannon, and the Teddy R
is one of them. Only one of our ships has the power to fire a Level 5 pulse
cannon, and that's the Teddy R. There will be situations where we're
the only one with the firepower and defenses to go up against certain ships or
certain planetary installations." He paused. "And there's something
else."
"What?"
"They don't know that
the Teddy R isn't acting
independently. If they kill or capture us, they'll assume it's over, and the
rest of you will be free to operate with far less scrutiny. Which is to say,
they won't be searching every ship for me."
"If they kill you,
you'll be avenged," said a tall blond man.
"I certainly hope so,
Mr. Sokolov," said Cole. "All right. Lieutenants Mboya and Briggs
think they'll have their code finished by nineteen hundred hours station time. I'll
want each of you to make your ships' computers available to them at that time,
and I want at least one member of your crew, and preferably two, standing by to
learn whatever they need to know about it. We'll depart the station tomorrow,
after one more meeting at oh-nine hundred hours. This meeting is
adjourned."
As the men, women, and
aliens began returning to the casino, the Platinum Duke walked up to Cole.
"You're so calm and
soft-spoken, one really has to listen to realize just how bloodthirsty you are."
A pretty brunette moved next
to Cole. "We were hoping you wouldn't notice," said Sharon Blacksmith
with a smile.
Cole put an arm around her
and turned to the Duke. "You didn't mind financing most of this a week
ago," he noted. "What made you so argumentative today?"
"A week ago eight
hundred ships weren't coming after the space station that I happen to own and
live on," answered the Duke.
"It was inevitable
after we destroyed their force of three hundred last month."
"Inevitable is just a
word," said the Duke. "Eight hundred Navy ships hell-bent on
destruction is a fact—and you're
leaving it to their mercy."
"If you really want out
..."
"No, of course
not," said the Duke. "What I really want is for us to have won
already with no damage to the station."
"Well," said Cole,
"I'll give you points for honesty."
"I'll give you even
more for gall," said the Duke. "The Teroni Federation has thrown a
couple of million ships against the Republic and hasn't made any measurable
progress in twenty-nine years. And you're planning to overthrow them with a
handful of ships and a crew of misfits."
"I'd rather have a
fleet of five million ships manned by seasoned veterans," said Cole.
"To put it in terms a casino owner will understand, you play the cards
you're dealt."
"Just destroy Admiral
Susan Garcia and her flagship before they blow you away," said the Duke.
"Do that and I'll consider it a victory." He paused and his
expression softened. "You two want some dinner?"
"Maybe later,"
said Cole. "I want to get back to the ship and see how they're coming on
the code."
The Duke checked his
timepiece. "Two hours?"
"Yeah, that'll be
fine—if my Chief of Security agrees."
"We'll be there,"
said Sharon.
"And Duke?" said
Cole.
"Yes?"
"I think you should
consider coming with us. They don't want the station, but sooner or later
they're going to find out who's financing us."
The Duke considered the
offer, then nodded. "You have a point. I'll have some of my things
transferred to the ship in the next hour."
Cole and Sharon took a tram
ride half a mile out on one of the docking arms until they reached the Theodore Roosevelt.
"I've got to go up to
the bridge," said Cole.
"I thought you hated
the bridge."
"I do, but that's where
Christine and Briggs are working."
"Okay," she
replied. "I've got about an hour's work in Security. Pick me up there when
you're ready to go back for dinner."
"Will do."
Cole took an airlift up to
the bridge level and stepped out into a corridor, trying not to think of how
long it had been since the ship had last been refitted. When he was still about
forty feet away he stopped, walked over to a bulkhead, and tapped on it.
"Good afternoon,
David," he said.
"Are we at war
yet?" asked a voice from inside the bulkhead.
"All's quiet on the
Western front," replied Cole.
"We're in space!"
snapped the voice. "There is no
West! And how dare you quote Erich Maria Remarque to me instead of the immortal
Charles!"
"You get stranger and
stranger every day," said Cole, heading off to the bridge.
"Bring me back a dry
sherry," the voice called after him.
"You can't metabolize
it."
"I'll be the judge of
that!" said the voice.
Then they were out of
earshot, and Cole entered the bridge.
"Hello, sir," said
Christine Mboya, looking up from her computer. "How did it go?"
"Our side has a redhead
who wants to attack all three million Republic ships at once, an egomaniacal
criminal kingpin with eight hands, a platinum cyborg who's only willing to go
to war as long as no one shoots back, and an alien who thinks he's David
Copperfield," replied Cole with a wry grimace. "How can we
lose?"
Cole sat at his usual table
in a corner of the mess hall, sipping a cup of coffee and wondering why the
galley created such foul-tasting cheese Danishes. The few crew members who were
also there gave his table a wide berth; it was well known that he was not at
his friendliest before he had his morning coffee.
One member who had no
compunction about talking to him any time of the day or night was Sharon
Blacksmith. She spotted him as she was walking past the mess hall, entered,
walked over, and seated herself opposite him.
"Well?" she said.
He looked across at her.
"Well what?"
"No red roses?"
"If I gave you a dozen
red roses every time we've shared a bed together, I could defoliate an entire
planet." He pushed his Danish across to her. "Settle for this
instead."
She wrinkled her nose.
"They're pretty awful."
He nodded his agreement.
"They taste a lot better when we're fifty light-years from any inhabited
planet that possesses a bakery. Maybe I'll buy a batch at Singapore Station and
take them with us."
"You're really going to
do it, aren't you?" she asked.
"Buy a bunch of
Danishes? Probably not."
She frowned. "You know
what I'm talking about, Wilson."
"I don't see that we
have any choice," he replied seriously. "And if we did, I'd still
choose this course of action."
"I just wish we'd had
more time to build our fleet," said Sharon.
"The bigger they are
..."
"Bullshit," she
said. "Not when they're that big."
"Maybe not,"
acknowledged Cole. "I wish the odds were better. Hell, I wish we had a
Republic that didn't plunder its colony planets and conscript men and women for
the military against their will. I wish this was the Republic we thought we
were fighting for when we all enlisted." His expression darkened. "I'd
prefer a Republic that hadn't tortured my best friend to death. I'd prefer a
Republic that's notion of pacifying an indigent population wasn't genocide. But
it's clear we're not going to get that
Republic until we get rid of this
one."
She stared at him for a long
moment. "You used to smile a lot more," she said at last.
"I used to have more to
smile about. I can count, you know. I'm asking a force of maybe four thousand
men to risk their lives against the most powerful military machine that has
ever existed. Any bookmaker would say that if ten of us are still alive half a
year from now, we've beaten the odds."
"Then why do it?"
"Because somebody has
to," replied Cole. "Because all of us—you, me, Bull, Christine, poor
Four Eyes—helped create and strengthen this monster. If we don't stand up and
say 'This is not what sentient beings do to one another,' who do you think
will?" He stared at her. "We've been through this a dozen times. Why
bring it up now?"
"Because we're leaving
Singapore Station in two hours, and there's no turning back."
A bitter smile crossed
Cole's face. "If we don't leave,
we'll be facing a fleet of eight hundred warships in less than a day." He
sighed. "They're just a bunch of soldiers following orders, just the way we used to. If we're going to die in
battle, let's do it against the people who give
those orders."
She returned his smile, such
as it was. "I thought the object was to make the other side die in
battle."
He suddenly relaxed.
"Well, that's certainly the way I'm going to plan it." He took
another sip of his coffee. "Don't worry. I don't believe there's anything
noble, or even effective, about a suicide attack. I have every intention of
winning and surviving."
"Really?"
"Really."
"You're even crazier
than the rest of us," said Sharon.
"There are days I think
it's a prime qualification for command."
Suddenly a scream of triumph
came over the ship's intercom. "Got one of the smarmy little
bastards!" yelled a familiar voice.
"Val, calm down and
tell me what happened," said Cole.
There was no response, and
he remembered he hadn't touched the spot on the table that would open a
communication channel. He placed his finger on it and repeated his statement.
"A seven-man Class H
Navy ship was approaching Binder X," replied the Valkyrie as the image of
her face materialized above the table. "It was probably going there for a
little R and R. Two of the Octopus's ships blew it apart."
Cole frowned. "I don't
suppose any of it survived?"
"A few pieces, I
suppose."
"All right," said
Cole. "And Val?"
"Yeah?"
"Tell the Octopus to
pass the word that next time they go after a Navy ship I want them to try to
destroy its antenna and then disable it."
"They're the enemy,
right?" said the Valkyrie. "What do you do with the enemy? You kill
him! You make the sonuvabitch wish he'd never been born! You—"
"Shut up and listen to
me," said Cole irritably. "We're about to enter the Republic. Any
time we can swipe the insignia from a Navy ship, that's one more of our ships
that's not at risk when it's spotted. If we can get to their radio before it's
destroyed, we can see if there are any new codes, we can learn how to send and
respond to messages using the ship's ID, we can appropriate its weapons and
give them to some of our own ships, we—"
"Why don't we just
shake their hands and offer to buy all that shit?" growled Val.
"Are you going to give
him my message or not?"
"Maybe."
"Maybe?" he
repeated.
"Okay, probably,"
she said. "What if they spot our ships and shoot first?"
"If they shoot first,
of course we have to defend ourselves," replied Cole. "And 'probably'
isn't any more acceptable than 'maybe.'"
"All right,"
muttered Val.
"By the way, what are
you doing on the bridge anyway?" he asked. "It's oh-seven hundred
hours. That means it's still red shift. That's Jacovic's shift."
"He's still on the
station, trying to recruit some new arrivals."
"Teronis?"
"Who else could he
recruit?" snorted Val.
"I hope he gets
some," said Cole. "It would make up a little for losing that insignia
because he wasn't on the bridge."
"All right, all
right," said Val, breaking the connection.
Cole pressed another spot on
the table.
"Sir?" said
Malcolm Briggs as his face appeared where Val's had been.
"Remind Commander
Jacovic that we're departing in less than two hours, and make sure all other crew
members are on board."
"Yes, sir."
"Did you get that code
installed in all the ships?"
"All those at the
station, sir," said Briggs. "I didn't want to take the chance of it
being intercepted as a signal, so I turned a cube over to Captain Flores and
told him to take it to Mr. Lafferty on Piccoli III and stay there until it was
successfully installed in all his ships."
"I approve," said
Cole. He paused. "His ships are spread out over a dozen planets. I don't
think we'll be seeing Mr. Flores anytime soon."
"We wouldn't
anyway," said Sharon. "We're all loners, at least until you tell us
what you have in mind."
"Thank you, Mr.
Briggs," said Cole. "That will be all."
He broke the connection.
"You're going to tell
me not to correct or contradict you in front of the crew, right?" said
Sharon.
He shrugged. "I don't
give a damn, unless someone's shooting at us. If it makes you happy, contradict
all you like."
She emitted an exasperated
sigh. "What the hell kind of hero are you, anyway?"
"A live one."
She stared at him.
"Come to think of it, you don't look much like a hero."
"What does a hero look
like?" asked Cole.
"Bold. Tall. Strong.
Handsome. Fearless."
"You've seen me with my
pants off too many times. It spoils the illusion."
She laughed, leaned across
the table, and kissed him. "You're hero enough for me."
Suddenly Malcolm Briggs's
face appeared again. "I hate to bother you, sir," he said
apologetically, "but we can't locate Commander Jacovic."
"Pass the word to Val
or whoever replaces her on white shift that we don't take off without
him," said Cole.
"Yes, sir."
Cole got to his feet.
"I'll fetch him. We know he's recruiting, and there's only two or three
Teroni hangouts on the alien levels of the station." He paused. "Tell
Bull Pampas to meet me at the hatch."
"Do you think you'll
need him?"
"Probably I
won't," answered Cole. "But Jacovic didn't respond when we summoned
him, and after Val, Bull is the best human weapon we've got."
"Then why not take
Val?"
"Because she's the
Officer on Deck for another hour or so. Protecting the ship is more important
than protecting the Captain."
Sharon didn't agree, but
decided not to argue the point, and a moment later Cole and his tall,
dark-haired, heavily muscled Gunnery Chief, Eric "Bull" Pampas,
boarded the tram and were soon inside the station.
Suddenly an alarm went off.
"Are you armed?"
asked Cole.
"Colonel Blacksmith
told me I was supposed to protect you," said Pampas as two security guards
approached and confiscated his weapon. "Besides, that never happened
before."
"The Duke was never
worried about the Navy sending spies, saboteurs, and assassins before,"
said Cole. He turned to the guards. "We'll want that back on the way
out."
"Fuck you," said
one of the guards. "You get the Navy to come out here, and then you and
all your ships leave us to face them alone. You're damned lucky I don't turn it
on you."
"The Navy doesn't want you" said Cole. "They want us. Don't fire a shot and they won't
either."
"And if you're
wrong?" demanded the man. "If they wipe us out, are you going to
avenge us? I feel all better now."
Cole could see that Pampas
was tensing, preparing to try to take the laser pistol back. "Keep
it," he said, taking Pampas by the arm. "Come on, Bull."
"But that was my
burner!" protested Pampas as he fell into step behind Cole. "They
have no business keeping it!"
"Draw another one from
the armory," said Cole, heading to an airlift. "I don't need you
getting yourself killed on Singapore Station. We've got bigger fish to
fry."
They reached the airlift,
and Cole briefly read the holographic chart next to the controls. "Okay,
third level," he said. "I don't spend much time on the alien levels.
I couldn't remember where the Teronis congregate." They were lowered to
the third level on a cushion of air. "Probably his communicator is just on
the blink. But if there's any kind of situation, take your lead from me. Don't
act independently unless you're attacked."
"Yes, sir."
They stepped out into a
corridor. The gravity was a little lighter than Galactic Standard, the air a
little thinner and dryer. The doorways were a mixed lot, some built to
accommodate beings who dwarfed Men, some for aliens who barely came up to Men's
waists, some exceptionally wide, others equally narrow. Cole always felt a bit
disoriented on those few occasions when he had to visit this level—and this was
for oxygen breathers. The lowest level was even stranger.
They walked past a few
stores, some selling items as familiar as weapons, others selling things that
were completely incomprehensible to the two Men. As they came to a corner, Cole
looked around for a Guidebox, found one, and approached it.
"How may I help
you?" asked the Guidebox as it sensed his presence.
"I'm looking for a
Teroni friend. Where on this level am I most likely to find him?"
A screen materialized in the
air, with three blinking lights on the schemata of the third level. "I am
compelled to point out that you are a Man, and you cannot metabolize the food
and drink you will encounter at these locations."
"Thank you," said
Cole, heading off toward the first of them. They passed a tripodal Hesporite
and four Lodinites, but no one paid them any attention, and a moment later they
entered a storefront that served as a bar, a restaurant, and a casino filled
with alien games.
Cole looked around, couldn't
spot Jacovic, walked up to an employee, and asked if he had been there. The
Teroni pointed to his ear and shook his head; clearly he didn't understand
Terran. Cole reached into his pocket, pulled out a T-Pack, and bonded it to his
throat.
"I am looking for a
Teroni named Jacovic," he said. The T-Pack muted his Terran and broadcast
an unaccented monotone Teroni. "Has he been here?"
"Ah, Jacovic!" was
the reply. "He was here less than an hour ago. He said he was going to the
..." Whatever the word was, Cole's T-Pack couldn't translate it into
Terran.
"Can you direct me
there?"
The alien led Cole and
Pampas to the front door and pointed to another storefront about a hundred feet
distant. Cole thanked him and began walking.
"You better put on your
T-Pack," Cole said to Pampas. "It's obvious they don't speak Terran
down here."
Pampas pulled his own
translating mechanism out and bonded it to his throat. "What if we don't
find him, sir?"
"Then we look harder.
He was here maybe half an hour ago, and the closest planet is three light-years
away. He's still on Singapore Station."
They reached the second
storefront and entered through a doorway created for exceptionally tall beings.
"Val would feel right
at home here," remarked Cole, and Pampas, a large man himself but a good
six inches shorter than Val, nodded his agreement.
The establishment seemed a
little more upscale than the first one, but Cole couldn't really be sure what
Teronis considered upscale.
"Excuse me," he
said, approaching what seemed to be a headwaiter, "but I am looking for
Jacovic. Is he here?"
The Teroni nodded his lean,
angular head. "In there," he said, pointing to a door along the back
wall.
Cole and Pampas approached
it. It sensed their presence and vanished until they had passed through, then
took solid shape behind them.
Jacovic was standing near
one wall, and half a dozen other Teronis were spread evenly throughout the room
in a semicircle around him.
"Why didn't you respond
when we summoned you?" said Cole by way of greeting.
"Ask them" said Jacovic, nodding his
head in the direction of the other Teronis.
One of the Teronis produced
Jacovic's communicator. "It is in safe hands," he said.
"Sir?" said
Pampas, tensing.
"Stay calm," said
Cole, glad that he'd taken Pampas rather than Val, who would already be among
the aliens, cracking skulls and shattering bones. He turned to the alien who
was holding the communicator. "You have taken something that doesn't
belong to you."
"It was the surest way
to get you to come here," answered the Teroni. "We knew you wouldn't
leave Singapore Station without your First Officer."
"All right, I'm
here," said Cole. "Now what?"
"Now we talk."
"I'm listening,"
said Cole.
"My T-Pack may have
said that wrong," was the reply. "Now
you talk."
"About what?"
"Do not be obtuse,
Captain Cole. Your First Officer has been trying to enlist us in what seems an
ill-considered battle against your Republic."
"It's not my Republic, not any longer,"
replied Cole. "If it was, I'd be fighting for it, not against it."
"Why do you not put
your forces at the disposal of the Teroni Federation?"
"Because I don't think
any more highly of the Teroni Federation than I do of the Republic,"
answered Cole.
"And yet a Teroni is
your First Officer."
"Honor and integrity
are not confined to one race," said Cole. "When we faced each other
as enemies, he gave me his word and kept it when it would have been very easy
to break it, when there would have been no survivors to point a finger at him.
That's more than most of my superiors would have done."
"You realize that the
odds are millions to one against you?"
"We plan to lower them,
one day at a time."
"If you actually
succeeded in bringing about the end of the Republic, what would you replace it
with?"
"I'm not a
politician," answered Cole. "That would be for others to
decide."
"Would you recommend a
cease-fire against the Teroni Federation?"
"No, I would not."
The Teronis tensed. "A cease-fire is temporary. I'd recommend a complete
cessation of all hostilities. We've been at war for so damned long I doubt that
anyone truly knows why the hell it started in the first place."
The six Teronis gathered in
a tight circle. Cole could see them whispering, but he couldn't hear what they
were saying. He caught Jacovic's eye, patted his empty holster, nodded toward
the Teronis, and held his palms up to indicate a question.
Jacovic shook his head: No, they are not armed.
Well,
that's a relief,
thought Cole. If things get hairy, I'll let Bull take the four biggest, Jacovic can take
the one closest to him, and I'll handle the little one who's done all the
talking.
The circle widened, and the
six Teronis turned to face Cole.
"We will join your
cause," said the one who seemed to be the spokesman.
"I'm very grateful to
hear that," replied Cole. "Why the inquisition?"
"We left the
Federation's military for the same reason that Commander Jacovic did: we no
longer believe that the Federation has the high moral ground, or that it is
worth dying for. Jacovic assured us that you shared our values, but we have
been trained all our lives to hate and distrust your race, so we felt we had to
hear it from your own mouth."
"But if you have been
trained to distrust everything I say, why believe me now?" asked Cole, who
realized that it was a stupid and potentially dangerous question to ask, but
his curiosity got the better of him.
"Oh, we knew you would
tell us what Jacovic had said. But it was one answer that convinced us."
"What was that?"
"That you have no
interest in being part of whatever succeeds the Republic. There are probably hundreds
of reasons for a Man to turn against his government and wish to overthrow it,
just as there are hundreds of reasons for a Teroni to do the same—but
ninety-nine times out of a hundred, the unspoken but true reason is egomania,
and a desire for power."
"Also, we know that
your Navy has been hunting you for four years," added another. He flashed
the Teroni equivalent of a smile. "That helped too."
"It's a comfort to know
you don't want to turn me in for the reward," said Cole.
"If you had answered
wrong, we might have."
"May I have my
communicator, please?" asked Jacovic, extending his hand. It was
immediately returned to him.
"All right," said
Cole. "I assume you all came on one ship?"
"Yes," said a
Teroni.
"You're going to have
to leave Singapore Station today. I'll have Lieutenant Briggs send over what
you need to rig your computer so the Navy can't intercept or read your
transmissions."
"Today?" said the
Teroni. "We just arrived four hours ago."
"You don't want to be
here tomorrow," said Cole. "There's a fleet of eight hundred Navy
ships due to show up, and they don't know you've opted out of the Teroni
Federation." He paused. "Whoever delivers the codes you need will
also brief you on how to contact us, what we plan to do in the first phase of
this campaign, what areas we'd prefer you to operate in, everything you'll
need. Just tell Commander Jacovic where you're docked and we'll take care of
everything else."
A few minutes later Cole,
Jacovic, and Pampas were heading back out along the docking arm to the Theodore Roosevelt.
"So we picked up six
recruits in half an hour," remarked Pampas. "Not bad."
Cole sighed deeply. Jacovic
merely stared silently at the Teddy R growing
larger and larger in the viewscreen. "Tell him," said Cole at last.
Jacovic turned to Pampas.
"We recruited six men in thirty minutes. How many men you do suppose the
Republic recruited on its sixty thousand worlds during that same period of
time?"
"I hadn't thought of
that," admitted Pampas.
"I have a feeling that
we'll be a happier ship in the days to come if we ban all mathematicians from
the crew," commented Cole with a rueful smile.
"Got
one, sir!"
Cole opened his eyes and
tried to concentrate.
"Sir?" continued
the feminine voice.
"Is that you,
Rachel?" asked Cole, swinging his feet to the floor.
"Yes, sir," said
Rachel Marcos. "We've got one!"
"One what?"
"Take a second,
sir," she said, her image hovering a few feet from the bed. "Gather
your senses. Then I'll explain."
Cole blinked his eyes very
rapidly. "Where the hell are we?"
"Sixteen hours out from
Singapore Station, sir."
He got to his feet, walked
to a sink in the corner, muttered "Cold!," waited for the water to
pour out, and sloshed some on his face. Then he turned to Rachel Marcos's
image. "Okay, I'm awake. What's going on?"
"We've disabled a Navy
ship, sir!" she said excitedly. "And we did it before they could
transmit a signal about what was happening!"
"Let me guess,"
said Cole. "Our redheaded friend nailed the antenna before it could
send."
"Yes, sir."
Cole pursed his lips.
"When she's on her game, there's none better. I'll give her that
much." He paused. "What type of ship?"
"A Class K
warship."
Alarm bells went off in the
back of Cole's head. "And we're sixteen hours from Singapore Station? It's
got to be part of the punishment party."
"Yes, sir,"
replied Rachel. "It was having trouble with its retarded tachyon drive,
and seems to have fallen hours behind its companions. Mr. Briggs spotted it,
but Val wouldn't trust anyone else to disable the transmitter and antenna, so
she went down to Gunnery and did it herself, then took out its main
engines."
"How did Mr. Briggs
spot the ship?"
"From its SOS
signal."
"Did any of the
geniuses up there on the bridge figure out that if we could read their SOS, so could the other seven hundred and
ninety-nine Navy ships?" demanded Cole.
Suddenly Val's face replaced
Rachel's. "You want insignia, don't you?" demanded Val. "And
their computer with all its codes? We can grab them and be back on the Teddy R in maybe forty minutes, and the
closest Navy ship is at least three hours away."
"Leave the
insignia," said Cole. "Eight hundred ships are going to know any ship
displaying it is an enemy. Grab the computer and all the record cubes, and get
back as fast you can. And Val?"
"Yeah?"
"No bloodshed."
"Are they the bad guys
or not?" she demanded.
"Leave them be,"
he said, wondering how she could be so beautiful and so bloodthirsty at the
same time. "We're after worse."
"You let 'em be, and
they'll come back and bite us in the ass," she predicted.
"They're just following
orders, the way we used to."
"The way you used to," she corrected him.
"I was a pirate, remember?"
"Some days it's harder
to forget that than others," he said dryly. "No shooting."
"There's forty-two Men
on that ship, all carrying regulation side-arms," she said. "What
makes you think they'll let us just walk in?"
"I'll contact them and
explain that no harm will come to them if they offer no resistance. We don't
even want to take them prisoner."
"How are you going to
contact them?" asked Val. "I blew their antenna."
"Shit!" growled
Cole. "All right, I'm leading the boarding party."
"The hell you
are," said a new voice. It belonged to Sharon Blacksmith.
"Stop
eavesdropping," said Cole irritably.
"I'm the Chief of
Security," she replied. "Everything that transpires on this ship is
my business, and you're not going anywhere. We've been through all this before:
the Captain doesn't leave his ship in enemy territory."
"Enemy territory is the
goddamned Republic," Cole shot back. "This is the Inner
Frontier."
"Anywhere there's a
Republic ship is enemy territory," Sharon insisted.
"The damned ship's
disabled."
"So you enter it and
get shot two seconds later. What is the rest of your fleet supposed to do? You
haven't exactly given them a complete and detailed battle plan."
"If Val walks in first,
she'll kill the first man who twitches, and that'll precipitate an all-out
battle. I want to avoid that."
"Then send someone
besides Val," said Sharon.
"Hey, wait a
minute!" said Val. "I'm the one who blew away its transmitter and
antenna; I'm the one who's going to claim the spoils of victory."
"It's just a goddamned
computer, Val," said Cole.
"You're willing to risk
your ass for it," she said. "That makes it valuable."
Cole glared at Sharon's
image. "Thanks for making life so easy for me," he said bitterly.
"Just doing my
job," she said. "You're the Captain and you're not leaving the ship
in enemy territory."
"If I'm the Captain,
then I give the orders," he said firmly. "Val, I'll meet you down in
the shuttle bay. Put together a team of four, and make sure one of them knows
how to open a locked hatch without blowing it apart. I want them to be able to
secure it again after we leave."
"Damn it, Wilson!"
said Sharon.
He waited until Val had
broken the connection. "We both know that if I let her lead the boarding
party, she'll kill all forty-two of them."
"They're the
enemy."
"No," said Cole.
"They're the enemy's weapons."
"Weapons are made to do
damage, Wilson."
"Weapons can be
neutralized," he replied. "Just not by someone like Val."
"So send Jacovic."
"Come on," he
said. "They'll take one look at him and start shooting. The Republic's at
war with the Teroni Federation, remember?"
"You have fifty-three
people on this ship, and you're going to find reasons why fifty-two of them
can't possibly lead the boarding party, am I right?"
"You're complicating
the issue unnecessarily," complained Cole.
"And you're
showboating," she said. "If you heard of any other Captain doing
this, you'd call it egomania."
"If you take on the
Republic with a fleet of eight hundred ships, you have to be a bit of an
egomaniac," said Cole. "Now perhaps you'll let me finish waking up
and concentrate on the business at hand."
"You're awake,"
said Sharon furiously. "If you were sleepy, you couldn't make such a dumb
decision."
She broke the connection,
and a couple of minutes later Cole was on his way to the shuttle bay. Along the
way he passed a small, mildly humanoid alien, dressed exactly like a
nineteenth-century British dandy, scurrying down a corridor.
"Good morning,
David," he said. "Where are you off to in such a hurry?"
"Are you really leading
the boarding party like everyone says, Steerforth?" asked David
Copperfield.
"Do they all say it?" asked Cole,
arching an eyebrow.
"Word travels fast
aboard a ship."
"Not that fast. Someone was listening. Maybe
someone from a Dickens novel?"
"But you are going?"
"Yes. Why?"
"Then I'm heading for
my bulkhead," answered the alien. "I've laid in a supply of roast
beef and Yorkshire pudding, and a bottle of port."
"None of which you can
eat or drink."
"You cut me to the
quick, Steerforth," said David. "I have never denied my limitations.
Why do you take such delight in referring to them?"
"Stop calling me
Steerforth and I'll stop pointing out who you are and aren't."
"But you are Steerforth!" cried the alien.
"How can you pretend we aren't old school chums?"
"It's difficult, but I
manage," said Cole. "Your bulkhead is calling to you. I'll let you
know when we've returned safe and sound."
"You make me sound like
an arrant coward," complained David.
"I don't think I ever
considered the word 'arrant.'"
"It happens to be very
comfortable in that bulkhead. I close my eyes and pretend I'm back in Salem
House boarding school with you, preparing to go out on a date with Becky
Thatcher."
"Wrong book, wrong
author."
"Well, all the women in
my book were only interested in you" replied David. "Little
Emily, Miss Dartle . . ."
"David," said
Cole, "you may be the best fence on the Inner Frontier, but you get stranger
every day."
"I'll second
that," said Sharon's disembodied voice.
"Well, the Platinum
Duke appreciates me," said David. "He's letting me teach him a civilized game: whist."
"That's just what we
need," said Sharon. "Two of
them."
"I know when I'm not
wanted," said David, stalking off.
"I thought I was the
one who wasn't wanted," said Cole as he walked to the airlift that would
take him to the shuttle bay.
"If you were wanted a
little less, I'd be a little less annoyed when you act like an asshole,"
answered Sharon.
"With compliments like
that, who needs insults?" said Cole as he entered the airlift.
"Just come back in one
piece," said Sharon.
He emerged into the shuttle
bay, where Val, Pampas, a Mollute, and a Polonoi were waiting for him.
"Which one?" asked
Val, gesturing toward the four shuttlecraft.
"The Kermit," answered Cole, walking
over to it.
"You always choose that
one."
"So?"
"It's the most
expendable," answered Val.
"What makes it any more
expendable than the others?" asked Cole.
"It's the oldest."
"So am I," he
said, entering the shuttle. He went directly to the back, donned his body
armor, and waited for the others—except for the warrior-caste Polonoi, who had
almost-impregnable natural armor on the front of his body (and almost none on
the back)—to do the same. "All right," he said when they were
assembled at their stations. "Once we're inside the ship, no one shoots
except on my command."
"Until they kill
you," said Val as the shuttle left the Teddy
R and began approaching the Navy ship, which hung in space about a quarter
of a million miles away.
"Try not to be so
optimistic," said Cole. "We don't want to hurt them, and there's no
sense taking their insignia or any other ID. All we want is their computer, and
there's every likelihood they'll destroy it when they see us approaching rather
than turn it over to us. Nothing on that ship is worth anyone dying for."
Val muttered something under
her breath, but knew enough not to argue with him in front of others now that
the mission had begun. The rest were silent, all eyes turned to the viewscreen,
where a hugely magnified image of the Navy ship appeared as a tiny dot.
Cole activated his
communicator. "Jacovic?"
The Teroni's image appeared
a few feet away. "Yes, sir?"
"It occurs to me that
we're depending on the goodwill of a ship that we've helped disable," said
Cole. "We're a sitting duck as we approach. Fire a couple of warning
shots, not close enough that they'll think we were trying to hit them, but
close enough to let them know that you're prepared to take them out if they
fire on us."
"Yes, sir."
A moment later a beam of
solid light from a laser cannon and a ball of energy from a thumper—a pulse
cannon—shot out in the general director of the Navy ship, missing it by clear
but close margins.
"That should do
it," said Cole. "We'll approach with our shields up. If they fire
even a single shot, we're turning tail and running back to the ship, and you'll
aim your next couple of shots a little better— but I don't think it's going to
happen. They know we can destroy them at will. The fact that we haven't ought
to convince them that we have no intention of doing so."
"You hope," said
Val.
"I hope," he
replied.
They approached without
being fired upon, bonded hatch-to-hatch, and the Mollute quickly opened the
lock on the Naval ship's hatch. Cole was about to enter when Val pushed him to
the back and walked in first, followed by Pampas and the Polonoi.
All forty-two crew members
stood facing them, weapons drawn, but no one fired a shot. When Val was sure
they weren't going to fire first, she stepped aside and let Cole walk to the
front of the boarding party.
"We mean you no
harm," he said. "We have disabled your transmitter and antenna, but
once we have what we came for, we'll broadcast an SOS to the remainder of your
fleet, and we won't leave the area until we know it has been received. We seek
no prisoners. We want one item from your ship. It is not any of your weaponry.
If you make no attempt to hinder us, no one on either side will be hurt, and
we'll be off your ship and sending that SOS inside of ten minutes."
The two sides stared at each
other silently for a long minute. Finally the captain of the ship holstered his
weapon, and the rest of his crew followed suit. Then Cole turned to Pampas.
"Okay, Bull, go pull it and take it back to the shuttle."
Pampas walked over to the
main control panel, studied it, shook his head, and began looking around the
deck. Finally he saw what he wanted and began making his way to it. An ensign,
almost as powerfully built, moved to block his way.
"None of that,"
said the captain of the ship, and the ensign stepped aside.
Pampas pulled out some
tools, signaled for the Polonoi to help him, and in four more minutes they had
the computer disconnected and detached.
"Okay," said Cole,
as Pampas lifted it in his massive arms, "take it back to the shuttle and
we'll be on our way."
Pampas walked past him to
the hatch, but Cole paid no attention to him. He was watching a crewman who was
staring intently at him, his body tense, his fingers flexing nervously.
"It's him!" the
crewman finally shouted.
The ship's captain turned to
him questioningly.
"It's Wilson
Cole!" he yelled.
"Don't do anything
stupid, son," said Cole.
"You son of a bitch,
we've been after you for four years!" said the crewman. He reached for his
weapon. Val put a beam of solid light between his eyes before his fingers
touched it.
Suddenly more weapons
appeared. Val began cursing and firing, as did the Polonoi and the Mollute.
Pampas dropped the computer and went for his weapon. Energy pulses and solid
light bounced off Cole's body armor as he pulled his own burner and began
firing.
It was a slaughter. One side
had body armor, one didn't. In a matter of thirty seconds the crew of the Navy
ship lay dead or dying on the deck. The Mollute was also dead, brought down by
a shot to his unprotected head. Cole turned to see if Pampas, who had been
standing behind him, was all right, and saw him kneeling next to the computer,
which had been melted by a stray laser blast.
"Wonderful!" muttered
Cole angrily. "Just wonderful!"
"Do you want to move
any of the wounded to the Teddy R, sir?"
asked the Polonoi.
Cole surveyed the carnage,
and finally shook his head. "There are nine or ten still twitching. Our
infirmary can't handle that many, and they're in a bad way."
"Shall we send the SOS,
then?"
"No," said Cole.
"If they save a single survivor, they'll know the Teddy R did this and they'll have the whole fucking Navy after us—
and we're only three hours ahead of them. Let's get back to the shuttle."
"What about our dead
comrade, sir?" asked the Polonoi, indicating the Mollute.
"Leave him," said
Cole. "He's past caring, and we need to obliterate all trace of him."
They rode the shuttle in
silence back to the Teddy R. Cole
went directly to his office and poured himself a stiff drink, then contacted
Jacovic, who was still on the bridge.
"Sir?" said the
Teroni.
"Kill the Navy
ship," said Cole. "Obliterate all trace of it. Sooner or later
they'll figure out what happened to it, and maybe even who was responsible—but
later is better."
"Yes, sir," said
the Teroni.
A few minutes later Sharon
entered his office.
"I heard what
happened," she said.
He stared at her and made no
answer.
"I'm glad you
survived."
"Forty-three men
didn't," he replied. "All for a piece of melted metal."
"The fortunes of
war," said Sharon.
"We're supposed to be
better than them," answered Cole grimly. "This was not the most
auspicious beginning."
"Three more hours,
sir," said the image of Domak, a warrior-caste Polonoi.
"Until what?"
asked Cole, who was sitting alone in his office, watching a musical
entertainment on a holoscreen.
"Until we're inside the
Republic," answered Domak.
"There shouldn't be any
welcoming committee, not if Mr. Briggs has picked the right approach route."
He paused. "Let me know when we're actually in Republic territory."
"Yes, sir."
"Any word from
Singapore Station?" said Cole.
"Yes, sir," said
Domak. "The Navy ships surrounded it, and when there was no opposition,
they simply docked and made use of the facilities."
"Make sure the Platinum
Duke knows that, would you, please?"
"Yes, sir."
Domak's image vanished.
Cole decided it was time to
inspect the ship's battle readiness. Actually, the ship was always ready these
days, but inactivity bored him, so he began making the rounds. First was the
shuttle bay, containing the shuttlecraft that were named after four of Theodore
Roosevelt's six children. (They were on their second Archie and Quentin and
their third Alice, but somehow the
original Kermit had survived.)
Next came the Gunnery
Section, which was usually run by Bull Pampas, but he was sleeping, and the
shift was being manned by Bujandi, a Pepon. The infirmary had no permanent
patients—Cole considered overnight to be permanent on a warship—and had a full
complement of supplies.
He then went down to the
guts of the ship, where he queried Mustapha Odom, the Chief Engineer, about the
vessel's readiness, then nodded sagely as he realized he didn't understand half
of the technical answers Odom was supplying.
He stopped by the undersized
Officers' Lounge, where he found six of his officers playing various card and
board games.
And finally, when he
couldn't avoid it any longer, he went up to the bridge. Over the years he'd
come to loathe it. The formality bothered him, and the tendency of normal men
and women to speak in sentence fragments the moment they set foot on the bridge
bothered him even more. There was a sense among the crew that all important
decisions had to be reached on the bridge, whereas in truth he was fully as
capable of commanding the ship from his office, or his cabin, or his table in
the mess hall. There was nothing that was said or seen on the bridge that
couldn't be transmitted to any part of the ship, but still it retained its
special aura. Of all his officers, only the dead Forrice had felt no obligation
to remain on the bridge when he was the Officer on Deck. As the Molarian used
to say with a wink of one of his four eyes, "There's nothing in the Code
of Conduct that says which deck."
Cole stepped out of the
airlift, turned right, and began approaching his destination.
"Captain on the
bridge!" Christine Mboya called out, and she, the alien Domak, and Ensign
Idena Mueller all stood and saluted.
Cole considered not
returning their salutes, but he knew they'd remain at attention until he did,
so he gave them a halfhearted salute. He further resisted the temptation to
point out that Christine had left the verb out of her sentence.
"All this formality
really isn't necessary," he complained for the hundredth time.
"It's regulation,
sir," said Christine.
"It's a regulation
created by the military machine that we're going to war with," he replied.
"It's also a sign of
respect."
"It's also a way of
letting the enemy know who to shoot first," he said wryly.
"I will remember that
the next time we leave the ship together, sir," said Christine.
"Tell me something,
Lieutenant Mboya," said Cole.
"Sir?"
"Did you ever lose an
argument with a parent, a teacher, anybody?"
"Not that I can recall,
sir," said Christine.
"Why am I not
surprised?" He looked around the bridge. "Neat as a pin. I assume
everything's in order?"
"Yes, sir."
"Then I won't keep you
any longer." A quick smile. "We must visit again sometime."
A computer flashed off to
his left.
"Just a moment, sir,"
said Domak. "We have a coded message coming in."
"From?" said Cole.
"It's from Mr.
Lafferty, sir."
"On Piccoli III?"
"I don't think so, sir.
It doesn't seem to be coming from that sector."
Cole frowned. "Anything
to imply it's private?"
"No, sir."
"Okay, play it right
here."
Lafferty's tan, wrinkled
face appeared in the center of the bridge.
"Got a surprise for
you, Mr. Cole," said the old man with a sly grin. "You're gonna like
it."
"Well?" replied
Cole after a moment.
"It's not a live
transmission, sir," interjected Domak just before Lafferty's image began
speaking again.
"I don't trust subspace
transmissions," continued Lafferty. "I've been intercepting and
reading the Navy's for years, so why shouldn't they be able to read mine?
Anyway, we have to meet. You'll figure out where. I'll wait three days for you
to show up. If you don't, I'll try to contact you once more, then assume you're
dead and carry on myself."
Lafferty's face vanished.
"That's all?"
asked Cole.
"That's the whole of
it," said Domak.
"And based on that, I'm
supposed to figure out where in this whole galaxy to meet him? Hell, the only
time I've ever seen him face-to-face was on Piccoli, and the only other time
I've ever been within light-years of him was when we were both defending Singapore
Station last month."
"Maybe he means Piccoli
III," suggested Idena Mueller.
Cole shook his head.
"His transmission didn't come from there. And he said I'd figure it out;
Piccoli doesn't take any figuring."
"He certainly can't
want to meet at Singapore Station," said Christine. "We don't dare go
back there this soon."
"Then what the hell
location am I supposed to figure out?" said Cole, frowning.
"Had he mentioned some
other world during your visit with him?"
"No," replied
Cole. "We were together less than an hour. Mostly we were trying to
arrange for me to get safely back to the Inner Frontier with the Navy hot on my
tail."
"Then I'm afraid I
can't help you, sir," she said. "Probably none of us can."
"I know," said
Cole. "I'll just have to work it out myself."
He walked to the airlift and
went back down to his office, where he sat, staring at a wall, for the next ten
minutes.
"Sometimes it helps if
you talk things out," said Sharon, her image flickering into existence.
"Don't you ever
sleep?"
"You'd be the best
judge of that," she replied. "I suppose it depends on how clumsy you
were the night before."
"Fine," he said.
"Get a good night's sleep tonight. I'll pester Rachel or some other svelte
crew member half your age."
"No, I couldn't do that
to Rachel," said Sharon. "She's young and impressionable. She's never
seen a forty-five-year-old man trying to prove he's twenty-two. She could be
giggling for years." She paused as a smile crossed Cole's face.
"Besides, she's sleeping with Mr. Bellamy."
"She is?" he said.
"How do you know?"
It was her turn to smile.
"I'm the Chief of Security. I know everything that happens on this
ship."
"All right—so what do
you want?"
"I thought I'd help
you," she replied. "Two heads are better than one."
"You were
listening?"
"It's my job."
"Okay," he said.
"Any suggestions?"
"No," answered
Sharon. "But then, I've never met Lafferty. By the way, has he got a first
name?"
"He never shared it
with me, but I suppose he must," answered Cole. "It's probably on the
registration of the ship he gave me."
"Could the hint be on
the ship?"
"I sure as hell hope
not. We left it and appropriated a little three-man Navy ship."
"We?" she
repeated. "You and Lafferty?"
"No, me and that little
alien friend of his. What the hell was his name? Oh, yes—Dozhin. I think he's
still on Singapore Station."
"Do you want to contact
him?"
Cole shook his head.
"No. The Navy's there now. I don't want them to be able to trace the
signal. Besides, I don't know what he could tell me. He's almost as big a
coward as our friend David, but without David's virtues."
"David has
virtues?"
"He has contacts. That
qualifies in his business—and ours." He frowned. "The answer has to
be with Dozhin. Lafferty knows he came out to the Frontier with me. Maybe
he—" Cole froze for a moment. "Oh, shit! I've got it." He
touched the spot on his desk that contacted Christine.
"Yes, sir?" she
said.
"Tell Pilot to take us
to Cicero VII as fast as he can."
"Do you know where it
is?"
"I've no idea. Not too
many parsecs from Piccoli III, I should think."
"Yes, sir."
Her image vanished, but
Sharon's remained, her face an open question mark.
"Dozhin's home
planet," said Cole. "He told me he left it when the Navy pacified
it."
"Won't they still be
there?"
He shook his head.
"Lafferty wouldn't invite me there if they were."
"Let's hope you're
right," she said. "And our pilot's name is Wxakgini."
"I can't pronounce
it," said Cole. "He knows that."
"You should try, as a
sign of respect."
"Every time I screw it
up he winces. Just Pilot is better."
"That's why he never
calls you 'sir.'"
"I can live with
it."
"It's hard to imagine
you were once the pride of the regular Navy," she said with a smile.
"I think pride is a bit
of an overstatement," he said wryly. "They took two captaincies away
from me."
"And gave them back
eventually."
"No choice," said
Cole. "They lost a lot of captains in the war."
"You know, you can be
really annoying when you're being modest," she said.
"Okay, I'll brag to the
crew about what you told me during an exceptionally interesting moment last
night."
"Fine."
"You don't mind?"
"Not if you don't mind
sleeping alone for the next six hundred years," she said, and her image
vanished.
"Pilot?"
Wxakgini's image appeared,
his head connected as always to the navigational computer by a series of tiny
tubes, his body similarly connected to nutrient solutions.
"Yes?"
"What's our ETA on
Cicero VII?"
"We'll be traversing
the Glover Wormhole. Seventeen minutes to reach it, seventy-three minutes in
transit, and approximately two hours at the other end."
"Once we're out of the
wormhole, have whoever's the Officer on Deck make sure there are no Navy ships
patrolling the Cicero system before you begin our approach."
"I will do so,"
said Wxakgini.
Cole broke the connection,
felt restless, and went to the mess hall for some coffee and a sandwich. Val
was just finishing a meal when he got there.
"I hear your friend
Lafferty's got a surprise for us," she said when as he sat down two tables
away.
"So he says."
"I also heard from
Lieutenant Sokolov," she continued. "He's killed three ships since
this started."
"Little ones, I
hope."
"Have you got something
against killing big ones?"
"In a ship the size of
Sokolov's I do," said Cole. "He's too small to kill anything above a
Class J without blowing its nuclear pile and killing everyone on board."
"That's the point of
going to war," said Val, "to kill the other guys."
"You go to war to get
the resolution you want to a particular problem. The more people you kill, the
less likely the other side is to give in until you've all but annihilated
them."
"So?"
He sighed deeply and stared
at the Valkyrie, marveling as always at the combination of beauty and
brutality. "You are the finest warrior I've ever seen, maybe the finest
there's ever been. If I had a hundred like you I could conquer the
galaxy." He paused. "I just wish somewhere along the way they'd given
you a course in peacemaking or maybe ethics."
"I learned at a harder
school," she replied.
"I know."
"The bars and
whorehouses are filled with women who learned how to make accommodations,"
said Val. "I'm not one of them."
"I value you for what
you are," Cole assured her. "I was just musing about what you might
have been."
"I might have been a
five-foot-tall hunchback with a prosthetic leg and steel teeth," she said.
"Point taken."
"So what do you thinks
waiting for us on Cicero?" asked Val.
Cole shrugged. "We'll
know soon enough."
Suddenly she smiled.
"If it bites, I'll protect you."
"Fine," said Cole.
"And if it kisses, I'll protect it.
I've seen you wear out the androids in that brothel back on Singapore
Station."
"I go there because
they're the only ones I can't wear
out," she replied with a laugh.
Cole and Val both
experienced a sudden sense of disorientation.
"I guess we've entered
the wormhole," he said.
"I guess," she
replied, getting up from the table. "I'm going to grab two hours of sleep,
just in case there's some fighting to do when we get there."
"We'll wake you if we
need you."
Then she was gone, and Cole
ordered his coffee and sandwich. They arrived, he took a bite of the mock
hamburger, and made a face, wondering why after all these millennia soya
products still tasted more like soybeans than all the things they were supposed to taste like.
He spent another half hour
finishing his sandwich, sipping his coffee, and getting the details of
Sokolov's three conquests after the pilot filed a report with Christine. He was
about to go to his cabin when the Platinum Duke wandered in, sat down at his
table, and ordered some coffee, artificial eggs, mock steak, and something that
wasn't quite toast.
"Good evening,"
said Cole.
"It's my morning,"
answered the Duke.
"Don't burn your lips
on the coffee," said Cole as the Duke's meal arrived. "It's very
hot."
"I don't have any
lips," said the Duke, lifting the cup to his mouth. A moment later he
cursed and put it down. "I do have a tongue, though."
"You heard that your
beloved Singapore Station is unscathed and probably turning a hell of a
profit."
"You were right,"
said the Duke. "I still don't like running and hiding."
"You're running and hiding," replied Cole.
"We're running and
attacking."
"I think I liked you
better when you were a customer," said the Duke.
"I liked you better
when you supplied me with elegant meals from your private kitchen."
The Duke chuckled. "We
had a good thing going. David and I would line up lucrative contracts, and you
and the Teddy R would fulfill
them." He paused. "How the hell did we get from there to here in so
short a time?"
"We had help,"
said Cole grimly.
"Yes," agreed the
Duke, remembering the attack on Singapore Station and the events that had
precipitated it.
They sat in silence for a
few moments. Then Cole felt a familiar wave of dizziness, and realized that
they had emerged from the worm-hole and would now be approaching the Cicero
system. If Briggs or Christine were looking for signs of the Navy, it could be
an hour before the Teddy R left the
vicinity of the wormhole. Jacovic would take half that time and be almost as
thorough—and Val, if she was on duty, would glance at the viewscreen, declare
the area free of Navy ships, and hope she was wrong as she proceeded to Cicero.
The Duke finished his meal
and left. Cole was on his third cup of coffee when the all-clear signal came
through and the Teddy R lurched
forward.
"Sir, would you like to
come to the bridge and take command?" asked Christine.
He stared at her image.
Unspoken was the fact that she had been promoted to Second Officer for her
loyalty and her other skills, but that she was totally unversed in spacial
warfare.
"You're in charge
during white shift," replied Cole. "Take us to Cicero VII."
"I have no landing
coordinates to give to Wxakgini."
"Lafferty knows
that."
"I don't follow you,
sir."
"He didn't invite us
out here as a practical joke. When you get close enough, I'm sure you'll be
told where to land. If you aren't, that'll be time enough to discuss our
options."
"Yes, sir," said
Christine. "Thank you, sir."
He resisted the urge to tell
her to call him "Wilson" or "Cole" or "Hey You,"
only because he knew it wouldn't do the least bit of good, and ordered a piece
of pie to go with his coffee.
David Copperfield spotted
him and entered the mess hall.
"Hi, David," said
Cole as the little alien approached his table.
"Good morning,
Steerforth. I heard the all-clear."
"You know anything
about the Cicero system?"
"I know a smuggler
named Krieder or Krieter used it as a storage dump for a year after the Navy
killed off the local population. There are ten planets in the system, six small
ones close in and three gas giants far out. I believe the only oxygen planet is
the seventh one. Not very hospitable to us humans."
Cole decided not to comment
on David's last sentence. "Any word about the Navy setting up a small
station anywhere in the system?"
David shook his head.
"Nothing of value, once they locked Kreider away and confiscated his
goods."
"Why would they pacify
an out-of-the-way planet like Cicero VII?" continued Cole.
David shrugged. "Why do
they do anything? They're the Navy."
"I used to be part of
that Navy," said Cole. "There had to be a reason. Maybe not a good
one, but a reason."
"You can't prove it by
me," said the dapper alien.
"Fuel costs money.
Ammunition costs money. Taking a ship away from the war with the Teroni
Federation costs money and men. You don't do that on a whim, not in peacetime,
and certainly not in the middle of a war."
"It's the middle of a
war to you and me, Steerforth," said David. "But half the people
fighting it can't remember a time when there wasn't a war."
"Even so . . ."
"We'll land and you'll
see for yourself," said the alien.
"Sharon, are you
peeking in again?" said Cole, raising his voice.
"But of course,"
she replied as her image flickered to life.
"I don't believe the
Navy wiped out Dozhin's race for no reason."
"I'd prefer not to
believe it, but we'll never know."
"Maybe we will,"
said Cole. "Get our best computer ace— Christine's on duty, so is Briggs,
so it'll be Domak or Jack-in-the-Box—and work with him or her. They'll be able
to dig out almost any fact, hack into any computer in nearby systems, but they
won't know what they're looking for. I want you to oversee and direct them, and
see if you can find out just what the hell the Navy wanted with Cicero
VII."
"All right," she
said. "But if they did wipe out the race to get their hands on something, it's
gone by now."
"Let's find out
anyway," he said.
"Okay, I'm on it,"
said Sharon as her image vanished.
"Why go to the effort,
Steerforth?" asked David. "As Colonel Blacksmith says, whatever it
was is almost certainly gone by now."
"Didn't they teach you
anything in that boarding school, David?"
"Hah!" cried the
alien happily. "You admit we were classmates!"
"It was a rhetorical
question," said Cole. "Let's find out if whatever they wanted was a
renewable resource, like drugs or organic medicines. And even if it's not
renewable, wouldn't you like to learn what the Republic wanted so badly that
they wiped out an entire planetary population to get their hands on it? Not
only that, but they didn't want your pal Kreider to find it."
"How do you arrive at
that conclusion, Steerforth?"
"There's a war on. The
Navy doesn't waste its time arresting smugglers. They leave that to planetary
or system police—unless the smuggler is either trading in something they
desperately want, or is likely to stumble upon the Navy's cache."
"It's their
cache," said David suddenly.
"You're sure?"
"Krieder dealt in fine
jewelry and expensive art," answered the little alien. "You're right:
the Navy wouldn't waste their time with that." He smiled. "I do
believe between us we've figured out that there's something valuable
there."
Cole returned the smile.
"The benefits of a public school education."
David chuckled and ordered a
cup of coffee. The table asked him if he wanted any cream or sweeteners, and he
explained that he-men took their coffee black.
"David . . ."
began Cole as the coffee arrived.
"It's
been a good day so far. I'll break my diet."
"You're not on a diet,
and if you want to live to the end of the day you can't drink any coffee. You
know that, David."
"Maybe I'll sip it, maybe
I won't," replied David. "Don't ruin the celebratory mood."
"Could be worse, I
suppose," said Cole.
"I beg your
pardon?"
"You could have read
Mowgli or Tarzan. At least you don't kill your food in mortal combat, and you
remember to wear clothes to the table."
"Why do you persist in
making fun of me, Steerforth?" said David.
"I thought I was
complimenting you."
The coffee arrived. David
stared at Cole, then his coffee, then Cole again. "It's too hot," he
said. "I'll let it cool."
"Good idea," said
Cole. He decided to take pity on the little alien. "I've got some work to
do in my office," he said, getting to his feet. "You'll want to stay
here and finish your coffee."
"Yes," said David.
"I'd just spill most of it if I tried carrying it. I'll join you when I'm
done."
Cole left, and figured David
would dump the coffee out by the time he reached his office. He sat at his desk
and contacted the bridge. "Any sign of the Navy?" he asked.
"So far so good,
sir," said Briggs, who was still manning the scanners.
"That's a
comfort," said Cole. "While I'm thinking of it, any sign of
Lafferty?"
"No, sir."
"Well, he'll be in
touch when he's ready."
Cole broke the connection,
called up a book he'd been reading on his holoscreen, and picked up where he
had left off. A few minutes later David Copperfield entered the office.
"How was your
coffee?" asked Cole.
"Well, it wasn't
Brazilian, but I suppose it was all right, considering our circumstances."
"You have a drop on
your chin."
David continued the fantasy
by wiping the nonexistent drop away. "No sign of the Navy yet?"
"No," said Cole.
"I don't think we'll have to put your bulkhead's defenses to the test
today."
Suddenly Sharon's voice rang
out: "Bingo!"
"Bingo?" repeated
Cole, making a face.
"You prefer
'Excelsior'?" she asked as her image popped into existence.
"Just tell me what
you've got."
"Cicero VII was rich in
fissionable materials," said Sharon.
"Was?" repeated Cole.
"All mined out in a
four-year period," she replied. "The planet has been abandoned for
the past five years. Dozhin and his friends and relations can go back now—if
they want to."
"Thanks," said
Cole. "See if you can dig up anything else."
"We're on it, Domak and
me," said Sharon as her image vanished.
David stared curiously at
Cole. "You are smiling from ear to ear."
"Humans can't smile
from ear to ear," said Cole. "But if we could, I would."
"Why?"
"You heard the same
thing I did," said Cole. "Use that Salem House education,
David."
"Stop teasing me and
just tell me what you think you know!"
"The Navy could have
negotiated for mining rights," began Cole. " They could have just
bought the whole damned planet. But instead they killed off the entire
population. Why?"
"Clearly they were
short of fissionable materials," said David. He frowned. "But that's
obvious."
"Think, David," said Cole. "They
needed the materials so much that they chose to wipe out an entire race rather
than take the time to negotiate a lease. It can only mean one thing: the war
was going badly, probably still is, and they couldn't take even an extra month
to get their hands on that stuff."
"It makes sense,"
admitted the alien.
"It also means we
aren't going to run into any opposition in this sector."
"Why do you think so,
Steerforth?"
"The planet's mined
out. It was the only thing they wanted or needed, and they're long gone.
There's no sign of them, and Mr. Briggs is as thorough as Christine. If they'd
left a single ship behind, he'd have spotted it. It's obvious that they've
moved their ships to where they're needed against the Teronis." He raised
his voice. "Sharon?"
There was no response.
"Damn it," he
said. "The one time I wish she was listening, she's doing something else.
Okay, David, I'll let you do it."
"Do what?"
"Tell the bridge they
can stop searching for the Navy. It's not there, and it's time we kept our
rendezvous with Mr. Lafferty."
"They won't listen to
me," said the alien.
"Sure they will,"
said Cole. "Tell them I'll confirm it if need be, but I can almost
guarantee they won't bother asking."
"What makes you think
so?"
"Because you're out of
your bulkhead. That means you have inside information that it's safe."
"Approaching planet,
sir," said Christine's voice.
"Approaching the planet, goddammit!" muttered
Cole to himself. Aloud he said, "Where does he want us?"
"Coordinates have been
fed into our computer. It seems we meet inside an extinct volcano."
"Okay. Patch me through
to the planet on every available frequency."
"Done."
"Lafferty, this is
Wilson Cole. We've got your coordinates, but the Teddy R can't land. It was built in space and will die in space,
hopefully not in the immediate future. I'll bring a party down in two
shuttlecraft."
"Not necessary,"
said Lafferty's voice. "I was going to take you, but I suppose it's just
as easy to lead you. You sure no one's followed you?"
"Pretty sure."
"That'll have to
do."
"Not to worry,"
said Cole. "No one's bothered us since we left Singapore Station, and this
system is some of the least desirable real estate in the Republic."
"Tell me that in an
hour," said Lafferty.
Jacovic's image suddenly
appeared. "That was piped all over the ship, sir. What do you think he's
got?"
"Beats me," said
Cole with a shrug. "Maybe he's found some uranium or plutonium that the
Republic missed."
"I found better,"
said Lafferty's voice. "First I had to make sure no one was tailing you;
that's why I directed you to Cicero VII. Now you can follow me."
A ship emerged from within
the volcano and began making its way toward an asteroid belt between Cicero
VIII and IX.
"Follow him,
Pilot," said Cole.
"You're going to need a
shuttle or two when we get there," said Lafferty.
"Son of a bitch likes
guessing games, doesn't he?" said Cole.
"I request permission
to accompany you in a shuttle," said Jacovic.
"Granted," replied
Cole.
"Thank you, sir,"
said Jacovic as his image vanished.
Cole left his office and
began making his way to the shuttle bay. When he reached the airlift he met
Bull Pampas and Braxite, his one remaining Molarian officer.
"Should we draw our
weapons from the armory, sir—or should we use those from the shuttles?"
asked Braxite.
"We're visiting allies,
not enemies," answered Cole.
"If there's an attack,
we could be virtually helpless," continued the Molarian.
"There won't be,"
said Cole. "The Republic hasn't had a presence here in years. Besides, Jacovic's
coming with me, and Christine's shift is almost over. That means Val will be in
command. Do you really think she's going to let anyone attack us?"
"How deep into the duty
roster do we go, sir?" asked Pampas.
"Five per
shuttle," answered Cole. "I assume you and Braxite were at the top of
the list?"
"Yes, sir."
"Interesting,"
said Cole. "You were at the top the last time too, Bull."
"Val puts me at the top
every time," replied Pampas uneasily. "She says I'm the only crew
member who can last a full minute in the ring with her."
"She's probably right.
Okay, I'll be in one shuttle and Jacovic will be in the other. He stays in
orbit until I give him an all-clear signal. You're in charge of the crews;
split 'em up any way you choose."
Pampas saluted. "Yes,
sir."
"One more thing, Bull.
I assume we're going to be among friends down there—but nobody salutes anybody
whenever we're out of the ship."
"I know, sir."
"I'm sure you do, but
since the guy who gets saluted instantly has a bull's-eye pinned on his back, I
hope you don't mind my repeating it."
"Yes, sir. I mean, no,
sir." Pampas looked flustered. "I mean . . ."
"It's okay, Bull. Just
relax and get on down to the shuttles."
"Aren't you going
there?"
"I was, but I thought
of one last thing I have to do. I'll be down shortly."
He stopped at the airlift
and contacted the bridge.
"Christine, is Val
there yet?"
"Right here," said
the Valkyrie's voice, and a moment later her image replaced Christine's.
"This figures to be
absolutely routine," said Cole. "I don't know what the hell Lafferty
feels we had to come all the way out here to see, but we've checked it out and
the whole system looks to be deserted except for Lafferty's ship. We'll be
taking off in the shuttles as soon as we get to the asteroid belt, and we'll
land wherever he wants us to. I don't know how long we'll be on the ground, but
I can't imagine it'll be more than twenty minutes, maybe half an hour. Should
be a piece of cake."
"Fine," said Val.
"Now tell me why you contacted me."
"It looks to be routine, but I could be
wrong. I'm going to feed a seven-digit code into the computer. That'll serve as
our password. When we come back, if we can't supply it, blow the shuttles to
hell and gone."
"Wait a minute,
Wilson!" said Sharon's voice.
"What is it?"
"What if you're
incapacitated? Does anyone else know this code? You can't program it into the
shuttle, because that way the shuttle will respond no matter who's aboard
it."
"Good point,"
acknowledged Cole. "I'll give it to Jacovic and Braxite as well." He
paused. "I'm going down to the shuttle bay. I'll feed you the code once
I'm onboard the Kermit."
Cole entered the airlift and
floated down to the shuttle bay on an almost-solid cushion of air. I can remember when visiting a friend in an
isolated, deserted star system wasn't a military operation fraught with
security concerns, he thought, and wondered if it would ever be that way
again.
"Everybody
aboard?" he asked as he entered the Kermit.
"Yes, sir," said
Braxite. "Commander Jacovic showed up about a minute ahead of you. He's in
the Archie."
"Fine," said Cole.
"Let's go."
As the Kermit took off, Cole sent the code back to the ship's computer,
then relaxed as they began following Lafferty's ship.
"What do you suppose
we're going to see, sir?" asked Braxite.
"Beats me," said
Cole. "If I knew what it was, I'd probably have told Lafferty that it
wasn't worth a trip out here." He stared at asteroids in the viewscreen.
"I keep wondering what the hell you can find or hide in an asteroid belt."
"We'll find out soon
enough, sir," said Braxite. "He's slowing down."
A small two-man shuttle
emerged from the belly of Lafferty's ship. "We're just about there,"
said his voice. "Follow me."
"We've been following you," said Cole
irritably.
"See that golden one
off to starboard?" said Lafferty. "That's our destination."
"It's a big one,"
remarked Cole. "Are we landing there?"
"Yes."
"Okay. Jacovic, have
your crew get into their space suits." He turned to his own crew.
"You do the same."
"Very slowly now," said Lafferty,
"or you might overshoot it."
"Overshoot what?" said Cole.
"You'll see."
Lafferty's shuttle began
circling the large golden asteroid, with the Kermit and the Archie
following him. Finally he slowed down even more, and then landed.
"Preparing to land,
sir," said Idena Mueller, who was at the controls. "I still don't see
what's there."
"We'll find out soon
enough," said Cole, testing his suit's oxygen. "Put me through to the
Archie, coded and scrambled."
"It's done, sir."
"Jacovic, this is Cole.
I want you to start lagging behind."
"Do you want us to go
into orbit, sir?" asked Jacovic.
"No, I don't think so.
I've walked into my share of traps, and this just doesn't feel like one. Just
stay about two minutes behind us. Once we land, I'll signal you to bring your
shuttle down. If I don't within, say, thirty seconds, take off like a bat out
of hell and get back to the Teddy R any
way you can."
"Considering that we've
pretty much checked the place out, we're being awfully cautious," remarked
Braxite.
"That's how you stay
alive for four years when you're the most wanted man on the most wanted ship in
the galaxy," replied Cole with no sign of annoyance.
"I'm sorry, sir,"
said Braxite, flustered. "I didn't mean . . . that is—"
"It's all right,"
said Cole. "I feel like we're moving through molasses too . . . but the
operative word is 'moving,' not 'molasses.'"
"Prepare for
landing," announced Idena as Lafferty's shuttle vanished from sight.
"Where the hell did he
go?" asked Cole.
"Look!" said
Idena, pointing to the viewscreen. Lafferty had landed in what seemed to be a
huge quarry, left over from some forgotten time when Men or some other race
were mining the asteroids. He vanished from sight when he was still eighty feet
above the ground, and could only be seen from directly overhead. Idena set the Kerm.it down forty yards away from him.
Cole checked the viewscreen
and saw Lafferty leading a number of his men out to the ship. "Get me the Archie," he said.
"Done, sir."
"Jacovic, bring it
down."
"We're on our
way," replied the Teroni.
The shuttle crew had waited
for Cole to indicate what he wanted done next. He signaled Idena to open the
hatch, and he stood in it until the ramp extended and lowered to the ground.
"Good to see you
again," said Lafferty, stepping forward and extending his hand.
"And you," said
Cole. "Don't get too far from the shuttles. I've got another on the way
down."
They watched the Archie make its careful descent, finally
landing less than thirty yards from the Kermit.
Jacovic and his crew
emerged, and Cole made some brief introductions. "All right," he said
at last. "Suppose you show me why the hell you dragged us all the way out
here."
"Happy to,"
replied Lafferty. "Do I have a big excrement-eating smile on my
face?"
"Couldn't be
bigger," said Cole.
"Well, there's a
reason. Come this way."
Lafferty crossed the bottom
of the quarry, which was perhaps half a mile in diameter. After they'd gone a
hundred yards he came to a stop, and Cole could see in the dim light that there
was something very large and formless
obscuring his vision.
"Stop or you'll walk
into it."
Cole stopped and stared. Something was carefully camouflaged, but
he couldn't make out what it was.
"Kill the screen,"
ordered Lafferty, and suddenly the holographic camouflage vanished and Cole
found himself looking at a Class L Navy starship without a mark on it.
"What do you
think?" said Lafferty, still grinning.
"I'm impressed,"
said Cole. "That's what the Teddy R
evolved into over a century. Six Level 5 thumpers, three Level 5 and three
Level 4 burners ... It can absorb anything Level 4 or lower in any quantity,
and it can take—I can't remember the new specs—two or three Level 5 hits a
second with minimal damage."
"You know your
stuff," said Lafferty.
"I was a part of the
Navy until four years ago," replied Cole. "Holds a crew of
seventy-two."
"Not anymore,"
said Lafferty. "Fifty-six these days. They've automated that many more
functions."
"Where the hell did you
get it?" asked Cole. "You sure as hell didn't shoot it down. It's
clean as a whistle."
"Kobernykov II."
"Never heard of
it."
"And you never will
again," said Lafferty with a trace of pride. "It's about eighty
light-years from here. The Republic just opened it as a shipbuilding
world." A grin. "We just closed it."
"I saw what you had at
Singapore Station," said Cole. "A Class L ship like this should have
been able to fight fifty of your ships to a standoff."
"Probably it would
have," agreed Lafferty. "If
it had an engine." Cole just stared at him. "We found it in the one
structure we didn't destroy. It was just sitting there like a newborn baby. But
no one had spanked its bottom yet. We knew the Navy hadn't been in the Cicero
system for several years, so we towed it here until we could figure out what to
do with it." He looked proudly at his trophy. "We couldn't put it
down on a planet without destroying it, but there's almost no gravity out
here."
"Has it got all its
weaponry?"
"Yes."
"Operational?"
asked Cole.
"Yes. We tested them
out just inside Cicero IX to make sure. I assume the screens and shields work
too, but they draw their power from the engine."
Cole studied the ship for a
long minute.
"I suppose the next
step is to hunt up an engine, forge some insignia, get right next to some other
Navy ships, and blow them away before they know what hit 'em," said
Lafferty.
Cole shook his head.
"No, we have a better use for it."
"Better than destroying
a few thousand ships?"
"Much better,"
said Cole. Suddenly he turned to Lafferty. "As of this moment, you are no
longer a combatant."
"What am I?" said
Lafferty.
"A mechanic. The sole
duty of you and any men you need is to get an engine installed in this ship. It
doesn't have to be the one that was designed for it, as long as it's powerful
enough to run the ship. And you'll need insignia."
"That's what I
said," replied Lafferty. "We get an engine and some phony ID, and we
start blowing ships away."
"No," said Cole.
"But you just
said—"
"You get the engine and
the insignia, but then you wait right here for my orders."
"What are you talking
about?" demanded Lafferty. "I could kill fifty ships a day with this.
We could keep killing them for months before anyone figured out what was
happening."
"And once they
did," said Cole, "they'd destroy you, and they'd still have three
million ships."
"And what do you think you're going to do with this ship?"
said Lafferty heatedly.
Cole looked at the ship
again.
"Win the war," he
answered.
The Teddy R had left the Cicero system far behind, passing one deserted
planetary system after another.
"What the hell has gone
on here?" asked Briggs as his sensors came up with another lifeless world,
its buildings destroyed, its thoroughfares cratered.
"War has gone on here,
Mr. Briggs," said Cole, who had found himself driven to the bridge through
boredom. "The Teroni didn't leave any bases, because there was nothing
here worth fighting for once the Navy pulled out—and the Navy didn't come back
and rebuild because there was nothing valuable or interesting enough to keep
the Teroni here. The only losers are the people who used to live here."
"Maybe they'll resettle
someday," said Rachel Marcos.
Cole shook his head.
"There's no infrastructure anymore, and if they build it, there's always a
chance the Teronis will come back and destroy it again. We're out in the
boonies; clearly the Navy doesn't consider this sector important enough to
leave a residual force behind."
"It just doesn't make
any sense," she said.
He looked at her youthful,
unlined face and thought: How can you be
so innocent and uncynical after four years aboard this ship? He suddenly
realized that he envied her.
He shook his head as if to
clear it of uncomfortable thoughts, then wandered over to where Wxakgini sat
high above the floor, his brain connected to the navigational computer, his
body connected to the nutrients that kept him alive. The Bdxeni were unique in
the galaxy, the only race that never slept, and hence the ideal starship
pilots. Cole had never met one with a name he could pronounce.
"How are we doing,
Pilot?" he said.
"I don't understand the
question," replied Wxakgini, once again omitting "sir" as a
protest against Cole never calling him by his name.
"Just making
conversation."
"I am pursuing an
erratic course with no destination in mind, as per your orders."
Cole stared at the Bdxeni
for a moment, wondered how anyone ever held a conversation with him, and then
decided that he had a limited perspective on "conversation," that
Wxakgini was conversing silently with the computer every minute of the day.
Suddenly the Platinum Duke's
image appeared in front of Cole.
"I did it!" he
cried happily.
"Did what?" asked
Cole.
"Beat the little
bastard at whist!"
"You actually played
whist?"
"I had to," said
the Duke. "He damned near cleaned me out at blackjack."
"That's what you get
for gambling with a member of the British middle class," said Cole.
"Sir?" said
Rachel, and the Duke's image vanished.
"Yeah?"
"We have a message
coming in from Mr. Moyer."
"Coded and scrambled, I
trust?"
"Yes, sir. He has just
made another kill. That is his fifth."
"Good for him."
"You don't seem very
elated," she noted.
"He's killed five
ships, and that's impressive," admitted Cole. His expression darkened.
"We still have three and a half million ships to neutralize. That's less
impressive."
She studied her computer for
a moment. "He wants to speak to you, sir."
"This will translate
him into Terran, and my reply will go out scrambled to his ship, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"Okay, put him
through."
"It will just be audio.
It would take too long to transmit a live holo at this distance."
"Fine."
"Sir," said Moyer's
voice, "I need some guidance. I have a prisoner here, a survivor from the
last ship I destroyed. I couldn't just let him starve or run out of air in a
safety pod. What should I do with him?"
"Put him down on an
oxygen world," replied Cole. "It can't be a Republic world; they'd
never let you take off again. If you can find some colony world, maybe a
farming planet, drop him off there."
There was a pause while the
message reached Moyer and his reply came back.
"Our charts may be out
of date, sir. What we have as a colony world may have been assimilated into the
Republic since we left. I think it might be safe to drop him on an uninhabited
oxygen world, and contact a Republic world a week later with his coordinates.
He's in good physical shape, no wounds at all; he can make it for a week, and I
can be pretty far away by then."
"Makes sense,"
said Cole. "All right, handle it that way."
He signaled Rachel to break
the connection.
"You still look
unhappy, sir," she noted.
"We can't have all our
ships cruise aimlessly, picking off small Navy ships whenever we can sneak up
on them," said Cole. "We're not fighting some little warlord who
commands twenty ships back on the Inner Frontier. This is the Republic. They
don't even notice that we're here."
"Commander Jacovic says
you have some master plan that has something to do with the ship Mr. Lafferty
is equipping."
"Mr. Lafferty could be
months or even years stealing or assembling an engine that can run that
thing," said Cole. "Or he could get captured trying. If he
accomplishes it, fine; but we can't just sit around waiting for him to do
so." He suddenly looked around. "By the way, where's the Officer on
Deck?"
"I'm coming," said
Val, stepping off the airlift with a beer in her hand. "Briggs, did you
finish that sweep?"
"Yes," he replied.
"It's just a meteor storm."
"Good." She turned
to Cole. "You can't be too careful. I used meteor storms for cover more
than once in my pirate days."
"Damned
dangerous," commented Briggs.
"Damned
effective," replied Val with a smile.
"You could have lost
your ship," said Briggs. "If something had hit you, there was nothing
you could do."
"Sometimes you have to
take bold action," said Val with an unconcerned shrug.
"You're right,"
said Cole suddenly. "Sometimes you do."
Val, Briggs, and Rachel
turned to him.
"What the hell are you
talking about, Cole?" asked Val.
"As far as the
Republic's concerned, we're less than a gnat," said Cole. "They don't
respond, because they don't even know we're here. We could pick off ten ships a
day, and at the end of the week they'd have built more ships than we
eliminated. We have to start being bolder; we have to make them aware of our
presence."
"Won't that just mean
they'll come after us with overwhelming force?" asked Rachel, frowning.
"They won't know where
to come," said Cole. "Besides, they're fighting a war of attrition
against the Teroni Federation. They're not coming anywhere in force."
"A fleet of eight
hundred ships may not seem like a force to them,"
noted Briggs, "but we
couldn't survive against it."
"Our job isn't to
survive it," said Cole. "Our job is to mobilize and misdirect
it."
"I don't
understand," said Rachel.
"Neither do I,"
said Val with a smile. "But I think I like it."
Cole turned to Val.
"Who would you say are our two best pilots?"
"Me and someone
else," she replied.
"I'm being
serious."
"So am I."
"Damn it, Val!"
"All right. After me,
the two best you have are Sokolov and Moyer."
"I agree."
There was a momentary
silence.
"Have we won the war
yet?" asked Val sardonically.
"Mr. Briggs, is there a
way for me to send a holo, coded, scrambled, unreadable by anyone but one of
the ships whose computers you and Christine rigged before we left?"
"Of course."
"I'm not done yet. Can
we then transfer that signal to a captured ship?"
"Yes."
"I'm still not done.
Now, the captured ship won't have a computer that you worked on, so I assume
the signal should probably be put in a cube and hand-delivered to the captured
ship's system?"
"That'll work,"
said Briggs, "but I don't see—"
"One final question,"
said Cole. "Can that signal then be transmitted, unscrambled and uncoded,
to a destination of our choice?"
"Well, yes, if whoever
transfers it to the captured ship's computer programs the ship's computer to do
that."
"Is it difficult?"
Briggs shook his head.
"All the difficult work has been done, encoding the initial signal so that
it's undecipherable."
"Now, once those
captured ships have been rigged to send the signal, we can also program them when to send it, right?"
"No problem at
all."
"Thank you, Mr.
Briggs." He turned to Rachel. "I want to send a coded, scrambled
message to Vladimir Sokolov and Dan Moyer. I don't care if they can see me or
not."
"Ready," she said,
concentrating on the computer's controls.
"Gentlemen, this is
Wilson Cole. I commend you on your recent kills. Now I have what will almost
certainly be a more difficult task for you. I want each of you to capture or
disable a small Republic ship— Class H would be perfect, certainly nothing
bigger than Class J. Set the prisoners down on an uninhabited oxygen world, and
I stress uninhabited. I don't want them on any world where they can make
contact with anyone who might be sympathetic to the Republic. Leave them with
all their food and all their medical supplies. You can also leave their weapons;
just toss 'em out the hatch as you're closing it."
He paused, cleared his
throat, and continued. "In a few minutes we will be transmitting a second
message, a prerecorded holographic one. Mr. Briggs will tell you exactly how to
handle it and what I want you to do with it. Once you have done as ordered, I
want you to clear the hell out of the sector, whatever sector you're in. If
there is anything you don't understand about your instructions or about the
message you will soon be receiving, contact either Mr. Briggs or Lieutenant
Mboya."
He looked over at Rachel and
nodded his head, and she sent the messages off.
"Okay, this next will
be the message I discussed with Mr. Briggs. And it has to be holographic, not
just audio."
"All right," said
Rachel. "Ready whenever you are."
"Now," said Cole.
"Go."
"This is Wilson Cole,
speaking to you from the bridge of the Theodore
Roosevelt. If you have any doubt of my identity, run a voice-print."
He paused to give them the opportunity to do just that. "Four years ago
you imprisoned me for an action that saved five million human lives. That is a
disagreement between you and me, and I was content to live out my life on the
Inner Frontier, well beyond your jurisdiction. But your pursuit of me has
enlarged our disagreement to include literally billions of men, women, and
aliens. You have committed genocide, you have practiced torture, and you have
proven yourself totally unworthy of the trust the citizens of the Republic have
placed in you. You have one Standard day in which to resign your position. If
you do not, then be assured that you will be forcibly removed from it. This is
not an idle threat, and I am not grandstanding: if you have not resigned within
one Standard day, we shall be at hazard. And this time I won't be running from you, but toward you."
He nodded to Rachel, who
coded and scrambled the message, then turned back to Briggs.
"This will be
transmitted to Sokolov and Moyer," he said. "Once they've each
captured or disabled a ship, I want these messages sent uncoded to the
recipients I name, but I don't want them sent separately. I want them sent
within a minute of each other, from totally different sectors."
"That shouldn't be a
problem."
"Good. And even though
Sokolov and Moyer aren't in military ships, I want them to get the hell out of
the area, at least fifty light-years, before those messages are sent. If they
can't find the proper wormholes, have them contact Pilot; he's been around
forever and he knows every damned wormhole in the galaxy—or at least it feels
like he does."
"I'll tell them,
sir," said Briggs. "You haven't told me where you want the message
sent."
"I want Moyer's sent to
the Xerxes—Admiral Susan Garcia's
flagship."
"It'll probably be
picked up by thirty other ships first. It could take a long time to go through
channels and reach her."
"Once they check my
voiceprint, it'll take about twenty seconds," replied Cole confidently.
"And the other message,
the one we're giving to Vladimir Sokolov?"
Cole smiled. "You
haven't guessed? Have it sent to Deluros VIII, to the personal attention of
Egan Wilkie, the Secretary of the Republic."
"So you're sending them
a threatening holo," said Val. "So what? They'll laugh their heads
off."
"No, they won't,"
said Cole. "They'll home in on the two ships, which I hope will be a
couple of thousand light-years apart, and blow them to hell and gone—but at the
same time they'll realize that we're a force of more than one. And then they'll
start checking on how many of their ships have turned up missing. Probably some
were brought down by the Teronis, and a few malfunctioned, but we'll take
credit for—and be blamed for—every last one. Any power plant blows, any
shipbuilding world is sabotaged—some will be our doing but most won't—they'll
credit it all to us. They'll spread themselves thin, thinner than they should
be while they're fighting the Teronis, and while we keep feinting and ducking,
they'll keep responding—and sooner or later we'll find the weakness in their
armor."
"It's a hell of a way
to fight a war," snorted Val.
"I know it's going to
disappoint the hell out of you," said Cole, "but I have no interest
in fighting a war." She stared at him curiously. "I'm only interested
in winning the war, and if I can do it without firing a single shot, I'll be
just as happy."
"We're growing a
strange crop of heroes this year," said Val.
"Heroes fight bravely
and die young," said Cole. "I'm just a guy who's playing the cards
that were dealt to him."
"Besides," said
Sharon's disembodied voice, "maybe Garcia and Wilkie will take the hint
and resign."
"Yeah," said Val.
"Right after the stars stop in their courses and I run off with David
Copperfield."
"If I were a
bookmaker," said Cole, "I'd call it six-to-five pick 'em."
Cole's messages had an
immediate and deleterious effect. Not on the Teddy R, which was a third of a galaxy away from Deluros VIII, but
on almost anything that moved and didn't bear the insignia of the Republic.
A convoy of eleven ships,
carrying ore from the mining worlds of the Frontier to the shipbuilding world
of Spica II, didn't identify itself quickly enough and was obliterated.
Two men—one high on whiskey,
one high on drugs—got into a fight on Bishawn IV. Weapons were drawn, a single
pulse blast was fired, it went wild and hit a bystander, more guns and shots
were fired, the bartender sent out a distress signal that people were shooting
at each other, the Navy picked it up, and a moment later the tavern and all
seventy-one of its customers and employees were vaporized.
Every ship, whether business
or pleasure, was inspected, released, then inspected again in the next system,
and the system after that. Anyone who didn't give the Navy the answers they
wanted, or who didn't give them fast enough, or clearly enough, or often
enough, was incarcerated without appeal.
Loyal alien worlds, longtime
members of the Republic, were suddenly viewed with suspicion. Terrified
ambassadors—Cole's messages had passed through channels and had leaked within
an hour—insisted on Navy escorts. Private ships became convinced that other
private ships were in the employ of the notorious Wilson Cole, and began firing
on each other.
"I should have thought
of this a long time ago," remarked Cole as the most recent reports came
in.
He was sitting in the mess
hall, where he had been joined by Sharon, David Copperfield, and the Platinum
Duke.
"You know, we may win
this conflict without firing a shot," said David.
"That's the best way to
win a war," replied Cole.
"I hear that the
Seventh Fleet is being recalled to defend Deluros," said the Duke. He
chuckled. "Against us!"
"It all seems to be
going smoothly now," said Sharon, "but pretty soon they're going to
notice that we're not attacking them, on Deluros VIII or anywhere else."
"Sure we are,"
said Cole with a smile. "And they can prove it. After all, haven't they
already destroyed two hundred of our ships, and pretty much decimated five
planets that we've used as bases?"
Sharon shook her head in
wonderment. "Who'd'a thunk it?" she said in bemused tones.
"My friend
Steerforth," answered David promptly. "No one but an Englishman would
be this subtle and this brilliant."
"David, give it a
rest," said Cole. "I've never even been to Earth."
"Stop contradicting
me!" demanded David irritably. "Of course you're British! If you
weren't, you couldn't have thought of this."
"Why don't you just
agree with him?" suggested the Duke. "That is, if you want to discuss
another subject anytime in the next few weeks."
Jacovic's image flickered
into existence. "It's official, sir. They've pulled back the Seventh
Fleet, and there are rumors that they'll soon be recalling the Fourth to
bolster their planetary defenses as well."
Cole frowned. "That
doesn't make any sense," he said. "If they call back the Fourth,
they're ceding the Matheson Sector to the Teronis."
"Evidently they're more
afraid of you, sir," suggested Jacovic.
"They can't be that
incompetent," said Cole. "We're not that lucky." He paused and
considered the situation. "They've been pouring men, ships, money, everything into that sector for fifteen
years. Now they're just going to walk away because of a threat from one
ship?"
"They don't know how
many ships we have, Wilson," said Sharon. "The only thing they do know is that they sent three hundred
ships out to Singapore Station last month, and none of them returned." She
paused. "They don't know that it was touch-and-go all the way, and that we
lost close to two thousand ships."
Jacovic's image faded and
vanished.
"It just goes to show
you," said the Duke. "Never underestimate the power of fear."
"I know Admiral
Garcia," replied Cole. "And if there's anything in the galaxy she's
afraid of, I'm not aware of it, and neither are you."
"Then why do you
suppose they're reacting like this?"
"I don't know Egan
Wilkie," said Cole. "I suspect this is being done on his orders, not
hers."
"You know," said
Sharon, "this just might convince him to sign a truce with the Teroni
Federation. If he decides he can't fight both the Teronis and the threat from
within, he might choose to fight the latter."
"It's not going to happen,"
said Cole firmly.
"Why not?"
"First, this can't
last. They've got to figure out pretty soon that we haven't fired a shot yet.
And second, the Teronis are no fools. If he's too eager and offers them too
many concessions, they'll know he's doing it out of weakness. They've been at
this for more than a quarter of a century; what's one more year if your enemy
is in deep trouble?"
"Then what was the
point of all this?" asked David Copperfield. "I mean, if they'll know
in a week or a month or even three months, what real damage have we done them?
All we've done is tell them that the Theodore
Roosevelt is inside the Republic."
"They don't even know
that," replied Cole. "All they know for sure is that we weren't at
Singapore Station when their fleet of eight hundred ships arrived."
"Then I repeat: why
have you gone to the trouble of doing all this?"
"I sent one message to
two locations," replied Cole easily. "It wasn't any trouble at
all."
"Damn it, Steerforth!
You're toying with me!"
"Use your brain,
David," said Cole.
The little alien frowned.
"I'm thinking," he said. "Nothing's coming."
"Domak?" said
Cole, raising his voice.
"Yes, sir?" said
Domak's image, appearing over the table.
"Have you got the
latest damage reports?"
"There's been no damage
to the ship, sir."
"I mean inflicted by
the Republic in the McAllister Sector."
"Yes, sir. I have it
right here."
"Stick it on a
holoscreen and transmit it down here, please."
A holographic screen with a
three-dimensional map of the McAllister Sector and a long readout below the map
suddenly replaced Domak's image. Cole scanned the readout intently for a few
seconds, found what he was looking for, and leaned back.
"Thank you,
Domak," he said.
"Will there be anything
else, sir?"
"Yeah. Tell Jacovic
we're going to New Lenin, and have Pilot lay in a course to get us there. Tell
him we don't want to arrive in less than three days. We wouldn't want to run
into any Navy stragglers."
"I'll get right on it,
sir," said Domak, ending the connection.
"What was that all
about?" asked David.
"New Lenin is the
banking and trading capital of the McAllister Sector," said Cole. "Or
at least it was until two days ago."
"What happened?"
"The Navy decided we
had a secret base there," answered Cole. "End result: there are an
estimated sixty-three thousand dead, most of the major buildings in the capital
city of Gromyko have been destroyed, and as far as I can tell the Teddy R remains unscathed."
"That's tragic, of
course," said David, without much emotion. "But what does it have to
do with what we were just discussing?"
"David," said
Cole, "if we're going to defeat the Republic, we're not going to do it
with eight hundred ships and four thousand men."
"I'm still not
following you."
"New Lenin has a
population of three million," answered Cole. "Their planet has just
been attacked for no valid reason by the Republic." He paused and looked
into the little alien's eyes. "Now, if you were going to recruit a few
thousand motivated men and their ships to our cause, where would you look for
them?"
"I see!" said
David, his eyes widening.
"That's where we're
heading now. And every time the Republic overreacts against another world,
we'll be there signing them up."
"That might even make
mean old Mr. Creakle proud of you, Steerforth!"
"Who the hell is Mr. Creakle?"
"Our headmaster,"
said David reproachfully. "How could you forget?"
"I must have lost my
head," answered Cole as Val entered the mess hall. "Or maybe I
confused him with Barkis."
"Ah!" said David
happily. '"Barkis is willin'."'
"Good," said Val. "Let's
recruit the son of a bitch."
During the flight to New
Lenin, Cole had Christine locate alien colonies and enclaves along the way. He
sent Braxite out in the Archie to
recruit Molarians from the alien enclave on Kipling V. Domak was given the Alice and told to recruit Polonoi from
the colony on Bednari III.
"We have two shuttles
left," noted Sharon. "Who do we send out next?"
"We have one shuttle
left." They were in Cole's office, and she looked at him questioningly.
"The Teddy R can't land, so we'll
need the Kermit to take us down to
New Lenin's surface." He paused. "I'll probably turn the Quentin over to Jack-in-the-Box."
"His name's
Jaxtaboxl."
"He doesn't mind,"
noted Cole. "No reason why anyone else should. Anyway, there's a
fair-sized Mollutei population on Win-schlaager VI. I think we'll let him try
his luck there."
"What about
David?"
"He's the only member
of his race any of us have ever seen, he insists that he comes from
nineteenth-century London, and besides, if they're all like him, do you really
want a bunch of them fighting on our side?"
She laughed. "You have
a point." Then: "Who are you sending down to New Lenin?"
He simply stared at her
silently.
"No!" she said
adamantly. "The Captain doesn't leave his ship in enemy territory, damn
it!"
"It hasn't been enemy
territory for a few days," said Cole. "We
didn't decimate it."
"They're a part of the
Republic. You're the Republic's most wanted criminal."
"We're going there
because we're betting that they don't consider themselves part of the Republic
either," said Cole. "I want them to see me, hear me, question me, and
convince themselves that contrary to what the Navy's been telling them for the
last few years, I'm not the Antichrist."
"How about convincing me and following regulations?" demanded
Sharon.
"Whose
regulations?" he shot back. "The same Navy we're fighting against? We
haven't been part of it for four years now."
"Damn it, Wilson!"
"I'll come back intact
and unharmed, guaranteed."
"What is your guarantee
worth?" she asked bitterly.
"Not mine" he corrected her.
"Val's." She stared at him uncomprehendingly. "I'm taking her
along as my bodyguard. Feel better now?"
"Okay, she'll protect
you from them," said Sharon. "Who'll protect them from her?"
"She'll be all
right," said Cole. "I've used her in this capacity before."
"Will you at least
signal ahead and make sure they won't shoot you before you open your
mouth?"
"Of course."
"You promise?" she
said suspiciously.
"My Chief of Security's
opinion to the contrary, I'm not suicidal."
"Maybe not, but you
seem to think you can only be killed by a silver bullet. You've been one hell
of a lot luckier than you deserve to be."
"That helps too,"
acknowledged Cole.
"Sir?" said
Christine urgently as her image popped into existence.
"What's up?"
"A lone Class H Navy
ship is approaching under a white flag."
"How many men aboard
it?"
"None, sir."
"A bomb?"
"No, sir. I didn't make
myself clear. Mr. Briggs has scanned it. It has a crew of two, both Lodinites,
not Men. There are no explosives on board."
"Have they sent a
signal?"
"Not yet," said
Christine. "Wait a minute. Yes, here it comes. They want to talk to
you."
"Ship-to-ship or
face-to-lace?" asked Cole.
"They don't care."
"Then make it
ship-to-ship and patch it through to my office."
Instantly the images of two
furry Lodinites appeared above Cole's desk.
"Which of you is
Captain Cole?"
Cole was tempted to say
"The ugly one," but realized that standards of beauty varied from
race to race, and if they immediately began conversing with Sharon he might get
a momentary chuckle out of it but it wouldn't keep him very warm when he went
to bed alone for the next few nights, so instead he said, "What can I do
for you?"
"We come under a flag
of peace," said one of the Lodinites.
"I know," said
Cole. "That's why we allowed you to come this close."
"We are members of the
Navy."
"I know that too."
"There are more than a
million Lodinites in the Navy. We fought at Man's side in the Sett War, and the
Battle of the Brazi Cluster, and we have been fighting with Man against the
Teroni Federation for twenty-nine years."
"Then what brings you
to the Republic's most wanted criminal under a flag of truce?" asked Cole,
hoping he knew the answer already.
"It was just
serendipitous that we spotted the Theodore
Roosevelt. We were on our way to the Inner Frontier."
"Why?"
"The Republic has put
Lodin XI under martial law!" growled the one who had remained silent.
"We are their most loyal ally, and they have the temerity to do that to
us, just because some of our leaders spoke out against their overreaction to
your threat against Secretary Wilkie."
"We want to join
you!" chimed in the other one.
"I think that can be
arranged," said Cole. "With a couple of stipulations."
"What are they? What
pledge must we take?"
"No pledge, no oaths.
You're here; that's proof enough that you don't want to be there. I want one of you to come aboard the Teddy R—"
"The what?"
interrupted the first Lodinite.
"The Theodore Roosevelt," replied Cole.
"One of you comes here, and one of our crewmen will transfer to your
ship."
"May I ask why?"
"He'll know our codes
and program them into your computer, and he'll be able to extract things from
your ship's computer you didn't even know were there. And the one of you who's
transferred here will learn our methods and our rules. It won't be permanent;
the two of you can be together again in a few days—but probably not on that
ship."
"Why not this
ship?"
"It's a Navy ship. I'm
going to want one of my best pilots to have it. If he can pick off the
occasional Class H or Class J Navy ship, and let the survivors identify him,
the Navy will start wondering how many of their ships we control. They might
start seeing ghosts and shooting each other, just the way they're currently
shooting up planets that we've never touched down on. Anyway, that's my plan,
and that's my offer. You can accept it or you can retreat out of range of our
weaponry before we call an end to the truce."
"Will we eventually
join the crew of the Theodore
Roosevelt?"
"Yes, if you
wish."
"Then we accept
it."
"Good. We'll send a
shuttle out with our man very shortly, and bring one of you back here."
He broke the connection,
then contacted Christine.
"Yes, sir?" she
said.
"Can we do without
Briggs for a few days?"
"I suppose so,
sir," she said. "But if so, then let's reschedule Lieutenant Domak so
we're not both on duty at the same time."
He nodded his head.
"Spread the expertise out. Makes sense. Put me on the ship's audio."
"Done."
"Mr. Briggs," said
Cole as his voice echoed throughout the Teddy
R, "pack a few days' worth of clothes and edibles, and get down to the
shuttle bay."
He waited a moment, then
directed Idena Mueller to pilot the Kermit
to the Lodinites' ship, trade Briggs for one of the Lodinites, and then return
to the Teddy R.
"Can you give me a few
minutes, sir?" she asked, her voice fuzzy with sleep. "You just woke
me."
"Sorry," said
Cole. "Yeah, take as much time as you need. The Republic's been around a
couple of thousand years. I don't suppose another ten minutes makes much
difference."
The trade was effected half
an hour later, and Cole had Luthor Chadwick, Sharon's second-in-command in
Security, locate Val for him. She was working out with Bull Pampas in the
makeshift gym near the infirmary. He waited another half hour until they had
finished, showered, and gotten back into their uniforms, then contacted Val and
asked her to come to his office.
"I need a beer,"
she said. "Lifting weights is thirsty work. Why don't you meet me in the
mess hall, or in that undersized closet that passes for the Officers'
Lounge?"
"The mess hall is
fine," said Cole. "Five minutes?"
"I'll be on my third
beer by then."
He just shook his head in
puzzlement. "I will never figure out how you can drink like a fish and
stay so damned good-looking."
"Good genes," she
replied with a smile. "And my workouts would kill you—or anyone else on
the ship besides Bull."
He showed up in four
minutes, and found she was just finishing her second beer.
"I hear some Navy ship
just surrendered to us," she said by way of greeting.
"Not quite," Cole
replied. "It was a little Class H job, and they've joined us."
"Can you trust
them?"
"Can they trust us?" he replied. "I've got Briggs over there working on
their computer right now."
"Okay, enough polite
small talk," said the Valkyrie. "Who do you want me to lean on?"
"Hopefully no
one," he said. "I'm going to take the shuttle down to New Lenin. I
want you to ride shotgun and protect my back."
"You got it," she
said.
"Don't look so damned
eager. We're trying to recruit these people, not go to war with them."
"Do they know it?"
"They will, before we
land."
"Men like you take all
the fun out of war and carnage, you know that?"
"I'll try to live with
the shame," replied Cole.
Val ordered another beer
from the galley. "You want one? My treat."
"What do you mean, your
treat? Nobody pays to eat on the ship."
"No one's paid me since
the battle back at Singapore Station, so it's a wash. Now, do you want one or
not?"
"Not," said Cole.
"And go easy on that stuff after today. No one likes a drunken pirate
queen."
She stared at him for a
moment. "That's a pretty daring challenge."
"Forget I said
it," said Cole. "Just be ready."
He got up and left the mess
hall. He wasn't sleepy, and he felt a little claustrophobic in his office after
they'd been in space for a week or more. He considered the exercise room, but
he hadn't lifted weights or run on a treadmill in almost twenty years. He went
down to Gunnery, ostensibly to inspect it, actually just to pass the time and
talk a bit with Bull Pampas, but Pampas was off duty and he had nothing to say
to the Mollute he found there. Mustapha Odom was always good for a chat, but
when Cole went down to Engineering he found that Odom was on his sleep shift.
Some
life! he thought. I traverse
the galaxy, I visit star clusters you can't even see from my home world, I have
the universe at my fingertips—and I spend most of my adulthood feeling like a
goddamned sardine in a can.
He looked in at the
Officers' Lounge and found David Copperfield and the Platinum Duke playing
cards.
"Hi, Steerforth,"
said David, looking up.
"I didn't realize you
two were officers," said Cole wryly.
"We're gentlemen,"
replied David. "That's just as good."
"Still playing
whist?"
"It's a proper game for
gentlemen."
"And it's the only one
I can win at," said the Duke. "If I can ever figure out the odds, I'm
going to add a table when we get back to Singapore Station."
Cole merely stared at him.
"I know, I know,"
continued the Duke at last. "But if I didn't believe there was a chance,
then what the hell am I doing on this ship?"
"There's a
chance," said Cole gently.
He left them playing their
game, and eventually wound up on the bridge. Christine was the Officer on Deck,
speaking rapidly to the main computer in a language Cole was sure only the two
of them understood. Idena Mueller and Bujandi, a native of far Peponi, were
also on the bridge, tending to their various stations.
He walked over to Idena.
"No problem with the transfer?"
"I thought we already
reported to you that it was successfully accomplished, sir," she replied.
"I believe Colonel Blacksmith is debriefing the Lodinite in Security right
now."
"Fine," said Cole.
He turned to Christine. "Everything going smoothly for Mr. Briggs?"
"He reports that he's
familiar with the computer, and should be done coding it and downloading its
public and private contents within twenty Standard hours."
"Tell him he'll be
staying until we've thoroughly indoctrinated the Lodinite whose place he's
taking."
"Meloctin, sir."
"Meloctin to you,
too," he said, frowning in puzzlement.
"That's the Lodinite's
name, sir—Meloctin."
"Fine."
He wanted to strike up a
conversation, but all three crewmembers were busy performing necessary tasks.
Suddenly he became irritated with himself. What's
wrong with being bored in a war zone? he asked himself. All right, no one was
shooting at anyone and there were no enemy ships within a parsec, but even so
the entire Republic was a war zone for anyone aboard the Teddy R, and especially
its Captain.
He considered visiting
Sharon in Security, but he knew she was busy with the Lodinite. He was just
about to go to his office and call up another musical entertainment—he'd seen
them all a dozen times—when Christine suddenly turned to him.
"Sir?"
"Yes?"
"A coded message from
the Octopus is coming in."
"Open it up and let's
see it."
An instant later the image
of the Octopus hovered in front of the main viewscreen. He was still shirtless,
and the six hands that stuck out of his rib cage seemed to be clenching and
unclenching independently of him. Cole wondered if they kept doing it when he
slept.
"Hi, Wilson," he
said in his gruff voice. "We're on the trail of a hot one."
"You want to
explain?" said Cole.
"There's a Navy
convoy—maybe a dozen ships but only two Class Ls—heading back to Deluros from
the Quinellus Cluster. And guess what they're carrying?"
"Why don't you just
tell me?"
"About twenty tons of
gold! They just plundered some of the Frontier mining worlds. There are a dozen
races that have no confidence in the credit, and insist on being paid in
gold."
"You're not seriously
telling me that you plan to rob a Navy convoy?" said Cole disbelievingly.
"I wish I could,"
said the Octopus, "but I haven't got enough firepower."
"Then what the hell are
you talking about?" asked Cole "You're contacting me to tell me you're
not going to rob it?"
"I'm going to blow it
to smithereens!" said the Octopus. "We know which ship's got the gold
and which are the decoys. Maybe I can't steal it for myself, but I can destroy
it, and that'll have the same effect on the Republic. They won't be meeting
their alien payroll this month!"
"How many ships have
you got?"
"Seven."
"Against a dozen ships,
including two Class Ls?" said Cole dubiously.
"They've got to pass
through a dust cloud two parsecs beyond the Beaufort system," said the Octopus.
"Well, through it or near it. We'll be waiting inside it. And they'll
immediately move into a formation to stop us from stealing the gold. They'll never guess that we're out to destroy
it."
"I think you're biting
off more than you can chew."
"You just don't want
someone else to be the Republic's most wanted felon," replied the Octopus
with a laugh.
"I can't stop
you," said Cole. "So good luck, Godspeed, and give 'em hell."
"That I will do,"
promised the Octopus, ending the transmission.
"What do you think,
sir?" asked Christine.
Cole shrugged. "He was
the most powerful criminal kingpin on the Inner Frontier before he teamed up
with us. He knows his stuff. Maybe he can pull it off. ..."
"But?" she said.
"But if I was a betting
man, I'd bet against it. He can defend his ship against one Class L attack . .
. but two of them acting in concert? I don't know." He paused.
"Still, if he can destroy that gold and word gets out—and we'll make sure
it does—that'll do more damage to the Republic than knocking off a thousand
ships."
"I don't know,"
said Idena. "They'll be late on the payroll, but they're hardly
impoverished."
"It's got nothing to do
with the value of the gold," explained Cole. "It's a public
demonstration that they can't defend something that's very valuable to them—and
if they can't defend that, how can
you expect them to defend your planet against the Teronis or the Teddy R?"
"I hadn't thought of it
that way," she admitted.
He smiled. "More wars
are won with headlines than with bombs."
"I suppose when you get
right down to it, the concept of propaganda has been around a lot longer than
the reality of bombs," said Idena.
"Which doesn't mean I
hope the Octopus attacks with words rather than thumpers and burners,"
said Cole.
He stayed on the bridge for
a few more minutes, then went to his cabin. He called up an entertainment,
decided he wasn't interested in it, and spent the next two hours watching
sporting events that the ship captured from powerful pan-galactic transmitters.
Finally he fell asleep, fully clothed, while watching the holo of a murderball
game between Rockgarden and Far London.
When he woke up he found
Sharon, also fully clothed, sleeping beside him. His stirring woke her, and she
sat up, rubbing her eyes.
"Good morning," he
said.
"There are no mornings
in deep space," said Sharon.
"Right," said
Cole. "Good afternoon." He paused. "Did we do anything—I mean,
you and me?"
"You snored. I slept
the innocent sleep of a fairy princess, dainty and delicate as a dragonfly's
wing."
"Please," he said.
"Not before breakfast."
"All right," she
said, getting to her feet. "I was hoping you'd grow a beard overnight so
no one on New Lenin would recognize you, but it hasn't happened, so we might as
well have what could very well be our last breakfast together."
"Try not to display so
much faith in me," said Cole dryly. "It might make me
overconfident."
They left the cabin and
headed toward the mess hall. Upon arriving, Cole contacted Jacovic, who was the
Officer on Deck.
"What's our ETA for New
Lenin?" he asked.
"We'll be in orbit in
about an hour, sir."
"They don't know yet
that we're the Good Guys," said Cole, "so I want all our defenses
activated before we enter
orbit."
"Yes, sir," said
Jacovic. Then: "Sir?"
"Yes?"
"I request permission
to accompany you."
"Request denied,"
replied Cole. "I appreciate the offer, but this is the wrong venue. The
Republic attacked them, so there's a chance I can convince them that we're on
their side. But they've been at war with the Teroni Federation for a quarter of
a century. I can't present them with a wanted mutineer and a Teroni and expect them to sit still long enough to listen to
what I have to say."
There was a momentary
silence. "I agree, sir," said Jacovic. "I hadn't thought it
through."
"All right," said
Cole. "I assume the Valkyrie is up and around?"
"Yes, sir. I believe
she's in the exercise room."
"Figures. Well, she
knows when she has to be ready."
He and Sharon ordered their
breakfast. The Platinum Duke showed up before they had finished.
"You're really going to
do it?" he said by way of greeting. "You're really walking into the
lion's den?"
"The Republic destroyed
the den, and all the lions are out shivering in the cold," answered Cole.
"I'm just going to offer them a blanket."
"Spare me your
metaphors," said the Duke. "If we were back on Singapore Station, I
could get fifteen-to-one against you living out the day. Can't you just talk to
them from up here?"
"I could."
"Then why don't
you?"
"I'm not looking to
pick up twenty or thirty ships, or a couple of hundred recruits," answered
Cole. "There are close to three million people on this planet who have
good reason to hate the Republic. But they also have good reason—or so they
think—to distrust the Republic's enemies. If I do it right, I could practically
conscript the whole damned planet. I want them to see me, talk to me, to get a
feel for what I'm saying, for what I am. I don't know if I could do that via a
transmission. Would you follow
someone who was afraid to land on your world?"
"Shouldn't you have
warned them before now that you were coming?"
"Why give them three
days to argue about whether to let me land or not?"
"So with half of
Gromyko blown away, who do you contact? What government is left?"
"I have no interest in
governments," replied Cole.
"Then who?"
"I have some ideas.
I'll play it by ear."
"Here's hoping that no
one puts a laser beam in that ear," said the Duke.
"Nobody's going to
touch him," said Val, who was standing at the entrance of the mess hull.
"I'm counting on you to
make sure of that," said Sharon.
"As long as I'm being
talked about as if I'm not here," said Cole, getting up from the table,
"I think it's time for me to go announce our presence to New Lenin."
"I'll drink to
that," said Val.
"Not today, you
won't," said Cole.
Val looked like she was
about to argue, then shrugged. "You're the boss," she said.
"I'm glad someone
remembers that," said Cole as he left to send his message.
Cole stood on the bridge,
and nodded to Domak.
"Okay," he said.
"Widest possible bandwidth; I want everyone on the damned planet who wants
to see and hear me to be able to."
"Are you sure you
wouldn't rather do this from your office?" said Jacovic. "It might
appear less threatening. After all, they were just attacked by warships exactly
like this one."
Cole couldn't repress a
grin. "Not exactly like this one," he replied. "They were
probably ninety years younger and a century more advanced. But to answer your
point, I hope they'll listen to
reason and greet me with open arms—but I want them to know that we're not a
sitting duck up here, and that if they take any action against us on the
assumption that we are still the enemy, we have the wherewithal to defend
ourselves." He turned to Domak. "This will override every broadcast
and show up on every computer and holo-screen, right?"
"In theory," said
Domak. "Lieutenant Mboya could probably make absolutely certain of
it."
"Let her sleep,"
said Cole. "She's putting in twelve-hour shifts with Briggs gone. Let's
assume you're as good as I think you are and get this show on the road."
"Now," said Domak.
Cole stared at where he
imagined a camera was.
"Greetings, citizens of
New Lenin. My name is Wilson Cole, my ship is the Theodore Roosevelt, and until a few days ago you probably thought I
was your enemy. Since that time, you have experienced firsthand the morality,
thoughtfulness, loyalty, and compassion of the Republic, which I personally
encountered almost four years ago. They have destroyed most of Gromyko and
killed tens of thousands of loyal New Lenin citizens because they have
overreacted to a threat that was made against only two people, neither of whom
was within fifteen thousand light-years of New Lenin."
He paused to give them a
moment to digest what he had said, then continued. "I would like to come
down to the surface of New Lenin and speak to some of you personally. I have no
objection if you have holo cameras and other mechanisms that will transmit what
is said all over the planet. I want a guarantee of safe passage for myself and
one assistant to take a shuttlecraft down to any location of your choice. The Theodore Roosevelt is in orbit around
New Lenin. If my offer is refused, there will be no repercussions; we will
simply leave. If I am offered safe passage and you should renege upon that
offer, there will be consequences,
but I hope, and I am sure you hope, that it does not come to that. I will give
you one hour to consider my offer and reply to it. A failure to answer will be
considered a negative response, and we'll take our leave of the system
immediately thereafter."
He waited a few seconds for
his conditions to sink in, and then concluded. "I am coming with a
proposition. If it is rejected, we will leave immediately and in peace. I await
your decision."
He nodded to Domak, who cut
the transmission.
"Keep every channel
we've got open," he said. "They'll take about forty minutes to argue
it out, and then they'll invite me down."
"You sound awfully
sure," said Sharon.
"They'll realize that
if we wanted to fire on them, we'd have done it before announcing our presence
and giving them a chance to activate whatever defenses they still have."
"Four Eyes was
right," she said. "You think too much to be a hero. Heroes walk in,
weapons blazing."
"Look where it got
him," said Cole bitterly. "There are an awful lot of heroes buried
all across the galaxy." He looked around. "I assume Val's waiting in
the shuttle bay?"
"I think she's down in
Gunnery, seeing how many cannons she can lift," said Sharon with a smile.
"See?" responded
Cole, returning her smile. "We have a hero after all. Rough, tough,
fearless, redheaded, maybe two or three inches under seven feet—what more could
you want?"
"You announced her as
your assistant," noted Sharon. "When she walks in fully armed, they
might have a little difficulty with your definition."
"They'll have more
important things to worry about."
Suddenly an alarm sounded.
"Incoming?" asked
the Mollute who was at one of the stations.
"No," said Sharon,
frowning. "That's an internal Security alert." She raised her voice.
"Luthor, do you read me? What's going on?"
"No problem," said
Chadwick as his image popped into being. "Just a little problem with our
newest crew member."
"The Lodinite?"
asked Cole.
"Right," replied
Chadwick. "Meloctin, I think his name is. He got confused, thought he was
one level down, and walked into the infirmary by mistake. The situation is
resolved, and he's back in his quarters."
His image vanished.
"It's hard to imagine
someone getting lost aboard this old hulk," offered Domak.
"That's because you've
been aboard her for, what, seven years?" said Cole. "He's been on it
less than a day. It is a big ship.
It's outdated, and battle-scarred, and tired, but it's as complex as most Class
Ls."
They killed time for another
half hour, and then the message Cole had been waiting for came in.
"Captain Cole, this is
Augustus Lake," said a tall, thin man with a shock of unruly white hair.
"I'm the Acting Mayor of Gromyko. More to the point, I'm the only member
of the city or planetary government left alive. We are willing to hear what you
have to say. I'll feed the landing coordinates into your computer—you'll be
setting down atop one of the few undamaged buildings. When you emerge, you'll
find yourself facing an array of armed men and women. We will not fire without
provocation, but you have to understand that we have lost our trust in people
who proclaim they mean us no harm."
"That's understandable
and acceptable," replied Cole. "My assistant will also be armed, but
if there is no immediate threat to my person, she will not use her weapons."
"Give us thirty minutes
to set everything up," continued Lake. "We'll take you to a secure
room, what's left of what might be called our leading citizens will be there to
hear what you have to say, and we'll have holo cameras standing by to transmit
what you say to the rest of our citizenry."
"Fine. Just give my
computer the coordinates, and we'll be there in half an hour."
"I apologize for our
appearance," said Lake. "We've barely begun digging out of the
rubble."
"I understand, and I
sympathize."
The transmission ended, and
Cole turned to Sharon.
"Feel a little
better?" he asked.
"Augustus Lake seems
like a decent man," she replied.
"I told you there was
nothing to worry about."
"You didn't let me
finish," she said. "He seems like a decent man, but you're going to
be confronted by dozens, perhaps hundreds, of armed men and women, many of whom
lost loved ones just a few days ago."
"They know we didn't do
it."
"They also know we were
the reason it was done," said Sharon. "You don't know that a couple
of them won't be so blinded by their grief that they decide to kill the cause
of it—the reason the Navy went berserk."
"It didn't go berserk," said Cole.
"It coldly and calmly attempted to destroy a planet that's been a part of
the Republic since it was first colonized. That's what this is all about."
She sighed deeply. "I
know. I just want you to stay alert."
"I've got Val. She's
alert enough for both of us."
And a few minutes later Cole
and Val took off in the Kermit,
spiraling gently down to the appointed rooftop in the shattered city of
Gromyko.
Gromyko smelled of death.
Most of the bodies hadn't been removed yet, and the odor wafted up to the roof
where the Kermit had set down.
Cole turned to Val before
opening the hatch. "No sudden moves. These guys figure to be more on edge
than most."
"Got it," she
replied with no show of concern.
"I mean it, Val. If
your hip itches within four or five inches of your burner or your screecher,
let it itch. You reach to scratch it, I can almost guarantee someone's going to
take that as an excuse to shoot."
She frowned. "Then why
the hell am I here anyway?"
"Not to face thirty or
forty armed men," said Cole. "But once we get in the studio or
whatever it's called, I want you to keep your eyes open."
"You don't really think
the Republic's got a spy here?" she said dubiously.
"No, not after what
happened," replied Cole. "But don't forget— there's still a
twenty-million-credit price on my head. You don't have to favor either side to
want to collect it."
She nodded. "Okay, it
makes sense."
"I'm so glad you
approve." He opened the hatch. "Let's go."
They emerged onto the roof,
where they found themselves facing some fifty armed men and women dressed in
street clothes—which was logical: no one would wear a Republic uniform on this
planet, and they wouldn't have had time to organize and equip an independent
force.
Augustus Lake stepped
forward. "The notorious Captain Cole," he said by way of greeting.
"Will your assistant relinquish her weapons?"
"No," said Cole
before Val could refuse in even harsher terms. "She won't use them without
cause, but I wouldn't want to be the guy who tries to take them away from
her."
Lake looked up at Val, who
towered a foot above him, and shrugged. "As you wish. We will have to
trust one another." He headed off to an airlift. "Follow me,
please."
Cole fell into step behind
him. Val looked like she wanted someone to take a shot at him, but no one
moved, and she joined them in the airlift as it descended a dozen levels.
"How bad was it?"
asked Cole.
"Worse than I hope you
can imagine," answered Lake. "Here we are."
They stepped off the airlift
and entered a large room. There were perhaps thirty chairs, and each of them
was filled. There were three holographic cameras, each of which turned to him
and tracked him as he walked to the front of the room.
Cole waited until Lake
seated himself. Val stood about ten feet to his left, her arms folded,
scrutinizing each member of the audience in turn.
"I want to thank you
for allowing me to address you," began Cole. "I know the propaganda
you've been subjected to since the Navy and I parted ways. I'd like to begin by
telling you the truth of what transpired. Every member of my crew who was with
me at the time will vouch for it, and so, if she's being honest, will Admiral
Susan Garcia."
"The Theodore Roosevelt, under the command of
Captain Podok, a warrior-caste Polonoi, was charged with patrolling the Cassius
Cluster, with myself as First Officer. Our orders were to protect large fuel
depots on two worlds, Benidos and New Argentina, and not let that fuel fall
into the hands of the enemy.
"One day the Fifth
Teroni Fleet showed up in force, some two hundred ships strong, and headed for
Benidos. There was no way our single ship could stand against them. Captain
Podok interpreted our orders to mean that the fuel was to be kept from the
Teronis at all costs."
Cole paused, the muscles in
his jaw twitching as he remembered that fateful day. "She gave the order
to destroy Benidos rather than allow the fuel to fall into Teroni hands. In the
process, she killed three million Republic citizens.
"She then directed the Theodore Roosevelt to do the same thing
to New Argentina, which was home to five million human colonists. I couldn't
let her slaughter them, so I relieved her of command and made an accommodation
with the Commander of the Fifth Teroni Fleet: if he would take the fuel and do
no harm to the citizenry, we would not try to hinder him, nor would we do to
New Argentina what Podok had done to Benidos. I might add that that same Teroni
Commander eventually came to the conclusion that his Federation is no more
worth his loyalty than the Republic is worth mine or yours, and he is currently
the First Officer aboard the Theodore
Roosevelt.
"I surrendered myself
to the military authorities and was perfectly willing to defend myself at a
court-martial. But while I was awaiting trial, Captain Podok went to the press
and claimed that I had taken control of the ship solely because she was a
Polonoi. It happens that most of the inhabitants of Benidos, though members of
the Republic, were not Men. No one knew what she planned to do to Benidos until
it was done, but the press broadcast the story that I only took the ship away
from her when she threatened members of my own race on New Argentina.
"Word reached my
attorney that because of pressure from the media, the result of the trial was
predetermined, that I and two so-called accomplices were to be found guilty to
avoid a public relations disaster, and officers who objected to the verdict
were quietly being replaced by those who didn't. My crew broke me out of the
brig, and we have spent the past three years on the Inner Frontier."
He surveyed his audience,
trying to determine if they believed him. No one had any questions, so he
continued.
"I had intended to
remain on the Inner Frontier for the rest of my life, but the abuses of the
Republic don't end at the Republic's border. They have plundered colony
planets, conscripted men and women, and otherwise exercised a power and
authority that was never given to them, and they've been doing it for as long
as they have existed. The tipping point came last year. They captured my First
Officer and tortured him to death in an attempt to learn the Theodore Roosevelt's, whereabouts from
him. Then, to punish the planet where they had found him, they came back in
force and obliterated it and every living thing on it.
"I declared that the
Inner Frontier was now off-limits to the Navy. I formed some unlikely
alliances, and the thing came to a head a little more than a month ago, when
the Republic sent a force of three hundred ships after us. We emerged
victorious, but then they recently sent a larger force, and I realized that we
could meet each force in battle until we were finally defeated, or we could go
after the source of our problems, which was not the Navy, but the people who
created the Republic's policy and gave orders to the Navy—and as you know,
they're all on Deluros VIII."
"How many ships have
you got?" asked a woman.
"About eight
hundred."
"It's suicide,"
said a man. "Eight hundred ships against the Republic!"
A middle-aged man stood up.
Val eyed him like a predator eyes its prey as he walked up to the stage and
stood next to Cole. "Last week I had a wife and three children. Today I
don't." He extended his hand to Cole. "Captain Cole, you've got eight
hundred and one ships."
And suddenly half of the
audience was on their feet, pledging their support.
"I assume this is what
you came here for?" said Lake.
"Eventually we're going
to need ships, equipment, money— everything that any navy needs," Cole
confirmed. "But right now we need to organize, which means we need
recruits and recruiters." He waited until all the pledges and promises
died down and then addressed the room again. "Man needs a government, and
in a frequently hostile universe we need a Navy as well. I don't want to upset
the social order. I don't want to disband the Navy. I don't want anarchy. I
simply want the Republic to do what it was empowered to do, and if that means
getting rid of Secretary Wilkie and Admiral Garcia, then that's what I plan to
do. The Republic is like a poorly trained pet or a misbehaving child. If you
ignore its faults and don't correct them, eventually it assumes they are not
faults but virtues, and suddenly you've got a monster on your hands. Men have
been looking the other way for too long; we're faced with a monster, and we're
going to have to do something about it. And we can. There are sixty thousand
worlds in the Republic. They haven't all been abused in quite the same
devastating way as New Lenin, but an awful lot of them bear major grudges, not
against the concept of a Republic but against the abuses of this Republic. When the time comes, I'll
ask you to join us in the battle, but right now you can be of much greater
value to me if you'll go to other Republic worlds and recruit a goodly number
of their citizens to our side."
"I'll join," said
one man, "if you'll turn Egan Wilkie over to us when you finally get
him."
Cole shook his head. "I
can't promise that. There are hundreds, probably thousands, of worlds with an
equal claim to him."
"So you just want
cannon fodder, not justice," said the man angrily.
"If you believe that,
don't join me," said Cole.
"You can't win without
us, and a hell of a lot more like us!" persisted the man.
"Perhaps not,"
said Cole. "But I'm not going to make any promises or commitments that I
can't keep."
They spoke for another
twenty minutes, and when Cole and Val finally returned to the ship, he was
convinced that he had won most of them over, and that they, in turn, would win
thousands of citizens of New Lenin, and even more from other worlds, to his
cause.
He was feeling exceptionally
pleased with himself by the time the Kermit
touched down in the shuttle bay and he set foot on the Teddy R.
Then Jacovic told him what
had transpired while he was gone, and his euphoria vanished.
"When did it
happen?" asked Cole as he reached the bridge.
"Hard to say,"
replied Jacovic. "Somewhere between two and ten hours ago."
"I told him he couldn't hold off two Class L ships," said Cole.
"What about his other ships?"
"We don't know. They
may be destroyed; they may have been captured."
"But he's definitely a
prisoner?" continued Cole.
"Yes."
"Any idea where he's
being held?"
"No," said
Jacovic.
"Fucking
grandstander!" muttered Cole. "He knew better! He cost maybe a
hundred men their lives."
"If he'd succeeded,
he'd have disrupted their economy for a few weeks," said Jacovic in
defense of the Octopus.
"A tiny portion of it," growled Cole. "So he would have
destroyed twenty tons of gold—big deal! There are sixty thousand goddamned
worlds in the Republic. That's less that a pound of gold per world!" He
paused. "I don't suppose Christine or Briggs put in some distress signal
that only we can read?" Jacovic merely stared at him. "No, I didn't
think so." He raised his voice. "Sharon, I assume you're
eavesdropping again?"
"I am," she
replied. "And I'm sorry about the Octopus."
"I'm a hell of a lot
sorrier for his crew," said Cole. "The Republic is already making Men
a little rarer than they were. He had no call to waste them like that." He
tried unsuccessfully to force the tension from his body. "I'm going to
grab a sandwich. Why don't you meet me there?"
"I've got some busywork
to finish," she said. "I'll be there in ten minutes."
"Fine." She broke
the connection and he turned back to Jacovic and Domak. "Any other good
news?" he said sarcastically.
"We heard from Lafferty
..." began Domak.
"And?"
"He still doesn't have
an engine, but he says he thinks he has a lead to one."
"Well, compared to the
Octopus, I suppose that's good news," said Cole. He walked over to
Wxakgini. "Pilot, there's always a chance that the Navy will come back to
admire their handiwork. Get us out of here."
"Where to?" asked
Wxakgini.
"How far are we from
the Pollux system?"
"Thirty-six
light-years."
"How long to get
there?"
"Using the Cormean
Wormhole, nine hours," answered Wxakgini. "However, the wormhole has
been unstable lately, so it could take considerably longer to traverse."
"Use it," said
Cole, turning away from him and approaching Jacovic. "Pollux IV is the
only inhabited world in the system, it's got a population of less than ten
thousand, almost all of them farmers. No way the Navy is going to show up
there, and we could use some fresh supplies for the galley. I can't be the only
person who's sick to death of soya products."
Jacovic nodded his head.
"I'll contact them after we emerge from the wormhole."
"Fine," said Cole.
"See you later."
He walked to the airlift and
took it down to the mess hall. He'd just finished ordering his sandwich when
Sharon showed up.
"Val tells me you were
a smashing success," she said.
"Really?" he said.
"I thought she only considered a mission a success when she got to kill
some guys on the other side."
"Are you going to let
what happened to the Octopus color everything you say for the rest of the
day?" she said. "There are five empty tables here. I could sit at one
of them."
"I'm sorry," he
said. "I just hate waste, and he wasted seven ships and who knows how many
lives." He reached across the table, took her hand, and squeezed it
gently. "Okay, the subject is closed."
But it wasn't.
It was an hour after they
emerged from the Cormean Wormhole when Christine's voice and image woke him
from a nap he'd been taking in front of a mystery holo.
"Yeah?" he said,
collecting his senses. "What is it?"
"We just had a
communication from Mr. Sokolov, sir."
"And?"
"He has a
prisoner."
"He's in a two-man
ship," said Cole. "What the hell is he doing with a prisoner?"
"He went out of his way
to capture this one, sir," she said.
"Do you enjoy stringing
this out?" said Cole irritably. "Just tell me what's going on."
"I wanted to make sure
you were totally awake."
"I am now."
"Thanks to the coded
upgrades Mr. Briggs and I installed in Mr. Sokolov's computer, he was able to
pick up a signal from another small ship, concerning the disposition of the
Octopus."
"Well?" demanded
Cole, suddenly alert.
"I gather they've got
him and about eighty survivors. They intend to transfer him—well, probably all
of them—in the next two days. They plan to hold a show trial that will be
broadcast throughout the Republic, and when they find them guilty of treason,
which of course they will, there will be a public execution."
"Where's the trial to
be held?"
"I don't know."
"Doesn't matter
anyway," said Cole. "Wherever it is, it'll be all but impregnable.
Where's the Octopus now?"
"I don't know."
"Does Sokolov?"
"No."
"How far away is
he?"
"Wxakgini says if Mr.
Sokolov uses the Bellermaine Wormhole, he can be here in two hours."
"Tell Sokolov to get
his ass in gear!" said Cole. "We just may be able to pull some
Octopus fat out of the fire after all."
"Yes, sir."
She contacted him again less
than three minutes later.
"Problems?" asked
Cole.
"No, sir. Mr. Sokolov
is on his way."
"Then what is it?"
"I was wondering:
should I contact any of our allies? I mean, if we're going to try to rescue the
Octopus ..."
"Not yet," said
Cole. "First we have to find out where he's being held. There's no sense
telling any of our ships to rendezvous here if we're a thousand light-years
from where we need to be."
"I hadn't thought of
that," she replied. "I'm sorry, sir."
"Not a problem,"
said Cole.
"Val would have thought
of it instantly," continued Christine.
"Probably," agreed
Cole. "But Val couldn't have rigged Sokolov's computer to pick up that
conversation."
She finally smiled. "I
hadn't considered that. Thank you, sir."
Cole got to his feet, left
his cabin, and went to Security.
"Hello, sir," said
Luthor Chadwick, standing and saluting as he entered. "I assume you wish
to speak to Colonel Blacksmith?" He began walking toward the door.
"Stay here," said
Cole. "I want to talk to both of you."
Chadwick looked surprised,
but remained standing at his desk.
"Sharon," Cole
said, facing her private office, "come out here."
She emerged a moment later.
"I hear we're about to get a prisoner."
"That's what we have to
talk about," said Cole.
"All right," she
said. "Talk."
"The Octopus is still
alive," began Cole. "So are most of his men. We don't know where they
are, but it figures to be near the dust cloud where he made his attack. The
problem is that there are at least thirty habitable planets in the general
area. They're moving him and the others in two days, maybe sooner, and we have
to assume they're moving him closer to the center of the Republic where it'll
be impossible to rescue him. I don't think we can pull it off while they're in
transit; it's too hard to get to the ship without one side or the other
destroying it." He paused and stared at each in turn. "That means
we've got to get that information from our prisoner fast, in time to attempt a rescue before they're moved."
"How much time would
you say we had, sir?" asked Chadwick.
"The prisoner will be
here in maybe two hours. Figure you'll have six hours to break him."
"That fast?"
"We could need ten,
fifteen hours to get to where they're holding the Octopus. Or one hour. We
won't know until you get that information. And of course we'll have to come up
with some kind of plan, which we can't do until we know where they're
incarcerated. We can't just blast our way in; we'd probably kill the prisoners
as well as the jailers."
"Six hours," said
Chadwick dully.
"Tops. Three would be
better."
"Well, we can try some
bliathol," said Sharon thoughtfully.
"What's bliathol?"
asked Cole.
"One of the newer truth
drugs," she replied.
"Have you ever used it
before?"
"When's the last time
we grilled a prisoner?" she said.
"Not since I've been on
the Teddy R," he admitted.
"What if it doesn't work?"
"I'm not sure,"
she replied. "We don't have a sensory deprivation tank."
"Too bad we don't have
any telepaths in the crew," said Chadwick.
"There are only two
known telepathic species in the galaxy, and neither has any use for the
Republic," said Cole.
"Why don't you leave us
to discuss it?" said Sharon.
"All right," said
Cole. "I'll check back with you later."
"We'll be here,"
she replied.
He went back up to the
bridge.
"Christine, patch me
through to Mr. Sokolov, coded and scrambled."
Vladimir Sokolov's face
appeared above Christine's computer.
"Good work,
Vladimir," said Cole.
"Thank you, sir."
"I've been getting this
secondhand. What, exactly, did you hear that led you to capture your
prisoner?"
"The voice at the other
end of the transmission—I couldn't trace its location—was saying that they'd
just captured close to eighty prisoners," said Sokolov. "When he
described the leader, I knew it was the Octopus. Anyway, he told my prisoner
that they'd transfer the Octopus and the others to a much safer location in the
next two Standard days. They were expecting a Class N dreadnought, but just in
case it didn't show or was late, they wanted all the firepower they could
muster, including my prisoner's ship. When I heard that I homed in on his
signal and disabled his ship before he knew I was there. I killed his antenna,
his transmitter, and his Level 2 thumper, and then started blowing bits and
pieces of his ship away until he surrendered."
"Surrendering bespeaks
a certain interest in reaching an accommodation with his captors," said
Cole hopefully.
"He's given me his
name, his rank, his serial number, his home planet, everything I could possibly
want," said Sokolov. "Except the location where they're holding the
Octopus."
"Sharon and Luthor will
try their best to help him remember," said Cole. "See you soon."
He cut the connection.
"What will we do if he
doesn't talk?" asked Christine.
"That's not an
option," answered Cole grimly. "If he doesn't talk, eighty good men
and women will die."
Sokolov arrived ninety
minutes later and brought his captive aboard the Teddy R. The Navy pilot was in his late twenties, clean-cut, in his
seventh year in the service. His name was Alberto Torres, and he seemed none
the worse for undergoing the unnerving experience of having his ship shot apart
while he was still in it.
He was brought before Cole
by Ensigns Brill and Dunyach, two members of Sharon's Security team.
"Welcome to the Theodore Roosevelt, Mr. Torres,"
said Cole. "I notice that you failed to salute me."
"You are a mutineer and
a felon," replied Torres. "I will salute only members of a legitimate
military."
"You know why you're
here, of course?"
"I know," said
Torres.
"I will ask you once
before I turn you over to the tender mercies of my Chief of Security: will you
tell me where your eighty prisoners are currently incarcerated?"
"I will not."
"Okay," said Cole
to the security men. "Take him away."
They turned and marched
Torres to the airlift, and then to Security.
"He seems like a nice
young man," remarked Christine. "I hope we don't have to be too harsh
with him."
"Let's see what
Sharon's miracle drug can do."
He found out an hour later
when her image popped into view above his table in the mess hall.
"It's not
working," she told him.
"It's a dud?"
"I doubt it," she
said. "I think he's probably been conditioned against it."
"How about some
old-fashioned hypnotism?" asked Cole.
"I'm no hypnotist.
Besides, if he can resist bliathol, he can almost certainly resist hypnotism
too."
"Well, see what else
you've got in your drug cabinet. We're losing time."
She sighed deeply.
"Right."
She broke the connection.
Val entered a moment later,
got herself a beer, and sat down opposite him.
"Has he talked
yet?" she asked.
"No."
"You're going to have
to get rough with him," she said. "I assume your lady friend's tried
drugs and they're not working."
"So far."
"Let me know if you
need a little help with him."
"We'd like him to
survive long enough to tell us what we need to know," replied Cole dryly.
She laughed. "I told
you the first time you met him that the Octopus was an asshole. If you save
him, he'll just do something dumb again."
"He may be an
asshole," said Cole, "but he's our
asshole. More to the point, he's got eighty men facing death because they
followed his orders. We have to try to get them out."
"Things were a lot
simpler when I was a pirate," she said. "I had just one rule:
Everyone's expendable."
Cole saw Sokolov walking
past and called him in.
"Sir?" said
Sokolov.
"Sit down,
Vladimir," said Cole. "I want to talk to you about Torres."
"No bleeding-heart
mumbo jumbo for me," said Val, getting up and taking her beer with her.
"I'm outta here."
She left the mess hall, and
Cole gestured Sokolov to take her seat.
"Tell me about him,
Vladimir."
"There's nothing much
to tell. He never saw me coming, and I had his ship disabled before he could
fire a shot."
"I don't mean about his
piloting abilities," said Cole. "What's he like?"
Sokolov shrugged. "He
seems nice enough. If we were still in the Navy, I think he could become a
friend."
"Did he say anything,
talk about anything, while you were bringing him here?"
"Nothing important,
sir. The first thing I did was question him about where they're keeping the
Octopus, so he knows why we want him. After that, he pretty much clammed
up."
"Pretty much?"
repeated Cole.
"He thought I was Navy
at the beginning, and wanted to know why I was attacking him. I believe he
actually thought it was a test of his loyalty, or his ability to keep the
location a secret, until I explained that I was from the Teddy R and you were my Captain. From that point on he refused to
discuss anything concerning the military except his name, rank, and serial
number."
"So he was silent for
almost two hours?"
"No, sir," said
Sokolov. "We talked about sports."
"Just sports?"
Sokolov smiled. "And
girls."
"Did you probe for any
weak spots, anything that might get him to talk?"
"That's out of my
bailiwick, sir," answered Sokolov. "I'm no psychologist. Any probing
I do is in deep space, with my ship."
"Okay," said Cole.
"Thanks, Vladimir."
Cole got up and wandered
back to his office. After half an hour he contacted Sharon again.
"Any luck?"
"No," she replied.
"Drugs aren't going to work on him, Wilson. If we give him any more, we
could blow every neural circuit in his brain." She sighed. "He was well
conditioned."
"How's he doing?"
"He's okay. Probably
got some fuzzy vision, but that'll pass in time."
"We can't wait much
longer," said Cole. "The message Sokolov overheard was that they're
moving the prisoners in two days or less, not two days or more. I don't think
we've got more than three more hours, four at the outside, to break him."
"Well, we're not going
to do it with drugs, that I can guarantee you."
"Then we'll have to do
something more forceful."
"How much more forceful?"
"Whatever it
takes," said Cole. "You can't start with half measures and work up to
truly harsh interrogation techniques. First, we haven't got the time—and
second, we know his mind is resistant to drugs, but we don't know how much
punishment his body can take. We can't have him passing out before he's told us
what we need to know."
"I'll discuss it with
Luthor and the rest of my staff and see what we can come up with."
"Just don't take too
long," said Cole. "I'll be on the bridge. Christine is checking his
serial number. Maybe she's dug up something useful on him by now."
Fifteen minutes later
Sharon's image appeared on the bridge.
"Wilson," she
said, "you'd better come down here."
"He talked
already?"
"No."
"You didn't kill
him?" he demanded harshly.
"No."
"Then what is it?"
"Security has a staff
of five, counting myself," she said.
"And?"
"Two of them refuse to
participate," continued Sharon. "They claim that there's no
difference between harsh interrogation and torture, and they won't be a part of
it."
"The difference is that
if we don't apply it, eighty men are going to die," said Cole.
"You don't have to
convince me" she said.
"Tell them."
"They're down there
with you?"
"Yes."
"I'm on my way,"
said Cole.
"They're right,"
said Ensign Walsh, who was manning one of the stations. "If we do it,
we're no better than the Republic we're fighting."
"The Republic we're
fighting is going to kill eighty men if we don't do it."
"That's the fortunes of
war," said Walsh.
"We captured Alberto
Torres, and now we're going to find out what we need to know," replied
Cole. "That's the fortunes of war, too."
"There's a
difference," insisted Walsh. "The Octopus's men were captured on the
battlefield, so to speak."
"One-third of the
galaxy is a battlefield," said Cole. "Torres was captured on it
too."
"They were captured
committing an act of aggression. He wasn't."
"I haven't got time to
argue the fine points with you, Mr. Walsh," said Cole. "Too many
lives depend upon the results of this interrogation."
"It's not interrogation—it's
torture."
"Granting for the
moment that it is, consider this: Torres is going to live through it, because
if we kill him he can't tell us what we need to know. Then ask yourself which
is worse: harshly questioning one man who is going to survive, or letting
eighty other men go to a certain death."
Cole left the bridge while
Walsh was formulating an answer, and entered Security two minutes later. Sharon
was waiting for him.
"Where are they?"
he said.
"In the next
room."
He walked into the room and
found himself confronting Brill and Dunyach, the two ensigns who had taken
Torres down to Security
"I understand you two
refuse to follow your superior officer's orders," he said.
"It's torture any way
you cut it, sir, and I'm not going to participate," said Brill.
"You know what's at
stake?" said Cole.
"We're at war. They
took their chances. They lost."
"Can't you say the same
thing about our prisoner?"
"Put him in the
brig," said Dunyach. "Or execute him, if that's what you want. But
don't ask me to help torture him."
"'Torture' is an easy
word to throw around," said Cole. "We're going to question him with
some degree of harshness, that's all."
"You're playing word
games, sir," said Brill. "You're asking us to cause him so much
physical pain that he breaks and tells us what we want to know."
"That's right."
"That's torture,"
said Brill.
"Is it?" asked
Cole. "What if one solid punch to the belly gets him to talk?"
"It won't."
"But if it does—is that
torture?"
"No," said Brill
reluctantly.
"How about four punches
to the belly?"
"I see where you're
going with this, sir," said Brill. "I don't know where it crosses the
line from harsh interrogation to torture, but I don't plan to be a participant
when it does."
"Has Colonel Blacksmith
asked you to do anything you explicitly find repugnant?" said Cole.
"Has she suggested you gouge one of his eyes out, or drive bamboo splints
under his fingernails?"
"No, sir," said
Dunyach. "But I won't hold him down while someone else does that to
him."
"Would you hold him
underwater until he drowned?"
"No!"
"Would you hold him
underwater until it simulated drowning— maybe sixty seconds, maybe
seventy?"
Dunyach seemed to be
weighing the question. Finally he just stared into Cole's eyes. "I'm all
through talking, sir. Do to me what you do to the prisoner, but I'm not going
to participate."
"Even though it means
eighty men will surely die?"
"Yes, sir."
"And if you knew some
of those eighty men would undergo harsh interrogation, as they surely will
before they're executed, would that make a difference to you?"
Again Dunyach seemed to be
struggling with himself. Finally Brill spoke up.
"We're not going to do
it, sir, and that's final."
"All right," said
Cole. "You're confined to quarters, and we'll put you off on the next
populated oxygen world we come to."
"For not torturing a
prisoner?" demanded Brill.
"No," said Cole.
"For disobeying a direct order, and for being willing to let eighty allies
die rather than causing some serious discomfort to one enemy. Now get out of
here."
They left without another
word, and Cole went back to Sharon's office.
"Whatever you were
going to do, can you do it with three people instead of five?"
"I don't know,"
she said. "I suppose we can ask Val for help if we need it."
"No," said Cole.
"No?" she asked
curiously.
"I'm the ultimate
authority who approved it. If you need help with whatever technique you apply,
you come to me for it—no one
else."
"Are you sure,
Wilson?"
"I can't throw those
men off the ship for refusing to do something I wouldn't do myself—and I can't
let eighty men die when we have a chance to save them."
"All right," said
Sharon grimly. "Time's running short. Let's get to work."
It wasn't pretty and it
wasn't painless, but it was relatively quick, and in less than half an hour
they had the information they needed. Cole left Security and returned to the
bridge with it.
"Did he talk?"
asked Val when he arrived.
"He talked,"
answered Cole.
"I thought he
would," she said. "He looked too damned wholesome." Then:
"Is he still alive?"
"Yes."
"Is he ever going to be
able to function normally again?"
"Yes," said Cole.
"He talked too
soon," she replied decisively.
"We can't all be like
you, Val," said Cole. "I feel sorry for the poor bastard. He was
minding his own business out in the middle of nowhere. He didn't ask for that
information, or to have the transmission overheard. He's just a victim of
circumstance."
"We're all victims of
circumstance," she replied. "The competent ones make use of it or
overcome it."
Cole wanted to tell her that
she couldn't stand up under the kind of interrogation Torres had suffered,
except that he had a feeling she was the one person on the ship who could.
Instead he walked over to Wxakgini.
"Pilot, take us hell
for leather over to the Malagori system."
"Hell for leather?"
repeated Wxakgini.
"Old-fashioned slang.
Ii means fast as you can."
"It's not a matter of
how fast I can go, but rather how fast the ship—"
"Just do it!"
snapped Cole. "I've had a lousy day, and I don't need any arguments about
semantics!"
Wxakgini turned back to the
navigational computer without another word.
"Malagori?" said
Rachel, frowning. "What's there? I thought it was unpopulated."
"They colonized
Malagori V a few years back," said Cole. "It's called Thistlepatch
now."
"Why?" mused
Domak.
"I suppose we'll find
out when we get there," answered Cole. "Anyway, I gather it's mostly
a shipping world. They've got a few dozen huge warehouses where supplies from
the outer colonies, plus those they steal from the Inner Frontier, are
temporarily stored and then sent off to those worlds that have ordered
them."
"Do they have a prison for eighty people
there?" asked Rachel.
"I doubt it. That's why
they're transferring them so soon. They're probably just locked in another
warehouse."
"What kind of defenses
do they have?" asked Val.
"The usual planetary
defenses," said Cole. "Nothing that can bother the Teddy R."
"This should be a piece
of cake," she said.
He shook his head.
"Don't understand me so fast. They have no planetary defenses that can harm us—but we have to assume they'll
have military ships patrolling the system. They won't know for sure that the
Octopus didn't get off a coded distress signal before they captured him."
"Will we be asking some
of our allies for help?" said Domak.
"I don't know what good
it'll do," answered Cole. "We have only two other ships capable of
going up against the kind of massive firepower that could hinder the Teddy R. One of them has no engine, and
the other was just captured by the Navy." He paused. "We may need
something other than a direct approach." He turned to Rachel.
"Sokolov's still on board, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"And his ship's still
attached?"
"It's bonded to the Teddy R, sir."
"All right," said
Cole. "Have Pilot pick a rendezvous location for us, Moyer, Perez, and
Flores—oh, and Jonah, the Octopus's son, if he wasn't captured with the others.
Then contact them and have them meet us there in ten hours."
"Yes, sir."
"Let me know if there's
any problem."
Cole walked to the airlift,
and Val called after him. "Where are you going?"
"To the Officers'
Lounge, to pour myself a stiff drink and try to get the taste of the past hour
out of my mouth."
Cole walked to the airlift
and descended two levels. He thought of asking Sharon to join him, but she
hadn't looked like she wanted any company, even his, when he'd left Security
twenty minutes earlier.
David Copperfield and the
Platinum Duke were playing an alien card game when he entered.
"You're teaching him
another game?" Cole asked of David.
"He's teaching me," answered the little alien.
"It's the only way He'll agree to play whist with me."
"Well, we all have to
make sacrifices," said Cole, plopping down on a leather chair.
"Did our prisoner give
us the information we needed?" asked the Duke.
"Eventually," said
Cole.
"How long did he hold
out?"
"Eighteen, maybe twenty
minutes," replied Cole. He grimaced. "It must have felt like an
eternity to him."
"I won't ask what you
did to him," said the Duke, "but I do have a question."
"Yes?"
"Would you have done
the same thing if you'd been after strategic information that you didn't know
would save eighty lives?"
"I don't know that this will," said Cole. "It
just gives us a chance at it. I have no idea what the Navy left behind to guard
the prisoners."
"You didn't answer my
question."
"I don't know the
answer," said Cole truthfully. "I hope I never have to find
out."
"Well, that's honest,
anyway."
"I can answer it,"
interjected David Copperfield. "My friend Steerforth would never resort to
torture under any circumstances."
"I don't believe you
were listening," said the Duke. "He already did."
"Is the prisoner
alive?" persisted David. "Will he recover fully?"
"Yes to both
questions," said Cole.
"Then it was just
interrogation, not torture."
"There's a very fuzzy
line, David," said Cole. "I don't know if we crossed over it or not.
I just know if we hadn't done what we did, we'd have condemned eighty men to
their deaths. This way there's at least a chance we can save them."
"War is hell,"
said David.
"To quote General
Sherman," said Cole.
"No, it was Admiral
Vosburgh, right before she destroyed Pinchon V."
"You're both
wrong," said David. "It was the immortal Charles."
"David," said
Cole, "not every brilliant line belongs to Dickens."
The little alien pulled a
deck of cards out of his pocket and held it out to Cole.
"Cut the cards,"
he said.
Cole cut to a seven.
"My turn," said
David. He cut to a jack, flashed a triumphant smile, and put the cards back in
his pocket.
"What was that all
about?" asked Cole.
"I won."
"Okay, you won. So
what?"
"So Dickens said
it."
"What do you suppose
he'd have been like if he'd read the Communist
Manifesto first?" the Platinum Duke asked Cole.
"I suppose it could be
worse," said Cole. "He could have read Fanny Hill, and none of the female crew would be safe."
"Or that Canphorite
poet Tanblixt—the one who uses all that cosmic imagery."
"Will you please stop
speaking about me as if I'm not here?" demanded David.
"But you're not here," replied the Duke.
"I beg your
pardon?"
"You've been replaced
by someone who loves Charles Dickens so much that he thinks he's David
Copperfield."
"Steerforth, throw that
man in the brig!" demanded David.
"Calm down, both of
you," said Cole.
"He insulted me!"
said David.
"David, I like
you," said the Platinum Duke. "But the fact remains that you're
certifiable."
"Shut
up!'" yelled Cole.
The other two simply stared at him. "I just did something that I took a
solemn oath never to do," he said. "I don't need any more hassles
today."
Before they could either
apologize or argue, Cole was on his feet and out the door. He walked through
the aging corridors and past the dented bulkheads until he reached Security.
Sharon was alone, and he walked up to her.
"How do you feel?"
he said.
"Rotten."
He took her hand and pulled
her to her feet. "Come on," he said.
"Where are we
going?"
"My cabin," he
said. "We can feel rotten together."
"I was hoping you'd
ask," she said.
They emerged from the Baxter
Wormhole three light-years from the outermost planet of the Malagori system.
Within an hour Moyer and the
others had rendezvoused with them.
Cole, who seemed to find
himself on the bridge more and more often, much as he disliked it, turned to
Jacovic. "There's no way we can see what they've got defending Malagori V
from here, and if we get c lose enough to see them, we're close enough for them
to see us. I don't know who's better equipped to program a probe, Christine or
Mr. Odom, but have one of them do it. We want it to get close enough to see
what's there and transmit the information back to us, and then I want it to
plunge into Malagori."
"Malagori?"
repeated the Teroni. "You mean the star, not the planet?"
"Right. Probably
they'll blow it apart first, but if not, let's not give them a chance to
capture it and see what it's learned and where it's sent that information."
"I think that Mr. Odom
would be best," said Jacovic.
"Okay, but just to be
on the safe side have him work in concert with Christine so the signal can't be
read by anyone but us," said Cole. "Damn! I wish Mr. Briggs was with
us. I have a feeling I'm going to work Christine around the clock, and I need
her to be sharp."
"I might be able to
help in that regard," said Sharon's voice. "Oh?" said Cole.
"Meloctin—the Lodinite
who just joined the crew—is a computer and communications expert. He's passed muster
on every psyche test I could give him, always remembering that he is a Lodinite and their psychologies are
different from ours. I think Christine could show him the codes and everything
else he'd need to know in maybe an hour, and then he could spell her when she
gets too tired to stay alert."
"If you vouch for him,
that's good enough for me," said Cole.
"I vouch for him conditionally."
"That'll do. Once
Christine's through with the probe, have her show him whatever it is he has to
learn."
It took a little longer than
Cole had anticipated to program the probe, but after forty minutes it was
launched. It hit light speed in another minute, and after a few more minutes it
began sending back images.
"Damn!" muttered
Cole, looking at the holographic image. "That's a Class M ship."
"Nothing else,
though," noted Vladimir Sokolov, who had joined Cole on the bridge until
he had to return to his own ship. "Just the one."
"That one has more
firepower than the Teddy R and thirty
of our Class H and Class J ships combined," said Cole. "We can't
square off against it. And that's one of the newer ones. I don't know if we
have anything that can pierce its defenses."
The image vanished.
"What happened?"
asked Cole. "Did they shoot it down?"
"No, sir," said
Mustapha Odom's voice. "It made its transmission and is now plunging into
the star at many multiples of light speed."
"All right," said
Cole. "Thank you, Mr. Odom."
"Sir?" said Domak.
"Yes."
"I've pinpointed some
neutrino activity on the surface of Malagori V," said the Polonoi. "I
think it has to be the complex where they're keeping the Octopus and the
others."
"Unless they've built
some settlements that we don't know anything about," said Sokolov.
"I don't think
so," said Cole. "If there's a new settlement, then Domak should be
picking up two sets of neutrino activity." He turned to the Polonoi.
"Keep checking, but if you don't find any more, we're going to have to
assume you've found the prisoners."
"Any instructions,
sir?" asked Jacovic.
Cole shook his head.
"Let's give Domak half an hour to make absolutely sure there's no other
activity on the surface."
"Won't the Navy ship be
aware that we're nearby, sir?" asked Sokolov. "I mean, they couldn't
have missed the probe."
"They know it,"
said Cole.
Sokolov frowned. "Then—"
"Relax, Vladimir,"
Cole interrupted him. "They're not coming after us."
"Why not, sir?"
asked Domak.
"Because all they saw
is the probe. They don't know how many ships we've got. They're just one—a
huge, powerful one, to be sure, but just one—and they're not going to leave the
planet to go hunting for us when they don't know where or how many we
are."
Christine Mboya appeared on
the bridge.
"Nice job on the
probe," said Cole by way of greeting.
"It was mostly Mr.
Odom's doing, sir," she replied. "I knew the codes, but he knew how
to program the probe."
"Okay, I take it
back," said Cole. She seemed flustered. "I was kidding,
Lieutenant."
"Oh, sir," she
said without smiling.
"Ask Meloctin—that's
the new Lodinite—to come up to the bridge, and when he gets here I want you and
Domak to show him everything he needs to know to work your station once you're
relieved."
"Yes, sir," she
replied.
"Sir?" said
Sokolov.
"Yes?"
"To get back to what
you were discussing with Lieutenant Domak, if they won't leave orbit, how the
devil are we going to get past them to rescue the prisoners?"
"We aren't," said Cole. "Val
is."
"First bright thing
you've said all month," said Val as her image appeared over Christine's
workstation.
"Thanks for that vote
of confidence," replied Cole dryly.
"So how are we going to
do this?" continued Val.
"I'm working on
it."
"Well, you'd better
work fast," she replied. "No sense getting there after the prisoners
are gone."
"I thought you didn't
care about the Octopus."
"I don't. But I care
about killing the guys who are holding him."
"You missed your
calling in life," said Cole.
"Yeah?"
"You should have been a
pacifist."
"Well, that's a
change," said Val. "Briggs and Sokolov keep telling me I should have
been a figure model, and the Duke is always trying to hire me as his pit
boss."
"Just go get your
beauty sleep," said Cole. "I'll let you know when we need you."
"I'm not sleepy."
"If we don't go into
action for another eight or ten hours, I want someone to be awake and alert, damn it!"
"Keep your shirt on,"
said Val, her image beginning to fade. "I'll be ready."
The image vanished
completely, and Cole turned to Sokolov. "She will, you know."
"I know, sir."
Sokolov paused awkwardly. "Perhaps, sir, you're now ready to tell me how
we're going to rescue the Octopus and his men?"
"Well, we're not going
to meet the Navy ship head-on, that's for sure," said Cole.
"Then how—?"
"I'm working on
it."
Cole walked over to
Wxakgini, who sat high above the floor in his permanent station, half hammock
and half cocoon, his eyes closed, his brain tied in to the navigational
computer's brain, using its eyes instead of his own.
"Pilot, I need to talk
to you."
"I am right here,"
was Wxakgini's response.
"Are there any
wormholes within the Malagori system," asked Cole, "and more
specifically, between the fifth and sixth planets?"
"One."
"Where does it
lead?"
"It will let you out by
the Benadotti system about twenty-nine light-years from here."
"That should do
it," said Cole. He turned to Domak. "How many moons around Malagori
VIII and IX?"
"Malagori VIII has
eleven moons, and Malagori IX has six," answered the Polonoi.
"Okay. Jacovic, what
have we got in the way of small craft?"
"There are the four
shuttles, sir," said the Teroni, "plus Mr. Sokolov's ship."
"And in space?"
"Mr. Moyer, Mr. Perez,
Mr. Flores—and Mr. Briggs in the Lodinite ship. He seems to have made the jump,
too.
"Which would you say is
the least hospitable of the seventeen moons on Malagori VIII and IX?"
asked Cole.
"I would say the fourth
moon of Malagori VIII, sir," replied Jacovic. "Methane atmosphere,
uneven surface covered by jagged crystal, almost ninety-five degrees below zero
Centigrade, frequent massive windstorms of hurricane strength ..."
"That'll do,
Jacovic," said Cole. "I accept your analysis." He began walking
across the bridge toward the airlift. "I'll be in the mess hall."
He descended to the proper
level, entered the mess hall, and walked to his usual table. He was not
surprised to find Sharon there waiting for him.
"May I take your
order?" asked the table.
"Coffee and
cheesecake."
"Thank you."
"Cheesecake?" said
Sharon. "I thought you were on a diet."
"If we die in the next
fifteen or twenty hours, no one will care," answered Cole. "And if
not, I'm celebrating our victory a little early."
"I take it you have a
plan."
"I do."
"I hope it doesn't
involve confronting that Navy ship."
"I hope so too,"
he said with a smile.
She relaxed noticeably. "That's a relief."
"I knew you'd
appreciate it," said Cole. "How's the young man?"
"Alberto Torres?"
she asked. "I checked on him an hour ago. He's sleeping soundly, and
doesn't seem too much the worse for wear."
"Good," said Cole.
"We'll know in a few hours if it was worth it."
"Of course it was worth
it," replied Sharon. "We couldn't even attempt to rescue them if we didn't know where they were."
"True enough."
"So what's your
plan?"
"Stick around, and
you'll hear it when everyone else does. I need to talk to Pilot one more
time."
"Then why aren't you
doing it?"
"Because talking to him
usually annoys the shit out of me, and I thought it'd be nice to digest my
cheesecake before I talked to
him."
"Farseeing and
resourceful," she said with a smile. "No wonder you're the
Captain."
The coffee and cheesecake
arrived and he began eating.
"What do you think of
it?" she asked curiously.
"The coffee's okay. The
cheesecake tastes a little like paste, but not as good." He sighed.
"I really miss eating on Singapore Station."
"Live with it,"
she said. "We're not going back for a long, long time."
"I know," he said,
getting to his feet. "Well, the sooner we get rid of the bad guys and
overthrow the strongest government that has ever existed, the sooner I can have
veal parmesan at Duke's Place."
"You're not going to
eat the rest of your cheesecake?" she asked as he headed to the doorway.
"It's all yours."
She took a small piece on a
fork and brought it to her mouth. "You were wrong," she said.
"About what?"
"It doesn't taste like
paste."
"It does to me."
She shook her head.
"Paste has much better flavor, to say nothing of smoother texture."
"You're right," he
said with a smile, and left.
He was back on the bridge a
moment later, and speaking to Wxakgini again.
"Is there a wormhole in
or near the system that'll get a ship way the hell out of here?"
"I told you."
"I mean another
one."
"I shall have to
check," said Wxakgini.
"I'm not going
anywhere."
"Then why do you need a
wormhole?"
"A figure of
speech," said Cole. "It means I'll wait while you check."
"Terran," muttered
Wxakgini irritably. A moment later he looked down at Cole. "There is the
MacGruder Wormhole, currently one hundred and thirty degrees around the sun in
approximately the same orbit as Malagori IX, that will deposit you some four
hundred light-years away, near the fourth planet of the Delamere system."
"That should do it,"
said Cole. "Thanks."
But Wxakgini had merged with
the navigational computer once more, and paid him no further attention.
Christine Mboya and Domak
were schooling Meloctin when Cole approached her.
"I hate to
intrude," he said, "but I'm going to need you for a few minutes,
Christine." He turned to the Lodinite. "I'm sorry, but this is
vital."
"I quite understand,
Captain Cole," said Meloctin.
"What it is, sir?"
asked Christine.
"I want you to talk to
Pilot and get the exact coordinates of the wormhole he just told me about—it's
out past Malagori IX—as well as the coordinates of the Delamere system at the
other end of it, and I want you to program them into Mr. Moyer's ship, Mr.
Sokolov's, Mr. Perez's, Mr. Flores's, the Lodinite ship Mr. Briggs is on, and
our four shuttles. Finally, I want you to program the exact location of the
neutrino activity on Malagori V into each. Can you get that done in fifteen
minutes?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good. Do it."
Cole next contacted the
Valkyrie.
"Val, are you
awake?"
"Of course I'm
awake."
"We're sending four
shuttles to carry the passengers. It'll be a little crowded, but you'll have to
manage until we can transfer them to the Teddy
R. I want you to pick a twelve-member combat team and spread them over the
four shuttles. Have them ready to go in twenty minutes—and don't take off until
I address all of you. Got it?"
"About time," was
her only answer.
Twelve minutes later
Christine looked up from her computer. "All done, sir," she
announced.
"Good," said Cole.
"Let me know when Val and her crews are down in the shuttle bay."
He became aware of an
increased tension on the bridge, as it became clear he'd settled on his
strategy and the rescue attempt was about to begin.
"I'll be back
shortly," he said, and walked to the airlift. A moment later he opened the
door of the Officers' Lounge, where he knew he'd find David Copperfield and the
Platinum Duke engaged in another card game.
"David," he said,
"I don't want to distress you, but I think you might want to spend a
little quality time in your bulkhead."
The little alien didn't say
a word, but simply placed his cards on the table, got up, and scurried right
out of the room.
"And you might want to
start laying bets on whether we survive or not," added Cole to the Duke.
"If we live through
this," replied the Duke, "I'm going to spend the rest of my
ill-gotten gains and buy you a sense of humor."
"If we're still alive
tomorrow, I promise to laugh at one of your jokes," said Cole.
"I'll hold you to
that."
"Just not the one about
the minister and the dancing girl, please."
Cole left and returned to
the bridge.
"They're all on their
way to the bay, sir," said Christine.
"Correction," said
Val's voice. "We're all here."
"Fine. Christine,
connect me to the bay, and to Moyer, Perez, Flores, and Briggs. Oh, and to
Vladimir Sokolov's ship."
"Don't bother about
that," said Val. "Sokolov's with me."
"All set, sir,"
said Christine.
"Okay," said Cole.
"Val, the four shuttlecraft leave the ship on my signal and go immediately
to the fourth moon of Malagori VIII. I don't want you to go into orbit, but to
land on the far side. I want the four small ships to do the same. I know we're
masking our transmissions, but I want all eight craft to maintain a total
communications blackout."
"What then, sir?"
asked Dan Moyer. "Our understanding is that the prisoners are on the
fourth planet."
"They are, but with the
Class M Navy ship patrolling the planet we can't possibly get through. Your
eight craft will remain on the moon until the Teddy R can draw the ship away. Pilot tells me there's a wormhole
between the fifth and sixth planets that will let us out near Benadotti some
nine light-years away. Once we lure the Navy ship into it, then I want you to leave your moon and do whatever has to be done
to free the Octopus and his men. Christine has programmed their location into
your crafts."
"Okay," said Val.
"We free them. Now what? The Navy ship's either going to catch you or it
isn't, but it's not going to stay away too long."
"In fact, you're going
to make sure of that," said Cole. "Once you're there and the
prisoners are freed, I want you to set off every alarm they've got—local,
subspace, whatever—before you leave." He paused to make sure there were no
questions. "We've programmed the coordinates of the MacGruder Wormhole
into each of your ships. It'll let you out almost four hundred light-years away
from here. Once there head to the third planet of the Delamere system and wait
for us—and if we're not there within, say, six hours, assume we're not coming,
turn over command of your mission to the Octopus, and good luck to you. Now get
going."
He cut the connection, then
watched on the main viewscreen as they took off and made their way to the
fourth moon of Malagori VIII.
"ETA?" he asked.
"About twelve minutes,
sir," said Jacovic.
"We'll give them
twenty," said Cole. "Who's in Gunnery? No, strike that; it doesn't
matter. We'll aim and fire from here."
"I doubt that we can do
them any damage, sir," offered Jacovic.
"We just want to annoy
them," replied Cole. "Any chance we can knock out their
transmitter?"
"I doubt it, sir,"
said the Teroni. "Both the transmitter and antenna are very well protected
in the Class M."
"All right," said
Cole. "It's probably faster than we are, but I don't think it's so much
faster that we can't reach the Benadotti hole first. Besides, we know where
we're going and they don't."
"Once they realize we
might be leading them away, won't they just turn around and go back?"
asked Christine.
"Pilot says it's almost
impossible to make a one-eighty in a worm-hole," said Cole. "He's
never been wrong before. This would be a very unfortunate time for him to make
his first mistake."
"Once we emerge, we're
still in a very awkward situation, sir," she said. "They'll be able
to narrow the distance until we're within range."
Cole turned to the Teroni.
"Tell her, Commander."
"That is why Val is
setting off all the alarms," said Jacovic. "Given a choice between
racing back to defend Malagori V against an attack and protecting the prisoners
or chasing the Theodore Roosevelt,
they will choose the former."
"If everything goes
according to plan," added Cole.
They waited in silence until
twenty minutes had passed. Then Cole instructed Wxakgini to approach Malagori
V.
"No subtlety, no
subterfuge. Just approach it directly, and make sure we're always a lot closer
to the Benadotti Wormhole than they are."
"Will you require
evasive maneuvering if they start firing on us?" asked Wxakgini.
"Only if it doesn't
conflict with my first order, which is to keep closer to the wormhole. Beyond
that, take your orders from Commander Jacovic. He's been through this kind of
thing often enough."
"Thank you for your
confidence," said Jacovic softly. "But in fact I have never been in
an analogous situation."
"We'll let that be our
little secret," said Cole as the Teddy
R began approaching Malagori V.
"Are we getting near
that damned hole?" asked Cole as they passed the sixth planet of the
Malagori system.
"It's about equidistant
between Malagori V and VI."
"They have to have
spotted us by now," said Domak.
"Of course they
have," said Cole. "That's a Class M ship. Trust me, if we can see
them, they can see us."
"They why don't they do something?" persisted Domak.
"Because they don't
know how many of us there are, or what directions we might be coming
from."
"Then why will they
chase us?"
"I suppose we'll just
have to irritate the shit out of them," said Cole with a smile.
"That means he has a
plan," said Sharon's voice. "Of course, if he dies of a heart attack
right now, none of us will ever know what it was."
"Sir?" said
Christine.
"Yes?"
"They're asking for us
to identify ourselves."
"No answer."
"Why aren't they
shooting?" asked the Duke, who had just arrived on the bridge.
"Because we're a Navy
ship. Not one they can instantly identify, though they will before much
longer."
"They're asking again,
sir."
"Can you make an answer
break up, or simulate static, or anything like that?" asked Cole.
"A ship as
sophisticated as a Class M will see right through it, sir," answered
Christine.
"All right. Tell them
we're on a secret mission, we have top priority, and what the hell are they
doing here?"
She just stared at him for a
moment.
"Just do it," said
Cole. "If it makes them think for half a minute, we'll be thirty seconds
closer to the Benadotti hole."
She did as instructed. There
was no response for almost a minute, and then they demanded identification
again.
"Jacovic, where do we
stand?" asked Cole.
"We're considerably
closer to the wormhole now than they are," responded the Teroni. "I
would say that we can reach it in approximately one minute, and the Navy ship
is almost two and a half minutes away."
"Let me know when we're
thirty seconds from it."
"Sir, they're warning
us off," said Christine. "They want us to leave the system."
"Tell them we have every
right to be here in the Shoemacher system," said Cole.
This time she asked no
questions, but did as he said.
"That ought to buy us a
few seconds," said Cole.
As they waited for a
response, Jacovic caught Cole's eye and nodded his head. "Thirty seconds,
sir."
"Good," said Cole.
"Christine, the next time they send a message, let's have it on visual and
audio and respond in kind."
"Incoming," she
said a moment later.
A square-jawed
square-shouldered middle-aged man wearing a captain's insignia suddenly flickered
into sight.
"I am Trevor Gladstone,
Captain of the Midnight Star" he
said. "This system is off-limits to everyone. You have consistently
refused to answer us, and when you have
answered they have been obvious lies. I will ask you one last time: who are
you, and what is your business here?"
"Captain Gladstone,
this is Wilson Cole, Captain of the Theodore
Roosevelt, and my business here is to free the prisoners you are holding on
Malagori V. Will you peacefully release them in my custody?"
Gladstone's eyes narrowed as
he studied Cole's image. "By God, you are
Wilson Cole! I demand that you surrender your ship to me, sir!"
"That's funny,"
said Cole. "I was going to make the same demand of you." He glanced
quickly at Jacovic, who held up ten fingers. Ten seconds.
The Midnight Star broke out of orbit and began approaching the Teddy R.
"Commander Jacovic,
open fire," said Cole, and Jacovic sent four Level 5 pulse torpedoes at
the Navy ship.
"Jacovic?"
repeated Gladstone. "The Teroni Fleet Commander? What the hell is going
on?"
Cole smiled at Jacovic.
"Your reputation precedes you."
"Incoming laser and
pulse fire, sir," announced Domak.
"Mr. Odom?" said
Cole. "How are we holding up."
"We're good for a few
more blasts," said Odom's voice, "but we can't withstand a sustained
attack, not against a Class M's firepower."
"Maybe we'd better fall
back and regroup," said Cole for Gladstone's benefit. He gestured to
Christine to shut down the communication.
"Pilot, get us into
that wormhole, top speed, and get us out the other end as fast as you
can!"
The Teddy R jumped forward, and was inside the Benadotti Worm-hole in a
matter of nine seconds. The Midnight Star took up the pursuit, and entered
the wormhole less than two minutes later.
"I need instructions
for when we reach the other end," said Wxakgini.
"Just keep going as
fast as you can," said Cole. "If there's any garbage out there—meteor
swarm, dust cloud, anything like that— head for it."
The ship swayed gently.
"It feels like we're
slowing down," said the Duke.
"There's no fast or
slow in a wormhole," replied Cole.
"But I heard you order
him to speed through it."
"Force of habit,"
said Cole. " Wormholes are a wonderful shortcut, but once you're inside
them you go at the speed they want
you to go. Hell, the longer we're both inside it, the more time Val's got to
effect a rescue."
They emerged eight minutes
later, twenty-nine light-years from Malagori, and reached maximum speed
instantly.
The Navy ship burst out of
the hole two minutes later and took up the pursuit, firing its awesome weaponry
as it went. The Teddy R shuddered
twice as its shields suffered direct hits, but nothing got through its defenses
and it continued speeding through the galaxy—and then, suddenly, the Midnight Star came to a sudden halt, circled around, and headed back toward
the wormhole.
"It's done!" said
Cole.
"Are you sure?"
asked the Platinum Duke.
Cole nodded an affirmative.
"They didn't stop chasing us when they came out of the hole because Val
hadn't effected the rescue yet. But once she did, she set off all the alarms.
That's why they turned around and went back. But when they get there, they
aren't going to find any prisoners. Our ships should make the MacGruder hole,
which is on the far side of the star, before the Midnight Star can even reach Malagori V, which is on this
side." He smiled. "Good time of year to effect a rescue."
He walked over to Wxakgini.
"Is there another way to get to the Delamere system without either taking
the MacGruder Wormhole or traveling through normal space?"
"There is always
another way, just less direct."
"Can we make it in five
hours?"
"I must think and
compute," said Wxakgini, closing his eyes.
"You, or the
navigational computer?" asked Cole.
"There is no
difference," said Wxakgini, and Cole concluded that he was probably right.
The pilot was silent for almost a full minute, and then opened his eyes again.
"We can traverse an as-yet-unnamed wormhole to the Beethoven system, and
from there seek out the Yamaguchi Wormhole. It will let you out within reach of
the Delamere system, and you can travel through normal space for the remainder
of the voyage. ETA will be six hours and forty-three minutes."
"How long before we're
out of the Yamaguchi Wormhole?" asked Cole.
"Five hours and
thirty-seven minutes."
"Okay, do it." He
turned and saw that everyone on the bridge had been listening. "We can
contact Val and the others in five and a half hours, when we get out of the
wormhole. I told them to wait six hours before writing us off."
"So we pulled it
off!" said the Duke.
"In theory," said
Cole.
"What are you talking
about? Val got the prisoners, and we got out with our asses intact."
"We don't know for a
fact that their guards didn't kill every last prisoner when they saw the ships
and shuttles coming in for a landing," replied Cole. "We don't know
if we lost any of our people. Let's wait seven more hours before we
celebrate."
They made their rendezvous
on schedule, and transferred the Octopus and his men to the Teddy R shortly thereafter.
"This ship wasn't built
to hold a crew of a hundred and thirty," said Cole as the Octopus joined
him for a drink in his office. "We're going to have to find someplace for
you and your men."
"I've been giving it
some thought," said the eight-handed mutant. "We're not that far from
the Bellermaine system. There's a small military outpost there. Why not use the
Teddy R to take it out? Leave a few
ships undamaged and my men and I will appropriate them."
"They won't do you a
bit of good," said Cole.
"Why not? They'll be
Navy ships."
"And the Navy will know
two minutes after you leave what each one's registration number is, what its
name is, and what codes have been programmed into its computer. You'll be the
most easily identified ships in the Republic." Cole stared at him and
shook his head. "Sometimes it's difficult to believe you were really the
biggest pirate on the Inner Frontier."
"I was not a pirate," said the Octopus
adamantly. "I was an entrepreneur.
Your good-looking redheaded friend—she
was the pirate." Suddenly he grinned. "I can't tell you how many
times she plundered my chosen prey before I could."
"Let's get back to the
subject at hand," said Cole. "We've got to get your men off the ship
in the next couple of days, before tempers start fraying. We're cramped for
living space as it is. And I'm not about to attack a Navy base just to make you
happy."
"It's a small
one," insisted the Octopus. "It's ripe for the taking."
"Why tell the Navy
where we are?" Cole shot back. "We just made fools of them not eight
hours ago. Let's capitalize on that first."
"I'm here instead of on
Malagori V. How much more capitalizing do you need?"
"Let's find out,"
said Cole. He contacted Jacovic.
"Yes, sir?" said
the Teroni as his image appeared.
"How many probes do we
have left?"
"I'll have to
check." A pause as he called up the information on a screen Cole could not
see. "Five, sir."
"I guess we can spare
one," said Cole. "Thanks." Then: "Let me speak to
Meloctin."
The Lodinite's face
immediately appeared. "Yes, Captain?"
"If I want to record a
message, can you capture it, insert it in a probe, and program it to be sent at
a certain time?"
"There should be no
problem at all," answered Meloctin.
"I'll want it broadcast
to as many worlds as can receive the signal, but I also want it transmitted via
subspace radio directly to one person."
"I don't foresee any
difficulty, sir."
Cole smiled. "I'm glad
to have you aboard, Meloctin—and I'll bet Christine Mboya, Malcolm Briggs, and
Domak are going to be even gladder. I'll be up to record the message
shortly."
He broke the connection.
"What's that all
about?" asked the Octopus.
"Want to be a video
star?"
"What are you talking
about?"
"Finish whatever it is
you're drinking and come with me," said Cole.
A moment later the two of
them were on the bridge, and Cole approached Meloctin. "Are we
ready?"
"Yes, sir," said
the Lodinite.
"Where do you want me
to stand?"
"Anywhere you
want."
"Right where I am is
fine." He turned to the Octopus. "Stay where you are until I signal
you to join me." He looked around. "Jacovic, stay well away from me
while we're recording. If they see you, they're going to convince themselves
this is some trick perpetrated by the Teroni Federation."
Jacovic nodded and backed
away.
"Say when," Cole
told Meloctin.
"Any time,"
replied the Lodinite.
"Now." Cole looked
straight ahead. "Hello again, Secretary Wilkie. This is Wilson Cole aboard
the Theodore Roosevelt, still free
and still approaching Deluros. You took eighty of my friends prisoner two days
ago, and held them incommunicado on the planet of Malagori V. This, of course,
was unacceptable, so we freed them without losing a single man to your Navy.
Since you are rarely within hailing distance of the truth, I expect you to deny
this vigorously. But before you do, I'd like to introduce you to a friend of
mine." He gestured for the Octopus to join him. "This man is the
notorious Octopus, one of the most feared entrepreneurs"—the Octopus
laughed out loud—"on the Inner Frontier. Yesterday he was in your custody
on Malagori V. Today he is standing next to me on the bridge of the Theodore Roosevelt. You are unquestionably going to claim that is it an
actor, which is ludicrous unless you assume that we carry eight-handed actors
among our crew ... or perhaps you will think that he is nothing but a special
effect. So I am going to ask him to say a few words to you, so that anyone who
wants to run a voiceprint can do so."
Cole turned to the Octopus,
who stared where Cole had been staring.
"Hello, you ugly little
worm," said the Octopus. "You had better hope Wilson Cole reaches you
first, because if I do, I plan to tear you into so many pieces that they can
never find all of them. Speaking as an unelected criminal kingpin to an elected
one, your days of plundering the galaxy are done. You can step aside, and I personally
hope you don't, or you can cling to your office for a few more days, after
which I will personally toss you aside before doing quite a few other
exceptionally nasty things to you."
Cole waited until he was
certain the Octopus was done, and then spoke again. "Your days of abusing
the citizens of the Republic and the Inner Frontier are coming to an end. You
are the primary villain, and your days in power are numbered, but we won't be
satisfied to replace you with another tyrant. This time we're going to have a
government that does what it is supposed to do, whatever that takes."
He nodded to Meloctin, who
deactivated the recording device.
"Got it all?" said
Cole.
"Yes. Would you like to
edit it before I insert it in the probe?"
Cole shook his head. "No,
we said what we had to say."
"Where would you like
the probe sent?"
"Pilot?" said
Cole, approaching Wxakgini.
"Yes?"
"What's the longest
wormhole in the vicinity?"
"Define vicinity."
"Half a day."
There was a momentary
silence while Wxakgini consulted with his mechanical counterpart. "That
will be the Miranda Wormhole."
"If I shoot a probe
into it, where will it come out?"
"Twenty-three thousand
light-years away."
"How soon?"
"Approximately fourteen
hours."
"Damn, that's fast,
even for a wormhole!" exclaimed Cole. Then: "When it comes out, how
close to Deluros will it be?"
Wxakgini closed his eyes and
bonded with the computer again. "Thirty-two hundred light-years."
"Thanks." Cole
returned to Meloctin. "Get all the coordinates you'll need from
Pilot," he said. "Where the wormhole starts and ends, how to direct
the transmission to Deluros once the probe is out the other end. Then rig it to
broadcast and send twenty minutes after it emerges."
"That's cutting it very
close," noted the Lodinite.
"We can't chance
waiting any longer. A probe pops out of a worm-hole just three thousand
light-years from the Deluros system, you can bet they'll destroy it the second
they know it's there."
"All right, sir,"
said Meloctin. "I should have it ready to go in half an hour."
"One more thing,"
said Cole.
"Sir?"
"Rig it to
self-destruct immediately after it transmits our message. If you think you
might need help, ask Mr. Odom."
"I've worked with
probes before, sir," said Meloctin.
"All right," said
Cole. "It's all yours." He turned to the Octopus. "Come
on," he said. "We have to talk."
The Octopus followed him to
the airlift, and a moment later they were in Cole's office.
"Now what?" said
the Octopus, seating himself opposite Cole's desk.
"Now we put our heads
together and try to solve your problem."
"My problem?"
"You're a navy without
any ships."
"And you won't attack a
Navy base?"
"Not a chance,"
said Cole. "They have no idea where we are. They won't find the probe
before it self-destructs, but they'll trace the signal and assume we're three
thousand light-years away. If we attack out here, if we're even seen by a Navy
ship, then all that misdirection was for nothing."
"Yeah, well, picking
off a Class H ship every couple of days is not going to win this war,"
said the Octopus.
"I'm working on
it."
"Are you, Wilson?" he asked sincerely.
"Of course I am,"
said Cole irritably. "Believe me, there are better and safer ways to feed
my ego than going to war with the Republic. I meant what I said: I intend to
take the Republic down, or at least take down Wilkie and Garcia and see to it
that some fundamental changes are made."
"Then why are we hiding
to hell and gone?" demanded the Octopus. "If we don't send that
message on the probe, Wilkie doesn't even know we exist."
"He knows," said Cole.
"Yeah? How?"
"Because a very foolish
man got himself and his men captured, and we stole them back from right under
the Navy's nose," said Cole. "He knows, all right."
"Okay, I shouldn't have
tried it," admitted the Octopus. "But we weren't accomplishing a
damned thing out here. Hell, we're still not!"
"That's just
out-and-out wrong," said Cole. "With under a thousand ships, we've
got the Republic shooting anything that moves, decimating entire worlds,
overreacting to everything we do. I wish we had a couple of million ships, but
we don't, so we'll have to fight this war with our brains and not our
overwhelming force."
"Just tell me that you
really have a plan."
"I really have a
plan," replied Cole. "Plus about ten contingency plans, since nothing
is guaranteed against an enemy of this magnitude and with its resources."
"But you have a
plan?" repeated the Octopus.
"I have a plan."
"Fucking well
better!" growled the Octopus.
"Now, if you're through
with your little fit of pique, let's see what we can do about getting your
people the hell off the ship before we can't stand the sight of you and vice
versa."
"If you're that damned
anxious to get rid of us, set us down on the next oxygen world."
"I'm anxious to get you
outfitted and back into the fight," answered Cole.
"Okay," said the
Octopus, "if you won't attack a Navy base, how about a spaceliner? We take
everyone prisoner—pilot, crew, and passengers—set them all down on a planet,
and my men and I take the ship deep into the Republic, maybe all the way to Deluros,
without being challenged."
"Not unless you're
prepared to kill every passenger and crew member aboard the ship," replied
Cole. "You have to figure ninety percent of them will have communicators
that can reach the nearest police or Navy ships—and once you're identified,
you're even worse off in a spaceliner than a stolen Navy ship, which at least
can defend itself."
"We'll strip 'em
naked—a delicious thought in itself, at least regarding those passengers of the
female persuasion—and then set 'em down on an uninhabited world."
"With no weapons, no
communications, no medicine—just a bunch of naked people on a totally
unpopulated world? And actions like that will make them prefer you to the
Republic? Don't forget— all this presupposes that neither the ship nor the
passengers can get off an SOS identifying you before you take control of
it."
The Octopus stared at him
for a long minute. "I think I hate you most when you're right," he
said. "I don't like you very much at this moment."
"I'll take that as a high
compliment, or as close to a compliment as you're capable of," said Cole
easily. "Got any other suggestions?"
"We both know you'll
just shoot 'em all down," said the Octopus sullenly. "You've known
all along what you want me to do, haven't you?"
"I've had a pretty good
idea," replied Cole. "But I thought I'd see if you had any better
suggestions."
"Don't make me play
guessing games," said the Octopus. "Just tell me what we're going to
do about my situation."
Cole stared at him for a
moment. "I think we'll start by procuring a cargo ship for you. The right
one will be big enough to hold your men, and you can move freely through the
Republic in it—or most of the Republic, anyway. And unlike a passenger ship,
we'll only be taking two or three men prisoner, and possibly none at all; a lot
of these ships are fully automated."
"But we'll still be in
an unarmed ship," said the Octopus.
"Initially," Cole
agreed. "Before long you'll be in a dozen unarmed cargo ships." Cole
paused. "The advantage is that you can land.
Choose a planet that has a major Republic presence, maybe the capital world of
one of the galactic sectors, and harass and disrupt it on the ground. They'll
be looking for an attack from space, by the Teddy
R or some Teroni ship. You'll
actually have an easier time of it with a ground attack."
"It's a thought,"
said the Octopus.
"I can't help but
notice that most of your men are thieves and cut throats," continued Cole.
"That's a definite advantage in a guerrilla war, which is what we're
fighting. If you need weapons, or more cargo ships, or money, they'll know how
to get it on whatever planet you find yourselves."
"I hate to admit it,
but it's got possibilities."
"Also, once you get
more ships, you can coordinate your attacks. Say you have two Republic worlds
in neighboring systems. Start harassing one until help arrives from the other,
and then have the other half of your team hit the other."
"Okay, I'm
convinced," said the Octopus.
"Just one thing,"
said Cole.
"Yeah?"
"I don't want you to
engage in any pitched battles. The whole point is to keep them off balance,
keep them guessing about our strength and our whereabouts until we're ready to
do something major."
"Are we doing something major?" asked
the Octopus.
"When the time
comes."
"And we're not going to
die of old age before then?"
"I'm not," said Cole. "You could
be a lot older than you look."
The Octopus laughed.
"All right," he said at last. "No pitched battles."
"Okay," said Cole.
"By tomorrow we'll have your ship."
The Octopus got to his feet.
"I'm going back to your mess hall," he said. "You wouldn't
believe the slop they fed us back on Malagori."
"Of course I
would," replied Cole. The Octopus stared questioningly at him. "I was
a serving officer for eighteen years. I know
what passes for food in the Navy."
The Octopus laughed and left
the office. As soon as the door snapped shut Sharon's image appeared in front
of Cole.
"You were
eavesdropping, of course?" said Cole.
"Of course."
"And?"
"I don't know,
Wilson," she said. "He's like Val but without her skills. How long do
you think he can keep his word before he does something really dumb?"
"He functioned for
years on the Frontier," replied Cole. "I think he's just having a
little trouble adjusting to a new situation. Where he comes from, no one could
match forces with him."
"How fast a learner is
he?"
Cole shrugged. "We'll
find out. If they capture him again, he's on his own. We can't keep rescuing
him. We've got more important things to do."
"Do you have a master plan?"
"I wouldn't call it
that," said Cole. "There are too many variables."
"But you know what you want to do."
"I want to win the
war."
"You know, sometimes
you can be very annoying to talk to. I think the Octopus had a point."
"Probably he did."
"Damn it, Wilson! Why
won't you tell me?"
"For the same reason I
won't tell Jacovic or Val or any of the others," said Cole. "If
you're captured, I don't want them to be able to extract it from you the way we
extracted information from Alberto Torres."
She stared at him. "I
love you," she said at last, "but you can be a cold son of a
bitch."
"It goes with
command," said Cole. "I liked myself much better when other people
got to make these decisions." He got to his feet. "I think it's time
to go to work again. We're not going to run out of air or food, but in a couple
of days it's going to feel like we
will. Let's get the Octopus his ship, and move his crew the hell off
ours."
He left the office and was
going to direct the operation from the mess hall, which was his preferred
command station, but he remembered that the Octopus was there so he went to the
bridge instead. Val was now on duty, Jacovic was either eating or sleeping, and
Meloctin seemed completely comfortable at Christine's computer.
"Val," he said,
"start hunting for a cargo ship, something big enough to hold eighty men
if we dump the contents."
"It shouldn't be that
hard," she said. "Delamere IV is an agricultural world. There should
be a steady supply of cargo ships."
"Just pinpoint
it," said Cole. "No shooting. We need it intact."
"Gotcha."
Meloctin had adjusted to the
lack of salutes, but he seemed a little shocked by "Gotcha" rather
than "Yes, sir." Cole smiled and decided that the Lodinite would get
used to Val before long.
Nothing happened for almost
an hour, and then Val spotted a cargo ship.
"Incoming," she
announced. "It's out by Delamere VII now." She turned to Cole.
"Couldn't be better. He'll be deadheading until he can load mutated corn
and wheat into his ship, so we won't have to dump a bunch of stuff that can be
traced."
"Good point," said
Cole. "All right, let's intercept him near one of those Delamere VI
moons."
The Teddy R jumped ahead, and was waiting for the cargo ship as it
neared the sixth planet of the system. Cole ordered it to stop, it refused, and
he fired a laser beam across its bow. That
stopped it.
It turned out that the
pilot, a woman named Gentry, was the only entity on the ship. She'd made a
short jump from the neighboring Kilgore system, and would be replaced by a
fresh pilot once the ship was loaded.
As the Octopus and his men
transferred to the cargo ship, Gentry was brought to the bridge, where Cole was
waiting for her.
"You're going to be our
guest for a few days," he told her. "I'm not going to put you off on
some uninhabited world where you'd live and die alone and undiscovered, and I
can't drop you on a Republic world where you can report what happened, so
you're going to stay aboard the Theodore
Roosevelt until my friends have had time to change your ship's appearance
and registration and to leave the vicinity. If you accept our terms and behave
yourself, you won't be confined to the brig, but will be given a cabin and
treated with every courtesy."
"The Theodore Roosevelt?" she said, her
eyes widening. "Are you really Wilson Cole?"
"Yes."
"I expected something
with horns and a tail," said Gentry. She paused for a moment, considering
her options. "I accept your terms."
"Rachel," said
Cole on the ship's intercom. "Please come to the bridge, and escort our
guest to an empty cabin."
"They're all a mess,
sir," replied Rachel. "The Octopus's men are many things, but neat
isn't one of them."
"That's all
right," said Cole. "Our guest is going to have a lot of time on her
hands. I'm sure she won't mind cleaning her cabin."
Rachel arrived a moment
later and led Gentry off the bridge to an airlift.
"We're on our
way," said the Octopus, and Cole saw from his image that he was on the
cargo ship.
"Not just yet,"
said Cole. "Mr. Briggs will be boarding your ship in a minute or two to
put our codes into your computer."
"Sure, why not?"
said the Octopus with a shrug. "Hell, what's another hour?"
At it turned out, it took
Briggs only forty minutes, and then the Octopus took off for a new system where
he planned to disguise the ship, create a new registration, and acquire a few new
cargo ships.
"What now?" asked
Val when the Octopus had left. "Now the distractions are over, and we get
back to fighting the war," said Cole.
Val stared at him. "Why
do I assume when you say that, you're not talking about blowing up ships and
leveling enemy cities?"
"Because you're
learning," answered Cole.
"Sir?" said Rachel
Marcos. She was standing in the doorway of the mess hall.
Cole, the only occupant,
looked up from his coffee. "What is it?"
"We have a matter of
some sensitivity," she said, approaching and sitting down across from him.
"I don't know how widespread the knowledge of it may be, so I didn't want
to discuss it from the bridge, where we could be overheard."
He stared at her curiously.
"All right, what is it?"
"We have two men who may
or may not be prisoners," she continued. "Nobody knows—or, rather,
nobody but you."
"What the hell are you
talking about, Rachel?"
"Mr. Brill and Mr.
Dunyach, sir," she replied. "They've been confined to quarters since
before we rescued the Octopus on Malagori V."
"Hell, I'd forgotten
all about them," said Cole. "We've been a little busy in the interim.
I promised to set them down on a neutral planet. We haven't come to one."
He frowned. "In fact, the deeper into the Republic we go, the less likely
we are to find one. I'll have to think about this."
"Maybe I can
help," said Sharon's voice, and her image appeared a moment later.
"How?" asked Cole.
"I stopped by their
cabins a couple of hours ago to make sure they were being fed on schedule and
had been well treated. They asked me to ask you if they can remain on board.
Their feelings haven't changed; they still want to do what they can to bring
about the end of the Republic."
Cole looked at Rachel.
"That'll be all, Rachel."
She saluted and left.
"So what are you going
to do?" asked Sharon. "As you pointed out, it's going to be difficult
to find a world where we can drop them."
"Difficult," he
repeated. "Not impossible."
"They want to stay on
the Teddy R and make war against the
Republic."
"Damn it, Sharon!"
he said, clearly annoyed. "They disobeyed a direct order from their
Captain in the middle of enemy territory! There has to be a consequence!"
"All right," she
said. "Then let's dump them on an agricultural world and be done with
them—but you can't just keep them confined indefinitely for taking a stand on a
matter of principle."
He stared at her image for a
long moment. "How's Torres doing?"
"He seems fine,"
she said. "More than a little ashamed that he gave us the information, but
physically he's just about recovered."
"So we did our worst,
and he's fine," said Cole. "And if they'd had their way, he'd still
be fine but eighty men would be dead."
"I'm not arguing that,
Wilson," she said angrily. "Hell, I was an active participant! I'm
just saying that we might not return to the Inner Frontier for a year or two,
if then. You can't keep them confined to their cabins until then."
"All right," he
said. "Let me think about it."
"If you want my
opinion—"
"I know your
opinion," he growled. "Now leave me alone."
She broke the communication,
and Cole sat alone in the mess hall, considering his options. Finally he put
through a call to Miguel Flores, whose ship was half a light-year away. They
spoke for a few minutes, and then he ended the connection.
"Sharon?"
"Yes?" she
replied.
"No sense doing this in
front of the crew. Bring them down to my office."
"We'll be there in five
minutes," she said, signing off.
He left his cup for the
servo-mech to clean up, approached the airlift, descended another level, got
off, and walked to his office. The security system read his retina, weight, and
bone structure and let him in.
He seated himself at his
desk, ordered the door to remain open, and waited. Sharon arrived shortly
thereafter, accompanied by Brill and Dunyach.
Cole studied the two men for
a moment. They seemed none the worse for their confinement.
"I understand you two
have a request," he said at last.
"Yes, sir," said
Brill. "We're here because we agreed to go to war against the Republic.
That hasn't changed." He paused, as if gathering his courage. "We
would like to be allowed to remain on the Teddy
R and return to our duties."
"What will happen the
next time I give you an order you don't like?" asked Cole.
Brill met his gaze without
blinking. "If it's the same order, you will get the same response."
Cole turned to Dunyach.
"Is he speaking for you, too?"
"Yes, sir," said
Dunyach. "I'm sorry, but you gave me an order that I could not obey."
"I respect you for
that," said Cole. "And I wish it hadn't been necessary. But eighty
lives were at stake."
"He might have talked
anyway, sir."
"He might have,"
agreed Cole. "But we don't know that, and in my opinion, we couldn't take
the chance. And the fact of the matter is that on this ship, it's my opinion
that counts."
"Then will you be
setting us down on a planet, sir?" asked Brill.
"Possibly," said
Cole. "But as I told Colonel Blacksmith, I respect you for sticking to
your ethical principles, and I also realize we need every man we can get in
this crusade."
"Then we can go back to our jobs?" asked
Dunyach, confused.
Cole shook his head.
"No. You disobeyed a direct order, and you just told me if you receive
another order that is contrary to your ethical precepts, you'll disobey it as
well. I can't have you on the Teddy
R."
"Then I don't
understand, sir," said Brill.
"I've contacted Mr.
Flores, whose ship, The Golden Dawn,
is a Class K, capable of holding a crew of twenty-two. He currently has only
sixteen men and aliens aboard it. If you wish to remain a part of our team, he
has agreed to take you on. Otherwise, we'll set you down on the next
agricultural world we come to, though I can't guarantee they'll view a pair of
insurrectionists with approval. That is your choice. We're in the middle of a
war, we're in enemy territory, and I simply can't do any more for you."
Brill looked at Dunyach, who
nodded his head.
"We'll go with Mr.
Flores, sir," said Brill.
"All right," said
Cole. "Return to your rooms and collect your gear." As they left he
turned to Sharon. "Contact Flores and tell him to come over here and pick
up his new crewmen."
"Thank you,
Wilson."
"No need to. Security
men are hard to come by."
"So are Captains,"
she said, kissing his cheek and leaving.
And
hardest of all, he
thought bitterly, are Captains who will stick, to their principles
as doggedly as a pair of crewmen did. A wistful expression crossed his
face. I wonder if I ever really was one.
Cole had three chairs set up
facing his desk in his small office. He wished he had room for Sharon, but the
room felt cramped when he was alone in it.
At the appointed hour,
Jacovic turned the bridge over to Braxite, and then he, Christine Mboya, and
Val made their way down to Cole's office. When they were all seated, Cole
spoke.
"Sharon is monitoring
this, but she won't be speaking unless we ask her a direct question. I've
called you here because you are my three senior officers, and it's time to take
our next step in this campaign. We've made the Republic and the Navy aware of
us, made them overreact, and stolen some prisoners out from right under their
noses. It's time to escalate, without, of course, meeting them head-on. I have
some thoughts, but I'd like your input first. Has anyone any suggestions?"
"Sir," said
Christine, "I'm not qualified to discuss strategy. You want Mr. Sokolov,
or perhaps Jaxtaboxl."
"I know who I
want," said Cole firmly.
"We've proven that we
can free our own people from a guarded sanctuary on Malagori V," said
Jacovic. "What if we were to start attacking the prisons and freeing the
prisoners out near the borders of the Republic? By the time word reached the
Navy and they reacted, we could be a thousand light-years away."
"Not bad,"
commented Val.
"I don't know,"
said Christine. "It seems to me that you'd be freeing a few political
prisoners and dissenters, but mostly you'd be freeing a bunch of criminals and
crazies."
"So what?" said
Val. "They could cause a lot of disruption."
"But it would be the
kind of disruption that would have the people hoping the Republic would catch
them and incarcerate them again," said Christine. "And I don't think
we want to do anything that would make the Republic appear in a favorable
light, which they would if they recaptured the felons before they could do any
damage to the locals."
"She's right,"
said Jacovic. "I concede it. I should have thought more carefully before I
spoke."
"What about the
military prisons?" asked Val. "They
sure as hell figure to hate the Navy."
Cole shook his head. "I
don't think so. The mere fact that they're in a military prison to begin with
implies that they lack discipline, and the fact that they may resent the Navy
doesn't mean they'll want to overthrow the Republic."
"What then?" asked
Jacovic. "We can't get much closer to Deluros without being spotted and
drawing the attention of the Navy."
"I have no problem
going out in a blaze of glory and taking as many of the bastards with us as we
can," said Val, "but even I admit that won't get the job done."
Cole smiled. "I knew if I just talked sense to you for a
couple of years it'd make an impression sooner or later."
"Save your
compliments," snorted Val. "You called us here. Yon waited for
everyone to say we don't have a plan. Now why don't yon tell us yours, which
you've obviously been sitting on all along?"
Cole looked at each of his
three officers. "I think that there's no sense doing more of the same.
We've threatened Susan Garcia and Egan Wilkie. We've freed some prisoners. It's
time to do something completely unexpected."
All three leaned forward,
trying to fathom what he had in mind.
"Governments thrive on
propaganda," said Cole. "Usually they convince the media to collude
with them in exchange for favorable treatment and status. And it almost always
works." He paused. "But I don't think most governments, including
this one, can withstand propaganda that is aimed against them, not from an
exterior source, but from within."
"Sounds good in a
lecture," said Val. "How does it work in practice?"
"I've been giving it
some thought," began Cole.
"I'll bet you
have," said Val with a grin.
"And I think I see a
way that will put the Democracy's credibility in question, and quite possibly
shatter it, without endangering any of us."
"And for your next
trick, will you make Andromeda disappear?" asked Val.
Cole ignored her and looked
at his Second Officer. "Christine, do you think you can find five
abandoned worlds, all within the Republic, all farther out from Deluros than we
are now?"
"Uninhabited
worlds?" she repeated. "There are millions of them."
"I didn't say
uninhabited," replied Cole. "I said abandoned. I want you to find five worlds that Man settled, built
some structures on, and then left."
"Structures?" she
repeated.
"Cities are good, but
I'll consider anything that is clearly artificial."
"Does it matter what
made them leave?" asked Jacovic. "It could be disease, war,
diminishing natural resources, a natural disaster . . ."
"I don't care, as long
as some structures remain," said Cole. He turned back to Christine.
"Can you do it?"
"I don't know why
not," she said. "In fact, if I can have Malcolm Briggs and perhaps
Meloctin and Domak work around the clock in shifts, we can probably find a
dozen or more worlds for you in a Standard day."
"Good," said Cole.
"Start as soon as this meeting's over, and tell the other three that
they're helping you. Have them check with me if there's any question about
it." He looked at the Teroni. "You're suddenly smiling, Commander
Jacovic."
"I think I see what you
plan to do," replied Jacovic. "And I think it will work."
"I'm delighted to have
the confidence of a leader with your experience."
"Well, I don't see
it," said Val irritably. "Are we going to play guessing games, or are
you going to confide in the rest of us?"
"Tell her,
Commander," said Cole.
"If I have correctly
deduced your plan, we are going to bomb a handful of abandoned worlds,"
said the Teroni. "We won't totally destroy them, because we'll want some
of the structures to remain standing."
"Why?" asked Val,
frowning.
"To prove these were inhabited worlds that
we decimated," answered Jacovic.
"But they
weren't," said Val.
Cole smiled. "I won't
tell anyone if you won't."
Suddenly Val smacked her
forehead with an open hand. "Of course!" she exclaimed. "We take
credit for wiping out half a dozen planetary civilizations. Wilkie denies it.
But we tell the media if they don't believe us, come and see for
themselves—"
"—and when they come
out, they see definite signs that a thriving civilization lived here prior to
the attack!" concluded Christine.
"Right," said
Cole. "Except that we don't take
credit for it. We're just one ship, and we don't need the attention that will
attract. We'll tell them that the Teroni Federation did it."
"They'll never believe
it," said Val.
"Oh, I think they
will," said Cole. "Especially if the one who reports it to them is a
Teroni." He smiled and gestured toward Jacovic.
"Son of a bitch!"
said Val. "Wilson Cole, you are one sneaky bastard!"
"Now, Secretary Wilkie
will deny it, of course," continued Cole. "He may even convince most
of the media that it's a ruse. But there's always some ambitious young reporter
who will follow up on an interesting lead—and if no one does, then we'll
broadcast the results of the carnage ourselves. Once we do that, you can be
sure that private citizens will start checking out those worlds even if no one
else does—and if it becomes Wilkie's word against that of a bunch of
nonpolitical eyewitnesses who, unlike Wilkie, were not in charge of protecting all the people who lived on those
worlds, who do you think the public will believe?"
"So who gets to blow
these five worlds?" asked Val.
"We're just going to
use one small ship," said Cole. "And we'll hit one every three or
four days. If we hit them all at once, it's a single attack, and Wilkie can
probably ride out the storm. But if we destroy one, and get word out that he couldn't
protect the populace of that world, and while he's denying it, destroy another,
and keep doing it . . . Well, I think it could snowball."
"And by the same token,
I'll pick worlds that are hundreds, preferably thousands, of light-years from
each other," said Christine enthusiastically. "As the Navy rushes to
one to see what's happened, we'll be bombing another."
Cole turned to Jacovic.
"You don't mind lending your face and voice to this enterprise?"
"I am no longer part of
the Teroni Federation," he replied. "That does not mean I am a friend
of the Republic."
"Any questions?"
asked Cole.
Silence.
"All right. Christine,
you might as well get started. Nothing gets done until you locate those worlds.
This meeting is over."
The three officers filed
out, and Cole leaned back on his chair as the door snapped shut.
"So what do you
think?" he asked as Sharon's image appeared.
"I think you're going
to drive Egan Wilkie crazy," she said. "You may even drive him from
office. But we both know he'll be replaced by someone just like him. I don't
see how this brings down the Republic."
"We don't want to bring
it down," answered Cole. "We want to reform it. As many abuses as
it's committed, it's still all that stands between Man and a frequently hostile
galaxy."
"We're growing a
strange crop of revolutionaries this year," she said.
"I'm not a
revolutionary," he replied. "I served in this government's Navy my
entire adult life. I don't want to end
the Republic; I want to fix it."
"By attacking empty
planets," she said with a smile.
"Why not?" he
said, returning her smile. "I'd like there to be someone left alive after
we win."
She stared at him
thoughtfully. "You really do intend to win, don't you?"
"I wouldn't have left
the Inner Frontier if I didn't," he answered.
Forli II was an oxygen world
that had once been a small banking and trading center in the Wajima Sector. But
as colonization spread in different directions, it was eventually abandoned,
and it stood empty for almost three hundred years.
Five days after Cole
announced his plan to his officers, Vladimir Sokolov bombed it, making sure to
leave some of the ancient buildings standing.
And two days after that,
Egan Wilkie explained to the populace at large via a galaxy-wide transmission
that Forli II was a totally unpopulated world and no lives had been lost.
And a day after that,
Jacovic—claiming that he was speaking from the flagship of the Fifth Teroni
Fleet—explained to that same populace that Forli II was unpopulated now, and it was only the first world he
planned to destroy.
Four days later, it was
Buchanan IV. Wilkie denied, Jacovic bragged and promised more, and this time
the media sent some people to see if there were any signs of civilization on
that distant world.
Cole was feeling pretty
good. He even allowed himself the luxury of both a beer and a dessert, and was
sitting at his usual table in the mess hall with David Copperfield and the
Platinum Duke, who seemed to have bonded simply because they were the only ones
on the Teddy R without any duties.
"Those worlds are going
to be tourist attractions after the Republic falls," the Duke was saying.
"I'd love to have the gambling concessions on them."
"I thought you wanted
to go back to Singapore Station," said Cole.
"That's my home,"
acknowledged the Duke. "But does that mean I can't have investments
anywhere else?"
"Investments?"
said Cole with a smile. "So you don't want a gift. You want to lease the gambling concessions?"
"Stop teasing me,"
said the Duke irritably. "You know perfectly well what I mean."
"Okay, they're
yours," said Cole. "There's just one small obstacle we have to
overcome."
"Oh?"
Cole nodded.
"Overthrowing the Republic."
"That's all but
done," said the Duke. "Wilkie can't survive something like
this."
"Even if you're right,
there'll be a next Wilkie, or someone just like him, and one after that, and
one after that. I hope you didn't think this was going to be that easy."
"I have every
confidence in you."
"And every hunger for
five or six showplace worlds for tourists," said Cole dryly. He turned to
David Copperfield. "You've been remarkably quiet, David."
"I'm thinking,"
said the little alien.
"Well, that's a step in
the right direction," said Cole. "What are you thinking about?"
"I own a warehouse that
seems to have slipped my mind until just now," said David. "And among
other things, it possesses two paintings executed in the ancient way, with
actual oils on canvas, by Bartholomew Miksis, the greatest artist of the
twenty-sixth century AD, four hundred years before the dawn of the Galactic
Era."
"And?" said Cole.
"As you know,"
continued David, "I have certain enemies on the Inner Frontier, evil men
possessed of a totally unreasonable hatred of myself, and for that reason I
have been loath to pass the word that some of these items, and especially the
paintings, were available, since to purchase them the buyer would have to know
where to deliver the money. I was thinking maybe I'll auction them here in the
Republic, where my record is absolutely spotless."
"Why the hell don't you
simply use an instantaneous transfer of money to a numbered account?"
asked the Duke.
"I suspect our David
has also annoyed his share of Inner Frontier bankers," said Cole with a
smile.
"Absolutely not!"
said David. He paused. "I have only offended relatively few of them—a mere handful."
"Then set up your
account somewhere else," said the Duke.
"You don't understand
the economics of the situation," said David.
"Let me take a
guess," said Cole. "Since those paintings aren't legally yours,
there's nothing to stop an unethical banker from keeping all the money—and you
don't know any ethical bankers."
"Precisely,"
replied David. "Though of course the argument is based on a totally false
premise: there are no laws on the Inner Frontier, and therefore nothing can be
illegal—but bankers can be so unethical! Besides," he added, "I'm not
a thief, I'm a fence—or I was, anyway. Which is to say that those paintings may
or may not legally be stolen goods, depending on how they were obtained and
whether they're in the Republic or the Frontier, but I didn't steal them. I
simply bought them from the man who . . ." He paused, frowning. "From
my source," he concluded lamely.
"That makes it all
okay," said Cole, amused at the little alien's discomfiture.
"How did you two ever
get together?" asked the Duke.
"We met during the Teddy R's brief fling at piracy,"
said Cole.
"We found out that we
were old school chums, Steerforth and I," said David, "and we've been
inseparable ever since."
The Duke looked to Cole for
a quick contradiction, but the latter merely shrugged and said, "I suppose
that's as good a story as any."
They spoke for a few more
minutes. Then David and the Duke left to play whist, and a moment later
Sharon's image appeared over the next table.
"Yeah, what is
it?" asked Cole.
"Gentry."
"Gentry to you."
"That's the name of the
cargo ship pilot we've been carrying."
"Okay," said Cole.
"What about her?"
"She wants to speak to
you."
"Put her through."
"In person," said
Sharon. He frowned and she continued. "She's not a prisoner or an enemy,
just someone who was piloting the wrong ship at the wrong time."
"You know what this is
about, I presume?"
"Yes."
"And you approve?"
"I do."
"All right," said
Cole. "Send her down."
"Thank you,
Wilson."
He had just finished his
beer when Gentry arrived.
"Have a seat," he
said, gesturing to the chair opposite him.
"Thank you, Captain
Cole," she said, walking over and seating herself.
"My Security Chief
tells me you have something to say to me."
She nodded her head.
"Yes," she replied. "I've spent quite a bit of time thinking,
and speaking to Colonel Blacksmith . . ." She paused awkwardly. "I've
been apolitical all my life, but I had no idea of the abuses the Navy had
committed, both here and especially on the Inner and Outer Frontiers."
Another pause. "Captain Cole, I want to join the Teddy R."
"You're aware that
we're presently engaged in a military action against the Republic?"
"Yes."
"And what the odds are
against our succeeding?"
"I'm aware of
them."
"We have a pilot,"
said Cole. "He hasn't eaten or slept in maybe ten years, and he's as much
a part of the ship as the cannons or the bulkheads, so clearly we're not in the
market for another pilot. What other skills can you bring to us?"
"I can speak seven
alien languages that aren't programmed into the standard T-Pack," she
replied. "For example, I can speak to your Tolobite crewman in his own
tongue."
"You can speak Slick's
language?" asked Cole. "It's all clicks and growls."
"Yes."
"I'm impressed,"
he said. "Where the hell did you ever pick it up?"
"I was stranded on his
planet for three months some years ago." She paused again. "They're a
remarkable race, aren't they? And I like your name for him."
"Slick? Well, his
second skin—that's the way I think of his symbiote—just looks slick and oily. He says it's intelligent, but I've never seen
any evidence of it."
"The symbiotes can only
communicate with their Tolobite hosts, it's a fascinating relationship."
"Yeah, the symbiote can
let Slick maneuver in the cold of space without air for four and five hours at
a time. He does all our external repairs, though we haven't needed him
lately." He stared at her. "All right, Gentry, you're a member of the
crew, and you have run of the ship. I'll leave it to Jacovic to figure out what
duties to assign you, until we come to a race that our T-Packs aren't
programmed for."
"Thank you, sir."
"By the way, is Gentry
your first name or your last?"
"These days it's my
only name," she replied.
"Sounds like there's a
story there," said Cole. "Perhaps someday you'll share it." He
opened communications to the bridge. "This is Cole. From this moment on,
Gentry is a member in good standing of the crew of the Teddy R. Val, when Jacovic shows up to replace you, have him decide
what her duties will be. Sharon, permanently kill the force field around her
cabin." He turned to Gentry. "Okay, you're set— or you will be once
Commander Jacovic wakes up. The Officers' Lounge is off-limits to you—you
wouldn't like it anyway—and unless you have business in the engine room it
would be best to keep away from it. Other than that, you have run of the
ship."
"Will I be required to
wear a uniform, sir?" asked Gentry.
"Only if you want
to," he replied. "All we have are Navy uniforms from four years ago,
and that's the same Navy you've just agreed to go to war against."
"Then I'll wear my own
clothes, sir."
"Fine," said Cole.
Then: "I just thought of another skill you bring to the ship. Well,
knowledge rather than skill, actually."
"What is it, sir?"
she asked. "I'll be happy to help in any way I can."
"You've been piloting
cargo ships inside the Republic for the past four years," said Cole,
"while we've been on the Inner Frontier for that same period of time.
Things must have changed here and there-socially, economically, politically. I
want you to sit down with either Christine Mboya or Malcolm Briggs and help
them update our computers, since they're four years out of date."
"I'll be happy to,
sir," said Gentry, "if someone will point them out to me."
"Christine is the black
woman who's never five feet away from her computer. Briggs is—"
"I'll direct her," said Sharon's voice.
"Are either of them on
duty right now?" asked Cole.
"No," said Sharon.
He turned to Gentry.
"Okay, you might as well spend a few hours learning your way around the
ship."
"Thank you, sir,"
said Gentry, getting up and heading toward tin doorway.
"One last thing,"
said Cole.
"Yes?"
"Sooner or
later—probably sooner—you're going to run into a gorgeous redheaded giant with
a foul mouth and a certain lack of ship board etiquette," said Cole.
"Don't be put off by her. She's our Third Officer, and when the chips are
down, there's no one you'd rather have on your side."
As if to emphasize what he
had just said, Val's image suddenly appeared.
"Damn it, Cole!"
she said. "I don't care what you say, I'm blowing up the next world! Why
does that goddamned Russian get to have all the fun?"
The image vanished as
suddenly as it had appeared.
"Your Third
Officer?" asked Gentry.
"You guessed,"
replied Cole with a smile.
By the time they attacked
the fourth world they were making galactic news, and the government, try as it
would, couldn't keep it quiet. Experts were actually suggesting that the
totally nonexistent death toll numbered in the tens of millions.
Cole decided that when
Jacovic made his fourth appearance, he should not be standing alone and
isolated. He selected a few crew members he'd picked up on the Inner Frontier,
members who could not possibly be identified as being members of the Teddy R's crew, put them in dress
uniforms, and had them pretend to be going about their business in the
background as Jacovic spoke.
The news transmissions went
crazy. Were these humans turncoats working for the Teroni Federation? And it
wasn't long before some of them spotted certain things in the bridge's structure
that convinced them that it was a Navy ship, which immediately implied that
some Navy ships had gone over to the enemy, and that made every Navy ship a potential turncoat, to be avoided, or lied to, or
possibly even fired upon.
Cole knew what would come
next, and recorded a message that was inserted into a probe and aimed at the
Inner Frontier. Before it got there, someone had suggested that Jacovic was
speaking from the bridge of the Teddy R.
The probe then transmitted a holo of Cole, explaining that he wished his ship had been causing all the
damage, but as Susan Garcia and others could testify, the ship was almost a
century old, and it was now back in the Inner Frontier for reoutfitting. If
they didn't believe it, all they had to do was trace the signal back to its
source (which immediately self-destructed once the message was sent).
Within a week, Egan Wilkie's
approval rating was in single digits, the lowest in the Republic's nineteen
centuries of existence. He finally took to the galactic airwaves, admitted that
serious damage had been done to a small handful of outlying planets, and laid
the blame squarely at Admiral Garcia's feet. He demanded that she use all the
resources at her command to find and capture or kill the saboteurs. (In one
transmission, they were saboteurs; in another, insurrectionists; in a third,
genocidal maniacs.) He explained that he had been elected to run the
government; Susan Garcia was in charge of the Republic's physical safety, and
it was her job to put an end to these attacks.
"Did you hear the
latest?" asked Sharon as she burst into Cole's office.
"David's running a
whist tournament?" suggested Cole.
"Be serious," she
said. "I'm talking about the latest news."
"Probably not."
"I didn't think so, so
I had Luthor capture it. Wait just a second." She gave Luthor Chadwick a
brief order, then stepped back as Admiral Susan Garcia's face suddenly appeared
above Cole's desk.
"We will do everything
we can to apprehend these terrorists," she was saying, "but of course
Secretary Wilkie misspoke when he said we would use the full force of the
military to do so. He seems to have forgotten that we are in an all-out war
against the Teroni Federation, and if I pulled every ship—or even a goodly
number of them—back from that conflict to hunt for a small number of
terrorists, the Republic would find itself overrun in a week. I would suggest
that Secretary Wilkie stick to worrying about expenditures and taxation, and
leave the security of the Republic to the Navy."
Susan Garcia's face vanished,
and Sharon's sported a huge grin. "I think we've got them fighting with
each other!"
"Stupid," said
Cole. "She's the more competent of the two, but it's not a fight she can
win. Eventually he'll call for her resignation. If she agrees to it, she's finished;
and if she refuses, she's in open rebellion."
"If she does refuse, will the Navy side with him
or her?" asked Sharon.
"I've been out of touch
for four years," said Cole. "I just don't know."
"You've met her,"
said Sharon. "What was she like?"
"I disliked her
personally," said Cole. "She was smug, self-centered, and
abrasive—but she was a damned good admiral."
"Didn't she give you
your last Medal of Courage—the one you won after you were transferred to the Teddy R?"
"Very
reluctantly," said Cole with a rueful smile. "I was grateful that
medals are bonded to the uniforms these days. If we'd been back in the days
when they were affixed with pins, I honestly believe she would have stuck the
point into my chest."
"And of course you were
the personification of sweet reason," said Sharon, returning his smile.
"We didn't get along
very well," said Cole.
"Somehow I think that
you won't get along any better with Egan Wilkie."
"With any luck, he'll
be history in a few more weeks."
"He must still be
wondering what the hell's going on," she suggested.
"That's the purpose of
the exercise," agreed Cole. "By the way, how's our newest crew member
working out?"
"Gentry? There are no
aliens for her to speak to—well, none that aren't programmed into our
T-Packs—so I've got Bull Pampas teaching her the Gunnery section."
"She has no problem
with that?" asked Cole.
"Should she?"
He shrugged. "It's easy
to join a war when all you have to do is translate. It's a little different
when you're expected to help shoot the enemy."
"She seems fine."
"Good," he said.
"You know, I think there must be a few billion Gentrys out there—decent
folks who would be repelled by some of the things the Navy does in the
Republic's name, their names, and
just want to get from one day to the next without hurting anyone or being hurt
themselves." He paused and sighed. "That's a fair appraisal of human
motivation. I wonder why it's such a faulty description of human history?"
"Sir," said
Briggs's voice, "there's a Navy ship approaching. They're demanding we
identify ourselves."
"We couldn't stay
unseen forever," said Cole. "What class is the ship?"
"Class K, crew of
twenty."
"Weaponry?"
"Checking . . . Unless
it's been enhanced, this particular model carries two Level 4 burners and a
Level 3 thumper."
"Okay," said Cole.
"Give them a phony name and registration, and send Gentry to my office on
the double."
"Yes, sir."
A moment later Gentry
entered the office. "You sent for me, sir?" she asked.
"Yes," said Cole.
"I need a face that's never been identified with the Teddy R. In a minute we're going to be contacted by a ship that's
been trying to identify us. They'll think we might be the Teddy R, but they won't
know for sure. They'll give us some orders, maybe want us to hold our position
for boarding. You'll identify yourself as the Captain of the ship, claim that
Admiral Garcia has ordered you to hunt this sector for saboteurs, and if they
want to hinder us by making us stand still for a boarding, you will accede to
their demands but will report to Garcia that they were responsible for delaying
you. Do you think you can do that?"
"Just tell me what our
ship's name is," she said.
"Listen to Mr. Briggs's
reply," he said, right before it was piped throughout the ship. "The Brave Bull" said Cole,
making a face. "He could have used a little more imagination." Then,
on a private channel, he said, "Remember, Mr. Briggs—neither Sharon nor I
can be seen."
"I understand,
sir," replied Briggs.
"Brave
Bull, I must speak to
your senior officer," said a voice.
"I'll put you through,
sir," said Briggs, and suddenly the image of a man wearing a Captain's
insignia popped into view in the office.
"You are the
Captain?" he said.
"That's correct,"
answered Gentry.
"You're not in
uniform."
"When my ship is
traveling incognito under express orders from General Garcia, I'll dress any
way I please," she answered haughtily.
"We have no record of The Brave Bull, either by name or
registration number."
Gentry smiled
contemptuously. "What part of the word 'incognito' don't you
understand?"
As she became more pompous
and dismissive, the other captain became more and more defensive. Finally he
conceded that she had the right to be in this sector, and he would now retreat
and go about his business.
"Very nice," said
Cole after the connection had broken. "Are you sure you haven't had any
experience on the stage or in the holos?"
"None," said
Gentry, suddenly collapsing on a chair. "I was so nervous!"
"You didn't show
it," said Cole. "And you saved twenty lives."
"I did?" she said,
surprised. "Whose?"
"The other ship. They
had nothing that could breach our defenses. We have weapons that could have
vaporized them."
"I know it sounds
bloodthirsty," said Gentry, "but why didn't you fire on them? After all, they are the enemy."
"First, we don't know
if they were in contact with any other ships, and we'd much prefer that the
Navy think we're on the Inner Frontier."
"And second?" she
asked.
"They could have fired,
and didn't," said Cole. "They could have insisted on boarding us, and
didn't. They're decent men and women who are just trying to protect other
decent men and women. They're not the enemy, Gentry; they're working for the
enemy."
"But you'd have
destroyed them if you had to?"
"Without a second's
hesitation," he replied.
"I believe you,"
she said, studying his face. She got to her feet. "I suppose I'd better
get back to Gunnery."
When the door snapped shut
behind her, he turned to Sharon. "She did a good job. Better than Moyer or
one of the others we picked up on the Frontier would have done."
"I agree," said
Sharon.
"Keep an eye on
her," continued Cole. "She has qualities."
"I'm the one who told
you she did."
"And I'm agreeing with
you. I like her."
"Good," said
Sharon. "And if you touch her, I'll cut your hand off."
"What do I care?"
said Cole. "The Captain's not obligated to salute."
"I'm sure if I thought
about it, I'd find other things to cut off," she replied.
"You old broads get so
jealous."
"It's just to make you
old geezers feel good."
"Let's go to my
cabin," suggested Cole. "We can feel good a lot more comfortably down
there."
It was six hours later that
Val's voice woke them.
"I hope I'm
interrupting you at an awkward moment," she said.
"No," said Cole.
"You're waking us up before we indulge in another awkward moment."
"Perhaps you'd like to
celebrate first," said Val, and now her face appeared with a huge grin.
"All right," said
Cole. "I'm awake. Now what have you got to tell me?"
"You'll be interested
to know that as of twenty minutes ago, Egan Wilkie demanded Susan Garcia's
resignation."
"That fast?" said Cole.
"I've got a bigger
surprise for you," continued Val. "As of five minutes ago, she gave
it to him."
"You're kidding!"
said Sharon.
"It's working!"
laughed Val. "The fucking Republic is falling apart!"
Suddenly the ship shuddered.
"Well, all but the part
that just started shooting at us," she added.
"Who the hell is
it?" asked Cole, getting to his feet.
"Who else? The
Navy," answered Val.
"Not that little ship
that wanted to stop and board us earlier today?"
"No, they know better
than to go up against us. But your pal Gentry's answers must not have satisfied
them, because now they've got a Class L ship firing on us."
"Are there any other
ships with it?" asked Cole.
"Not so far," said
Val. "But then, they've only been shooting at us for maybe half a
minute."
"Have you fired
back?"
"Of course I fired
back!" she said irritably. "They're shooting at my ship!"
"Cut and run,"
said Cole.
"If we cut and run,
they'll know we have no business being here," said Val.
"If you fired on them,
they know it already," replied Cole. "Cut and run."
"Where to?"
"Away from them and
away from Deluros," said Cole. "No sense drawing even more of a
crowd."
"Are we ever going to engage with one of these
damned ships?" demanded Val.
"When the time is
right," said Cole. "Put me through to Pilot."
Wxakgini's face appeared,
his eyes still closed, his brain still attached to the navigational computer.
"Pilot, how far to the
nearest hydra-headed wormhole?" asked Cole.
"There are none in this
vicinity," replied Wxakgini, "but we are very close to the
Sondermeyer Wormhole, which will let us out six thousand light-years from here
in the neighborhood of the Tiznow Wormhole."
"And that one's
hydra-headed?"
"At one end,"
confirmed Wxakgini.
"Entrance or
exit?"
"With this approach,
the exit."
"How many heads has it
got?"
"Six," answered
the pilot. "But two are unstable."
"Take us there, as fast
as we can go."
There was a momentary pause,
and then a brief shudder. "We are now inside the Sondermeyer
Wormhole," announced Wxakgini.
"Good," said Cole.
"I assume the Navy ship that was firing on us will follow. Now, once we
emerge in normal space and we enter the Tiznow hole, can you navigate inside
it—which is to say, can you choose which of the six exits we emerge from?"
"No, I cannot,"
said Wxakgini. "The hole will choose which exit it wants us to use."
"It's not always the
same?"
"It is not."
"So if the Navy ship
enters in hot pursuit a minute or two later, it won't necessarily come out
through the same exit?"
"That is correct."
"How far apart are
these six exits?"
"On average, two
thousand light-years," answered Wxakgini.
"That'll do," said
Cole. "Val, I assume you were listening?"
"Yes."
"Don't fire a shot
until we come out of the Tiznow hole," continued Cole. "If they come
out the same exit, we're all through running and we'll take them on."
"You mean it?"
said Val excitedly.
"If we can't elude
them, I don't see that we have any choice but to stand our ground and
fight."
"We will emerge from
the Sondermeyer Wormhole in less than four minutes," said Wxakgini.
"Good," said Cole.
"One of these days we've really got to program the locations of all these
damned wormholes into the computer."
"They are already in
the computer," said Wxakgini.
"Oh?" said Cole,
surprised. "I never saw them there.
"That is because I am
in the computer, and I have encrypted them against detection."
"We're not the enemy,
Pilot."
"I never thought you
were," answered Wxakgini. "It is just a precaution."
"What if you die during combat?" demanded
Cole.
"Then the Theodore Roosevelt will be without
direction, and will be destroyed within seconds."
"He doesn't value
himself too highly, does he?" said Val sarcastically.
"He's right, Val,"
admitted Cole.
The ship shuddered again as
they returned to normal space.
"That was fast, even
for a wormhole," remarked Sharon.
"They don't travel
through normal space," said Cole. "If we could find the right one, we
could conceivably reach the Andromeda galaxy in twenty minutes instead of two
hundred years."
"One hundred
eighty-seven," Wxakgini corrected him.
"Who cares about
Andromeda?" said Meloctin, who was working one of the computers.
"There are some really outre galaxies out there."
Cole turned to Sharon.
"Do you get the feeling that my bedroom isn't as private as it was ten
minutes ago?"
"Go be a hero,"
she said. "I'm off to Security."
"I'm not going
anywhere," said Cole. "I've told Wxakgini where to take us, and if
anyone starts shooting, Val's better able to defend the ship than I am."
"You're not going back
to sleep while we're being chased through a wormhole by a Class L Navy
ship?" she said incredulously.
"No," he said.
"I'm awake now. But I think I'll take a shower and grab some
breakfast—maybe some coffee and a couple of those awful Danishes."
"While we're under
attack?"
"We're not under attack," he corrected
her. "We're under pursuit. And the odds are that when it's over, we're
going to be a few thousand light-years away from our pursuer."
"What if they sight us
between the wormholes and start shooting while you're in the shower?"
"That's why I have
competent subordinates," Cole replied. "The days of a captain
standing on the bridge for two or three days at a time, tying himself to the
wheel, are long gone."
"You just better hope
the days of hanging captured captains from the mainmast are just as long
gone."
"They got rid of all
the mainmasts last year," he said with a smile.
"Damn it, Wilson—I'm
being serious!"
"Leaving aside the fact
that you love me and Val probably isn't your type, be honest now: which of us
would you rather have protecting your ass when the chips are down?"
"You," said Sharon
without hesitation.
"I asked for an honest
answer, not an argumentative one," said Cole.
"That was an honest
answer. She may be better in combat, but she'll never look for alternatives to
killing or being killed, and you will."
"I'll consider that a
compliment to my intellect rather than my lack of courage."
"Your lack of
bloodthirstiness," she corrected him.
"Whatever," he
said, walking toward the washroom. "You going to scrub my back?"
"I really don't think
this is the time for it," she said. "I'll be in Security."
The ship shuddered again as
he was showering, and he realized they had entered the Tiznow Wormhole. He was
out, dried, shaved, dressed, and sitting in the mess hall when the ship
shuddered one last time.
"We're out," Val
informed him as he finished ordering his breakfast.
"Any sign of the Navy
ship?"
"No, but it was a
minute or two behind us."
"Keep me
informed," said Cole. "And while I'm thinking of it, have Pilot find
out just where the hell we are."
A moment later her face
appeared again.
"Who did you
kill?" asked Cole.
"No one," she
said, puzzled. "Why?"
"Because you had such a
happy smile on your face." He paused. "So do we know where we are,
and has the Navy ship shown up?"
The smile returned.
"Not yet, but I sure as hell hope it does."
"Oh?" said Cole.
"Why?"
"Because this head of
the wormhole spit us out on the Inner Frontier."
Cole entered the Officers'
Lounge to find David Copperfield and the Platinum Duke engaged in an argument
rather than a card game. It concerned the percentage of the break for the house
in the alien game of jabob, and the
argument made no sense since David had never played the game, but it didn't
stop him from arguing his position passionately.
"Is the ship
okay?" asked the Duke.
"Why shouldn't it
be?" responded Cole.
"It shook a couple of
times, even after we were beyond that Navy ship's firing range."
"We were entering and
leaving wormholes."
"Good," said the
Duke. "I thought for a minute it might be falling apart."
"You don't seem
exceptionally worried."
"You tell me what good
worrying will do when you're flung into space without a protective suit and
I'll worry my ass off," answered the Duke.
"I assume we're safely
away from that ship," said David. "Otherwise, you'd have told me
to"—he searched for the right word—"visit
my bulkhead."
"We're safe."
"Where are we?"
asked the little alien.
"The Inner
Frontier."
The Platinum Duke chuckled.
"So we're back where we started!"
"Not for long,"
said Cole, sitting down on a chair that looked more comfortable than it fell,
as did everything in the Lounge. "I'll give the Navy a few hours to get
discouraged and return home, and then we'll reenter the Republic, probably from
a new direction."
"Well, I think you'll
be doing it without me," said the Duke after a moment.
"Oh?"
"I came with you
because the Navy might be attacking Singapore Station, or at least hunting for
me on it. But enough time has passed now. Either they've gone, or at least
they're not looking for me anymore."
"You don't know
that," said David.
"I'm going stir-crazy
on this ship," replied the Duke. "Singapore Station is more than my
investment. It's my home, and as long as we're this close I'm going back."
"I can't chance sending
a shuttle to the station in case the Navy's still there," said Cole.
"But I can have one of the shuttles drop you off on a planet where you can
find transportation the rest of the way."
"That'll be fine,"
said the Duke.
"I think you're stupid,
going back to a station that may have a few hundred Navy men on it."
The Duke laughed. "Not
as crazy as a man who thinks he can overthrow the Republic with eight hundred
ships. In fact, do you still have that many?"
"Probably not,"
admitted Cole.
"Then why not come back
to the station with me?"
"Because sooner or
later the Navy will be back on the Inner Frontier, and when we try to drive
them out, they'll attack Singapore Station in force."
"But you can't
seriously think you have a chance to win."
"In a month's time
we've gotten rid of Susan Garcia, and we've seen to it that Egan Wilkie
couldn't be elected Chief Street Cleaner," Cole pointed out.
"Cosmetic," said
the Duke. "The Republic's still there."
"It's a little
different than it was yesterday," replied Cole. "I call that progress."
"I call it window
dressing," said the Duke.
"No one's stopping you
from going," said David Copperfield. "Why are you so bitter that we
won't come with you?"
"You'll come," said the Duke with
certainty. "At least they won't be shooting at you on the station."
"Englishmen are made of
sterner stuff," said David. "I'm not deserting my friend
Steerforth."
"You're not an Englishman," said the Duke.
"You're not any kind of a man at all."
"Tell him,
Steerforth," said David.
"If he says he's an
Englishman, that's good enough for me," said Cole.
"You're both
crazy!" said the Duke, getting to his feet. "I'm off to pack my gear.
Let me know when and where the shuttle can take me."
He left the room and David
turned to Cole.
"Thank you for vouching
for me, Steerforth," said the little alien.
"I can deny we went to
school together in nineteenth-century England," said Cole. "He can't."
"You are a true friend,
Steerforth," said David.
"You want to make your
true friend happy?" said Cole. "Start calling me by my real name."
"It is your real name," said David
adamantly. "I don't put my life on the line for anyone named Wilson or
Cole. That sacrifice is reserved only for classmates."
"Whatever you
say," replied Cole wearily.
"Still no sign of
'em," announced Val's voice. "I think the hole dumped em somewhere
else."
"Good," said Cole.
"How far are we from Singapore Station?"
"How the hell should I
know?"
"Ask Pilot."
"If I may make a
suggestion, Steerforth?" said David.
"What is it?"
"Once our position is
determined, have it transmitted here on a Tri-D cross section of the
Frontier."
"Why?"
"It's possible you may
have more friends than you know about," answered David. "Or at least
more supplies."
"Val, you heard
him."
"Coming up. Let me just
speak to Wxakgini."
Cole muttered an obscenity.
"How come everyone but me can pronounce his name?"
"Oh, names are
easy," said David.
"Thanks."
"It's quantum mechanics
that are difficult," continued the alien. "Why, it took me months to
totally master them."
"I may put you ashore
with the Duke," said Cole.
Before David could reply,
Val's voice announced, "Coming at you!"—and an instant later the
middle of the room was filled with a cross section of the Inner Frontier. A
tiny blinking light represented the position of the Teddy R.
David studied the image for
a moment, then moved his finger through it until it reached a large blue star.
"Computer, is this Horatius?"
"Yes," answered
the computer's voice.
David smiled and touched
another star. "Then this would be New Macademia?"
"Yes."
David withdrew his hand and
turned to Cole. "I know where we are now." He indicated a nearby
yellow star. "See this? It's Nyerere, and the fifth planet circling it is
Ngorongoro. I have a trading partner down there."
"A thief or a
fence?" asked Cole.
"It depends on the
day," replied David easily. "But he owes me a favor. I'm sure he'll
be willing to transport the Platinum Duke to Singapore Station."
Cole stared at him.
"David, you were one of the hardest-headed businessmen I ever met. No one
owes you a favor. You'd never let it go uncollected."
"Semantics," said
David.
"What?"
"A matter of
tenses."
"What the hell are you
talking about?"
"He will owe me a favor," explained
David.
"How do you figure
that?"
"You're still a Navy
ship. I'll simply tell him that I will misdirect you away from Ngorongoro if
he'll provide the Duke with transportation."
"If he's got half as
good a security system as yours was, he'll know we're the Teddy R."
"And by now everyone
knows that the Teddy R has teamed up
with the Octopus, who is a thief and a cutthroat."
"Why don't we just
offer him some money to transport the Duke, and save the threats for someone
who doesn't figure to be on our side from the outset?" said Cole.
"Well, yes," said
David. "I suppose we could do
that."
"See to it before the
shuttle leaves the ship."
"They taught you well
in school, Steerforth," said David. "Of course I was just testing
you."
"Of course."
"Well, that's that.
Shall we go have some kidney pie and Yorkshire pudding?"
"In our galley?" asked Cole with an
amused smile.
"All right,"
replied the alien. "Brisket of beef, then, with a good red wine."
"Later, perhaps."
"Fine," said
David, getting up and walking to the door. "I'll check my records and see
how to contact my friend."
"David, you didn't
bring any records."
"All right,"
admitted the alien. "I'm going to check and make sure he's still in
business. Not everyone has my survival instincts."
"I'll vouch for
that," said Cole.
"Thank you for the
compliment, Steerforth," said David, and left.
Sharon's image instantly
appeared. "Have you ever wondered what would have happened if you'd said
your name was Wilson Cole the first time you met?"
"He had nine bodyguards
with their guns trained on me," answered Cole. "There's every
likelihood that he'd have killed me."
"You really think
so?"
"He's not always on
speaking terms with the truth, but he was right about one thing: he has
excellent survival instincts. That's the only way he could have stayed in
business all those years. A lot of rivals tried to rob him or kill him, but
he's still around and most of them aren't."
"So now that we're out
here, what's our next step?"
"Well, Sokolov's still
got another abandoned planet to bomb." He paused thoughtfully. "I
think I'll have Christine find three or four more, and have each of them
transmit a prerecorded message just before we hit them."
"What kind of
message?"
"I think a panicky
voice saying that the government promised to protect them, and they're being
attacked right now, and where the hell is the Navy, and why won't the Republic
protect them? That kind of
message."
"And you'll make sure
thousands of worlds hear it."
"Wouldn't be much point
in just sending it to Deluros VIII, would it?" answered Cole.
"It's very effective,
Wilson, but we can't just bomb abandoned planets forever."
"We don't intend to.
But if we're going to throw the rascals out, as the saying goes, we want to
make sure most of the populace agrees with us. All we're really doing now is
shaping public opinion."
"So what else do you
plan to do?" asked Sharon.
"It depends on
conditions."
"What conditions."
"Various," said
Cole.
"You can be an
infuriating person to talk to!"
"So meet me in my cabin
later and I promise not to talk."
"Maybe I'll meet you in
your cabin, and unless you talk I'll cut off your supply of me."
"Whatever makes you
happy," said Cole. "That Gentry's a fine-looking woman. I don't
suppose you've noticed?"
"Men!" she
snapped, and cut the connection.
"Val," he said,
contacting the bridge, "who's working the main computer?"
"Idena."
"Let me speak to
her."
Idena Mueller's image
instantly appeared. "Yes, sir?"
"I want yon to put me
through to Lafferty," he said. "I'm pretty sure he's still in the
Cicero asteroid belt. You'll find the coordinates and codes in your
machine."
He waited almost two minutes,
and then Lafferty's face popped into view above his desk.
"How's it going?"
asked Cole.
"I was about to ask you
the same thing."
"We're making some
progress. Susan Garcia is no longer the Fleet Admiral."
"That's a step in the
right direction," said Lafferty. "Whoever replaces her won't be as
good. How'd you kill her?"
"We didn't."
"Who did—the
Teronis?"
"She's still
alive," said Cole. "She's just been relieved of command."
"Your doing?"
asked Lafferty.
"I'd like to think
so."
"One of my men who had
to leave the Cicero system tells me you're also destroying millions of
civilians."
"It's comforting to
know the news is spreading," said Cole.
"Did you really have to
kill that many?" asked Lafferty. "Our war is against the government
and the Navy."
"I give you my word
that we haven't killed a single civilian," said Cole.
Lafferty's image frowned.
"Then how—?"
"I'll tell you when I
see you. This is supposed to be a secure connection, but I'd prefer not to
trust it if I don't have to."
Lafferty nodded his head.
"Not a problem. And in the meantime, I'll accept your answer."
"So much for our progress," said Cole. "How
about yours?"
"We've got our hands on
one," answered Lafferty, making sure he wasn't explicit just in case the
connection wasn't secure.
"How did you get
it?"
Lafferty smiled. "I
think we'll also save that answer for
when we're face-to-face."
"How soon is it
ready?" asked Cole.
"It won't be here for
another day or two, and then it'll take at least four days to install it and
check it out."
"Six days," said
Cole. "Yeah, that'll be okay. What about ID?"
"We're blank on
that."
"Okay, we've got six
days to come up with something. You need anything else?"
"Not right at the
moment."
"We'll see you
then," said Cole, breaking the connection.
He got to his feet and began
pacing, considering his options. He felt too confined, so he went down to the
crew's quarters where he could walk with a little more freedom. Next he went up
to the bridge, paced around it briskly with an expression that said he didn't
want to be bothered, and finally he went to the mess hall, ordered some coffee,
and sat staring at it for ten minutes.
After another five minutes
had passed, David Copperfield came in.
"Someone told me you
were here, Steerforth," said the little alien, "and that you looked
troubled, so I thought I'd come and share my old friend's burdens."
"Hi, David," said
Cole. "I was just about to pay you a visit in your room."
"You were?"
Cole nodded. "Yes, I
was."
"What about?"
asked David.
"How would you like to
be the hero who helped win the war?" said Cole.
"You're teasing me,
right?" said the alien nervously.
"Not this time, my old
school chum."
"I'd hate it!"
said David."
"But you'll do it for
Crown and country."
"You're making my
stomach hurt."
"David, if there was
anyone else I could ask …"
"All right," said
David unhappily. "But there had better be a knighthood for me in
this."
"I'll speak to Queen
Victoria," said Cole.
"You damned well
better."
Cole sat down on a chair in
the Platinum Duke's cabin. The Duke perched on the edge of the bed, and David
Copperfield stood by the door, looking very unhappy.
"We'll go over this as
often as necessary," Cole was saying, "though there's nothing very
complicated about it."
"Hah!" said David bitterly.
"I have no idea what
you have in mind," said the Duke. "All I know is that a few hours ago
I was leaving alone and you were both going back into the Republic, and now
suddenly I'm part of a mission and David's coming with me."
"All the more reason to
listen instead of talk," said Cole.
"Why are we talking in
my cabin?" demanded the Duke. "Are you afraid there are saboteurs or
turncoats on board?"
"No. I just thought
David would be more comfortable if we didn't discuss this where everyone could
hear it."
"Why aren't we in his cabin, then?"
"You wouldn't like
it," said Cole. "All those doilies . . ."
"All right, talk,"
said the Duke.
"You'll be taking the
shuttle down to Ngorongoro. David will come with you. Braxite's coming along
too."
"Braxite?"
repeated the Duke. "Why?"
"Because as far as the
contact is concerned, you and David are going to stay on Singapore Station, and
someone has to bring the ship back to Ngorongoro."
"My friend may want one
of his own men to pilot it," said David.
"Try to talk him out of
it. And if you can't, Braxite goes anyway."
"Again, why?" said
the Duke.
"Because if David's
contact absolutely insists on his own pilot, someone's going to have to make
sure the ship stays at the station until David is done with his job and is
ready to return. If Braxite has to incapacitate the pilot so that David can
complete his mission, he will—and we'll pay the contact enough money when it's
done to make it all right."
"Okay, so David and I
are taken to Singapore Station. Now what?"
"Now you go back to
running the place, unless you feel the Navy may start using you for target
practice. If that's the case, then hide as best you can until David's ready to
come back, and come with him."
"I don't even know what
David's coming along for!" said the Duke in frustration. "How can I
help him if I don't know what he's going to do?"
"He's doing a little
infiltration and a little sabotage."
The Duke stared at David. "Him?" he said with a laugh.
"Him," said Cole.
"Me," said David,
his voice breaking.
"We need something, and
I think he has the best chance of getting it without immediate
repercussions."
"And what is
that?" asked the Duke.
"We need the name and
registration number of a Class M Navy ship. We can't make it up. It has to be
one that Deluros will recognize and acknowledge."
"You don't need
David," said the Duke. "I can get that easy enough. Every ship that's
docked has to use its name and registration."
"And you can check
it?"
"If I want to,"
said the Duke. "I almost never do, but the mechanism's there."
"Can anyone on the
station access this information?"
"No, only about half a
dozen employees—though if you just want the name, go out on the docking arms
and look. Navy ships are never shy about displaying their names in big bold
letters."
"So only six or seven
of you can access it," said Cole. "That implies you each have a code
or a password."
"Yes."
"Different ones?"
"Yes, of course."
"That's why you can't get the information for us.
You plan to stay on the station, and so do your employees. That puts you at
risk. Do all the paperwork required to make David one of your employees, and
give him his own password. Since he's leaving the station with the name and
registration, it doesn't matter if they know he took it."
"Seems awfully
complicated," muttered the Duke.
"I'm just trying to
protect your ass," said Cole. "After what we do to the ship, the
Navy's going to be out for blood. Now, if you'd rather it was your blood than
David's . . ."
"When you put it that
way . . ." said the Duke.
"I thought you might
see reason," replied Cole with a smile.
"Why are they going to
be out for blood?"
"Because David has
volunteered to disable their ship."
The Duke looked at David
again. "You?"
The little alien smiled a
sickly smile.
"So he's going to blow
up a ship right on my dock, and they're not going to blame me?"
"He's not going to blow
it up. That wouldn't serve our purpose."
"How can destroying a
Class M ship not help your cause?" asked the Duke.
"If it's destroyed, it
will be reported," said Cole, "and we don't want Deluros or anyone
else to know that the ship they see isn't what it's supposed to be."
The Duke's eyes widened.
"You're going to swipe the name and registration and give it to Lafferty's
ship!"
"That's right."
"It may do some damage,
but you can't bring the Republic down by attacking it with one misidentified
ship, not even a Class M."
"We don't intend
do," said Cole.
"Then what do you plan to do?"
"You'll stay healthier
a lot longer if you don't know," said Cole. "Anyway, David is going
to be instructed in the subtle art of sabotage by some of the best—Bujandi,
Moyer, and of course Val—and then he's going to find a way to disable the ship,
not permanently, but for three or four weeks. And he's going to make it look
like some kind of malfunction, nothing to report or get alarmed about."
"And then what?"
"And then he's going to
take the ship back to Ngorongoro, and we'll pick him up there in the shuttle
and bring him back to the Teddy R."
"And you really think
he'll do it?"
Cole stood up, walked over
to David, and placed a hand on the little alien's shoulder. "He risked his
life for me once before, in your casino. Now he'll be risking it for a cause
that's far more important than any single life."
"Including his
own," said the Duke.
"Don't say that!" snapped David.
"So when do we go down
to Ngorongoro?"
"Tomorrow,"
answered Cole. "David's still got to be instructed in the art of disabling
a ship. And you could save a little time if you decide on a password with him
on your way down to Ngorongoro."
"I've got a
question," said the Duke.
"What is it?"
"What if there aren't
any Class M ships docked at Singapore Station?"
"You're not going to
like the answer," said Cole.
"Oh?" said the
Duke apprehensively. "What is the
answer?"
"You do whatever it
takes to lure a Class M to the station."
Cole paced the ship like a
caged animal. He was in a foul mood. When he spoke, he growled. When he slept,
which was rarely, he awoke every hour. When he ate, he left half his food on
the plate. He snapped at Jacovic, which he hadn't done since the Teroni had joined
his crew. He actually had Christine in tears. Nothing intimidated Val, but she
left him completely alone.
When he wasn't stalking
through the ship he stayed in his office. Finally, after four days, Sharon went
down to the office and entered it.
"Any word?" asked
Cole anxiously.
"No, Wilson," she
said. "And if there was, it would come to you from the bridge."
"I know," he said.
"How long are you going
to be like this?"
"Until I find out
what's happening on the station."
"You don't expect to
hear for another two days," she said.
"I know."
"Then don't you think
it's time you stopped behaving like this?"
"Damn it, Sharon—I
shamed him into it! The little bastard's no more fit for sabotage that I'm fit
to box or wrestle with Bull or Val. I had no business asking him to do
it."
"Why don't you wait and
see what happens before you mourn him?"
"There was no one else
I could send," said Cole. "He's the only member of his race anyone's
ever seen, and if they've been there before they know he spent time at the
station. He's not at war with anyone, he's not allied with the Teronis, and if
he's with the Duke and we're somewhere else, he's not part of the Teddy R."
"I know. That's why he
was the proper choice."
Cole shook his head.
"He was shaking like a leaf when I walked him down to the shuttle."
"But he went," she
noted. "And if he hadn't been willing to go to Singapore Station, someone
on Ngorongoro would have contacted us and told us to come and get him."
"Do you know how well
protected a Class M ship is?" said Cole. "Even Four Eyes would have
said to forget it, and he was the best damned saboteur I ever knew."
"I don't know exactly
what you have in mind, but I know you need that ID and registration, and I know
you feel that the ship has to be incapacitated for a few weeks. This is war,
and in war you sometimes have to take chances when all the odds are against
it."
"I know all that,"
said Cole. "It doesn't make me feel any better. I took the most cowardly
being I know, stuck him down in the middle of a war he has no part of, and sent
him off on an impossible mission."
"He risked his life for
you once before, when a would-be warlord had you at his mercy."
"That was
different."
"How?"
"That was his decision," said Cole.
"This was mine."
Sharon grimaced in
frustration. "You're going to be like this until you hear something,
aren't you?"
"Probably."
"Then do yourself and
your ship a big favor."
"What is it?"
"Stay in this damned
office and don't talk to anyone," she said. "That way you won't have
to spend all next week apologizing."
He stared at her and made no
reply. She waited for a moment, then turned on her heel and left.
Cole took her advice. He no
longer paced the ship. He had his meals delivered to his office, primarily so
he could toss what he didn't want into the trash atomizer without anyone
looking at him reproachfully or telling him to eat more. After two more days he
decided that David had failed, the Duke hadn't had the courage to notify him,
and he was no closer to carrying off his plan than he'd been a month ago.
He was just about to go down
to the shuttle bay and take it to Ngorongoro where he would rent or buy a ship,
find some way to disguise himself, and do what he felt he should have done in
the first place, when Jacovic's voice broke the silence of his office:
"Captain Cole to the
bridge, please."
"What's up?" he
asked, leaving the office and heading to the airlift.
Sharon's voice broke in.
"We have a hero who would like to report personally to you."
Cole ran the last few steps
to the airlift, took it up to the bridge, and a moment later was confronting
David Copperfield—who looked incredibly proud of himself and very little the
worse for wear—in the flesh.
"I did it!" said
the little alien. "Me, Steerforth! I did it!"
"I always knew you
could," lied Cole. "Tell me about it."
"I had the name and the
registration within three hours of arriving on the station," said David.
"It was as easy as the Platinum Duke said it would be."
"And the rest?"
"I couldn't gain access
to the ship," answered David. "It was too heavily guarded, so I
wasn't able to do any of the things I learned from Mr. Moyer or Bujandi or
Val." He paused. "But I'd had a feeling I might not be able to get
onto the ship, so before I left the Teddy
R I had Mr. Briggs prepare an undetectable virus that should eat away the
memory of the navigational computer. He showed me how to transmit it in such a
way that the Bdxeni pilot wouldn't be aware of it for at least three days. It
also destroys just enough of the hardware so that the computer can't receive a transmission
of the missing memory. This particular hardware will take at least two weeks to
replace, including delivery time, and since it doesn't come from the same
source as the computer code and memory, it will have to be installed before the
memory can be transmitted."
Cole turned to Briggs.
"You never told me about this."
"You never asked,
sir," answered Briggs. "Besides, I assumed you had approved it."
"I wish I'd thought of
it," admitted Cole.
"What do you want done
with the ship's name and registration?" asked David, who clearly enjoyed
being the center of admiring attention.
"Give them to Mr.
Briggs, who will transmit them to Mr. Lafferty. How's the Duke doing?"
"He announced two full
days of free drinks and meals for the Navy, and they're all friends
again," answered David.
Cole looked at the little
alien with an almost fatherly pride. "You did well, David."
"Thank you,
Steerforth."
"Even Mr. Creakle would
agree, however reluctantly."
David's chest puffed out.
"Who is Mr.
Creakle?" asked Sharon.
"Our old
headmaster," said Cole as David grinned happily.
Val came onto the bridge.
"I heard you were back," she said to David. "Get the job
done?"
"Yes," answered
the alien.
"Good," she said,
then turned to Cole. "So we're ready for the next phase of the war?"
"Absolutely," said
Cole.
"When do we
attack?" she asked.
"We don't attack."
She frowned. "What do we do?"
"Surrender,"
answered Cole.
The Teddy R entered the Cicero system and made its way to what the crew
had dubbed Lafferty's Asteroid. It was easy enough to find. Contrary to the
belief that Man had held when he was still Earthbound that asteroid belts were
like incredibly busy meteor showers, asteroids were generally so far apart that
seeing a handful, spread out over thousands of miles, broke the boredom of the
approach.
Cole chose the Kermit, as usual, and selected a landing
party consisting of himself, Jacovic, Idena Mueller, Bull Pampas, Jaxtaboxl,
and Gentry. A few minutes later they were standing in front of the Class M
ship.
"Looks good, doesn't
it?" said Lafferty, who greeted them in his protective space suit.
"Looks new," said
Cole. "I think I'd better have the Platinum Duke send me some holos of the
ship whose identity we're borrowing, and we'll have Slick match any markings
it's got."
"Markings?"
repeated Lafferty. "You mean name and numbers?"
Cole shook his head.
"We already know those. But the fact that a Class M ship is still
functional doesn't mean it hasn't seen some serious action, either against the
Teronis or elsewhere, and it could be showing the scars of battle, or just
simple collisions with some minor space debris. If so, I want Slick to
duplicate them."
"What kind of weaponry
does it carry?" asked Gentry, stepping forward.
"Standard," said
Lafferty. "Eighteen cannons, ten of them Level 5—half pulse, half laser.
The wild thing is that it even has a pair of screechers."
"That doesn't make any
sense," said Cole. "You can't use sonic weapons in space where there
aren't enough molecules to vibrate, and a ship like this never enters a
planetary atmosphere."
"Maybe they know
something we don't know," said Jacovic. "The fact that I've never
seen a sonic cannon on a starship, and neither have you, doesn't mean they
can't carry them. Maybe there's some innovation that lets the sound waves go
directly to the enemy ship and not dissipate in space."
"Maybe," said
Cole. "It makes no difference, though. If we have to fire any of this weaponry, we're dead meat. I
just want to make sure it's carrying what it's supposed to be carrying if
someone checks it out."
"Want to inspect the
inside?" asked Lafferty.
"That's what we're here
for."
Lafferty led them to the
ramp that lifted them and drew them to the main hatch, and a moment later they
were inside the ship.
"Wow!" said Idena.
"I knew these things were big, but I had no idea!"
"Ceiling's got to be
nine or ten feet high," noted Pampas. "You'd never feel trapped or
claustrophobic in this baby."
"How many does it
hold?" asked Jaxtaboxl.
"I can answer
that," said Jacovic. "According to our information, a Class M
starship holds a crew of ninety-six."
"Not this one,"
said Lafferty. "Oh, it's got room enough to carry a couple of hundred, but
as far as I can tell, there are only forty-two duty stations. You wouldn't
believe how many functions have been mechanized."
"Just tell me that it's
got a powerful tractor beam," said Cole.
"Of course,"
answered Lafferty. "But so did the older models." He smiled suddenly.
"Maybe not the antiques like your
ship—you know, the ones that still ran on steam or fossil fuels."
"Let's see the rest of
it," said Cole, ignoring the older man's comment.
Lafferty led them through
the Gunnery section, which sported a truly impressive array of cannons and
other weaponry, then up to the bridge.
"Have you ever seen a
bridge like this?" asked Pampas in awestruck tones.
"Admiral Garcia had a
bigger one on her flagship," said Cole. "Still, it's
impressive." He walked over to the pilot's hanging ham-mock-chair.
"Same setup?" he asked. "The pilot sits up there and ties in to
the navigational computer?"
"Right," said
Lafferty. "Assuming he's a Bdxeni, of course—and these days just about all
of them are."
"Well, let's see how
the communication system works." He activated it. "David, are you
there?"
"Right here,
Steerforth," said David Copperfield, his image suddenly appearing.
"Let me speak to Val
for a minute."
The redhead instantly
appeared. "What do you want?"
"Take a shuttle, or
transfer to one of the small ships," said Cole, "go out a few hundred
miles, and see if you can intercept the transmissions David and I are sending
to each other."
"On my way," she
said, and vanished. "I'll be in the Alice."
"Okay, David,"
said Cole, "just talk for a few minutes until we find out how secure this
connection is."
"Certainly," said
the little alien, who immediately fell silent.
"David, you have to
keep talking," explained Cole. "She can't try to intercept a message
or a conversation if you remain quiet."
"I'm thinking,"
said David. "But nothing's coming."
"Tell me the details of
your adventure at Singapore Station," said Cole.
"I already did."
"Tell me again."
"I'm uncomfortable in
the spotlight," said David.
"You'll be a lot more
uncomfortable in the sights of a Level 5 thumper that homed in on you because
we didn't know it was able to capture our transmission."
Suddenly David began talking
a blue streak. Finally Cole told him he'd spoken long enough, and sent a
message to the Alice. "Did you
pick up any of it?"
"No," answered
Val. "I couldn't even tell that you were signaling to each other."
"Fine," said Cole.
"You can go back to the ship now."
He broke the connections,
first to Val, then to David. "All right," he said to Lafferty,
"it looks like the codes work." He looked around once more. "I
hope to hell this galley is better than the Teddy
R's."
"You ever see a Navy
galley with good food?" asked Lafferty with a grin.
"No," admitted
Cole. "Not on any ship I've ever been on. But allow me to hope."
"Hope all you
want," replied Lafferty. "But given its defenses, you're more likely
to die of hunger or food poisoning aboard the Sabine Nova than of enemy fire."
"That's its name—the Sabine Nova?"
"Commanded by Captain
Tucker Marchand," said Lafferty, surprised. "Didn't you know
that?"
"I told David to
transmit the information to you," answered Cole. "I figured I'd find
out when I got to the Cicero system."
"We programmed in its
registration numbers and its Navy code, and your Mr. Briggs has told us how to
program all of your private codes, so it's ready to go."
"Not quite ready,"
Cole corrected him. "I still want the Duke to transmit some holos to us,
and then I want Slick to match any marks, scars, anything that the real Sabine
Nova has."
"Who is this Slick you
keep referring to?"
"A Tolobite."
"Damn!" said
Lafferty. "I wish we had one! It would have made working on the ship's
exterior a lot easier."
Cole turned to the crew that
had come over with him. "I want you to go through the ship, learn where
everything is, and make sure it's all in working order."
"Including the
weaponry?" asked Pampas.
"Everything but the weaponry," answered Cole.
"Then, when you're done, go back and send over six more crew members, and
keep rotating six new ones every time the previous batch returns. I want every
member of the Teddy R to know the inside of this ship by
this time tomorrow." He turned to Jacovic. "Contact the Duke and tell
him about the holos I want."
Jacovic nodded and began
walking through the ship, as did the others.
"I don't
understand," said Lafferty. "You want to make sure the climate
control and the toilets and the airlift are working, but you don't care about
the weapon systems?"
"That's right."
"Why not?"
"Because if we have to
fire a shot, we're in deep trouble," answered Cole.
Lafferty frowned. "Just
how far into the Republic do you plan to go?"
"All the way to Deluros."
"Without firing a
shot?"
"Correct."
"You're crazy, you know
that?" said Lafferty.
"Perhaps," said
Cole easily.
"Definitely,"
insisted Lafferty.
Cole smiled. "Did you
ever hear the story of the Trojan Horse?"
"Now here's the way
it's going to work," said Cole, speaking to the entire ship through the
communications system. "We're going to leave a ghost crew on the Teddy R, just enough so if it becomes
necessary they can prove that the ship can defend itself. I need six
volunteers, preferably human since the Navy knows that was the bulk of our
crew. I'll want one ranking officer to remain on board in case any command
decisions are required, and it can't be Commander Jacovic since there are no
Teronis in the Navy."
He paused, giving them time
to digest what he was saying. "Pilot is going to be transferred to the Sabine Nova, and will tie in to its
computer, just as he's tied in here. Anyone who's joined us since the mutiny
four years ago will go to the Sabine Nova without question; I don't want
anybody on board the Teddy R that the Navy hasn't got a record
of."
"I'll stay on board the
Teddy R, sir," said Christine.
"If Jacovic has to leave, then it comes down to Val and myself, and if
you're going to face any danger, she'll be more use to you than I would
be."
"Thank you, Lieutenant
Mboya," said Cole. "And of course your logic is impeccable."
"Also," added
Christine, "she joined us after we reached the Inner Frontier, so I'm
really the only choice."
"I've gotten so used to
her that I forgot," Cole admitted. "All right," he continued.
"As for those who are transferring ships, you all know what the plan is.
The only way we can approach Deluros is if we pose as the ship that has finally
captured the Teddy R, and a Class M
ship is the most likely to have done so. The Sabine Nova will be
towing the Teddy R, and if we're lucky we'll tow it all the way to Deluros VIII
itself. You can be sure Secretary Wilkie and his cronies are going to want to
have a show trial and brag about how they nailed us, and I'm betting they'll
feel they can control things better on Deluros than some other world.
Therefore, I am ordering all personnel on both ships not to fire a shot except
on my direct orders. Even a Class M ship like the Sabine Nova can't get
within a thousand light-years of Deluros if the Navy decides to stop it.
Christine, even if some local system sends out a few ships to take a few
potshots at the Teddy R, you can't fire back."
"Can we activate our
defenses?" she asked.
He gave it a moment's
thought. "I don't see why not," he said. "The fact that the Sabine Nova didn't blow you apart means
that your defenses are working. And of course the Captain of the Sabine Nova would never begin towing the Teddy R until he'd
deactivated all its weapons systems. In fact, he'll probably want the defenses activated; he can't
present the government with the Teddy R
as a trophy if someone blows it away. So yes, you can protect yourself—but you
can't fire back, not a single shot. And I don't want you communicating with
anyone except the Sabine Nova, and only on channels and in codes
that won't show up on the most sophisticated Navy surveillance computers."
"Understood, sir."
"All right," said
Cole. "I want the volunteers who are remaining on the Teddy R to report to Jacovic. If there are more than six or seven,
he'll choose who stays and who doesn't. The rest of you, pack all essential
gear and head down to the shuttle bay, where we'll start transferring you to
the Sabine Nova. Pilot's going to put the Teddy
R in orbit. Then we'll take him down
to the Sabine Nova, and when everyone's aboard, including any of Lafferty s men
who want to come along, we'll take off and start towing the Teddy R to Deluros. It won't be long before we're spotted by some Navy
ship or other. We'll simply report that we've captured the Teddy R and are taking
our prize to Deluros."
"What if they order us
to stop?" asked Jaxtaboxl.
"We'll explain, with
all due courtesy, that we will only respond to that order if it comes from
Fleet Admiral Garcia," said Cole. "We've been chasing the Teddy R on the Inner Frontier, we don't
know she's been replaced, and we won't believe it if we're told."
"I have a question,
sir," said Gentry.
"You always ask
intelligent ones," replied Cole. "What is it this time?"
"If word gets out that
the Sabine Nova captured the Theodore Roosevelt, I would imagine that the real Sabine Nova will hear of
it shortly. What's to stop them from warning the Navy what's happened? Even if
the Navy doesn't believe them, they're nonetheless going to have to board and
inspect us before we get near Deluros."
"Very good
question," said Cole. "Mr. Briggs, would you like to answer it?"
"Part of the virus we
introduced into the Sabine Nova's computer
destroyed its ability to receive any communications after two Standard days,"
replied Briggs. "This allowed them to report their problem and to order
replacement parts, but right now they can neither send nor receive any
communications, and we've also contacted the Platinum Duke and told him to shut
down his public communications systems until he receives another coded message
telling him to activate them again."
"Does that answer your
question?" said Cole.
"Yes, sir, it
does," replied Gentry.
"Are there any other
questions?" asked Cole. He waited a moment. "No? Okay, start gathering
your gear and heading down to the shuttles."
He looked for Pampas and
finally spotted him. "Bull, get the medic and help him unhook Pilot, then
carry him to the shuttle, cart him into the Sabine
Nova, and stick with him until the medic attaches him."
"Carry him, sir?"
asked Pampas.
"Bull, he hasn't been
out of that sling in fifteen or twenty years. His muscles have got to have
atrophied."
"Yes, sir."
"All right," said
Cole. "Let's get moving."
The crew dispersed and went
to their cabins, and Cole caught Sharon's eye.
"What is it?" she
asked, approaching him.
"Are you ready to stop
pretending we sleep in separate cabins?"
"Well, it's hardly a
secret," she said with a smile.
"Okay. When you get
down to the Sabine Nova, hunt up the
captain's suite and move your stuff in."
"Suite?" she repeated.
"This is a Class M
ship," he replied.
"A real suite!"
she repeated happily. "If we have a fight and break up, I'm keeping
it."
"Don't be such an
optimist," said Cole. "We're not breaking up. We're much more likely
to be hanged for treason."
"They don't hang people
anymore," said Sharon.
"They don't?" said
Cole in mock surprise. "Hell, if I'd known that, I'd have mutinied ten
years sooner."
The Sabine Nova had been towing the Teddy
R for more than a Standard day when a
Navy ship finally spotted it.
"Please identify
yourself," demanded the ship, a Class L.
"Just voice," Cole
ordered Briggs. "No holo."
"Yes, sir."
"This is the Sabine Nova," answered Cole,
"three hundred and four days out of Spica VI, registration number
HVT678939QW2, Tucker Marchand commanding, destination Deluros VIII."
"And your companion
ship?"
"It is not a
companion," answered Cole. "It's a trophy that we're presenting to
Secretary Egan Wilkie."
"A trophy?" said
the voice at the other end. "Explain yourself, please."
"The ship we are towing
is the Theodore Roosevelt."
"That's Wilson Cole's
ship?" said the voice excitedly. "You really got him?"
"We really got
him," answered Cole.
The voice gave out a holler
of triumph. "Good for you, Sabine
Nova! We're going to ride shotgun for you until you've passed through our
sector."
"We'd be proud to have
you," said Cole, ending the transmission.
"Proud?" said Val
contemptuously.
"What do you think he'd
have done if we told him to leave us alone?" asked Cole,
"We could have blown
him to bits," she said. "In fact, we still can. He's a bigger target
now."
"We're not on the
Frontier or the outskirts of the Republic any longer, Val," said Cole.
"He's got to be in constant contact with other ships."
And no sooner had he said it
than two more ships, each on its normal patrol route, contacted him and
volunteered to help escort him to Deluros.
"We're going to be
quite a parade if we keep picking up help in each sector," remarked Sharon
after Cole had thanked them for their offer.
"Just as well,"
replied Cole. "Then no outraged patriots will take any potshots at the Teddy R."
Within three hours Briggs
found a galaxy-wide newscast concerning the daring capture of the notorious
Wilson Cole and his rebel ship. One politician after another made
self-congratulatory speeches, and at least three of them suggested that when
the whole truth came out it would show that Cole was in the employ of the
Teroni Federation.
"They may trample each
other getting to the microphone to take credit for it," remarked Sharon as
she and Cole took dinner in the sitting room of their suite. "I never
thought much of our government, but suddenly I think even less of it."
"At least Susan
Garcia's not coming out of retirement to claim that she planned our capture," said Cole with a smile.
"What are we going to
do when we finally get there?" asked Sharon. "The media is going to
want to take endless holos of the triumphant crew."
"Then I guess we'll let
them."
She stared at him curiously.
"Are you going to tell me what you have in mind?"
"It would be more fun
if you seduced it out of me," he answered. "But what the hell. They
want a triumphant crew? We'll give them one. We have eleven crew members, like
Moyer and Gentry, who never served on the Teddy
R when it was in the Navy, men and aliens we picked up on the Inner
Frontier . . . and Lafferty's got over a dozen or more. We'll make sure they're
wearing some of our old Navy uniforms—I'll give one of mine to Lafferty; we'll
have to take it in a bit, but I trust him to come up with the right answers—and
they can meet the press."
"Including Val?"
asked Sharon.
Cole shook his head. "I
need her with me." Suddenly he smiled. "Besides, can you imagine the
answers she'd give to their questions?"
"I assume from the way
you worded that, you're planning on leaving the ship?"
"That shouldn't come as
a surprise," he said.
"You and Val
alone?"
"No, I'll need more
than that. It's a shame I can't take Jacovic, but we can't let a Teroni show
his face on Deluros."
"Am I coming?" she
asked.
"I haven't decided
yet," he told her.
"I'd like to."
"I know."
"You wouldn't say no
just to protect me?" she persisted.
"I'm taking those I
think best fit the mission," he said. "If it fails, we're all dead
anyway."
Sharon opened a line to the bridge.
"Commander Jacovic, what's our ETA on Deluros VIII?"
"If we use the Kominsky
Wormhole and no one hinders us along the way, Wxakgini says we will arrive in
forty-three Standard hours," answered the Teroni.
"That fast!" she
said after breaking the connection. "The most heavily guarded planet in
the galaxy, probably in the history of the galaxy, and we're actually going to
do it, aren't we, Wilson?"
"We're actually going
to make it to Deluros," he replied. "But that was always the easy
part."
"Easy?" she
repeated incredulously.
He nodded his head.
"Compared to what comes next."
They docked in one of the
six thousand orbiting hangars under the watchful eyes of the local authorities,
the system authorities, the sector authorities, the Navy, and the media.
Cole was standing just
outside Engineering, his hands in glowing manacles.
"You're sure?" he
said.
"Absolutely," said
Mustapha Odom. "Try them."
Cole flexed his muscles and
tried to pull his hands apart. At first he thought the experiment was a failure,
but then he felt the manacles break apart, and a moment later they shattered
and the pieces fell off his wrists.
"I told you," said Odom, annoyed that Cole hadn't taken his word
for it.
"All right," said
Cole. "I'm going to be sending some of the crew down here. I want those
manacles on each of them."
"I made up a dozen
pair, just as you told me."
"I know. But we won't
need that many."
Odom frowned. "Then
why—?"
"Because the others may
also be a little dubious about being able to break out of them when the time
comes," replied Cole. "And if each of them needs to try them out, so
be it. I don't want any of them having doubts when the chips are down."
"Send your crew,"
said Odom. "I'm ready for them."
"Soon," promised
Cole, walking to the airlift.
A moment later he was on the
bridge. "Val, get down to Engineering, and don't fight whatever Mr. Odom
does to you. He'll explain it all." He looked around. "You too,
Braxite. You're our only Molarian, and since most of the Men we're going to see
today can't tell one Molarian from another, you can pass for Four Eyes."
"That will be an
honor," said Braxite, accompanying Val to the airlift.
"Put me on the ship's
intercom," Cole told Jacovic.
"Done."
"Mr. Pampas, get down
to Engineering, on the double. Mr. Sokolov, you too. Right now." He
considered the final name for a long minute, then shrugged. "Colonel
Blacksmith, report to Engineering immediately."
He joined them a moment
later, waiting until the other five were manacled, then had Odom affix another
set to his wrists.
"You five, down to the
shuttle bay. That's the way we'll leave the ship. Remember, you are prisoners,
and no one breaks out of his manacles until I do."
He waited until they'd gone,
then went back on the intercom. "Mr. Lafferty, take the five members of
your crew that you've decided upon and report to the shuttle bay. Gentry and
Mr. Chadwick, you too."
He went down to the shuttle
bay and waited until they were all assembled.
"Mr. Lafferty, from
this moment on you are Captain Marchand. Right this second they want to see who
and what's on the Teddy R, but the
second they see my face, and assume that Braxite is Four Eyes, they'll turn
their entire attention on us. Be a little arrogant, explain that you know how
big the reward is, and that you're not sharing it with anyone else. They've
already announced that there will be a special shuttle to take us down to the
Secretary's Mansion. Insist that no one from that shuttle except you, your
crew, and your prisoners enters the Secretary's Mansion, and once we're there,
demand that we be marched directly to Wilkie's office. I can't imagine he isn't
there, ready to take his bows to the press."
"What if some of his
security team wants to come with us?" asked Lafferty.
"I'm sure they will,
and I'm sure they won't permit you to enter the office without at least some of
them in attendance."
"So . . . ?"
"So let them accompany
you, and the second the door's closed try to get the drop on them. I promise we
won't be a hindrance." He looked at his team. "Are we ready?"
There were a few nods and
grunts of assent.
"Okay. Open the
hatch."
Lafferty walked out onto the
enclosed dock first, tall and dignified in one of Cole's old uniforms. He
gruffly demanded that the press keep their distance, and then he had Luthor
Chadwick, burner in hand, grab Cole's arm with his free hand and yank him
forward until he was a few feet clear of the shuttle.
Suddenly there was an
excited buzzing among the media.
"It's
him! It's really him!"
"It's
Wilson Cole!"
"It's
Cole and that Molarian, Forrice/"
"It's
really Wilson Cole! We finally caught the bastard!"
"Who's
the giantess—the one with the red hair?"
A patrol of local gendarmes
and a squad of Navy Special Police were waiting for them. The leader of the
Navy group approached Lafferty and saluted.
"Captain
Marchand?"
"That's right,"
said Lafferty, returning a lazy salute. "And I believe you know this
gentleman?"
"I've been studying his
poster for four years," replied the Navy man. "How did you finally
capture him?"
"It's a long
story," said Lafferty. "I'll be happy to tell it to you over a beer
or two, but first I want to deliver Mr. Cole and his cohorts so I can collect
my reward."
"That's Captain Cole," snapped Cole.
"You lost that title
when you committed mutiny," said Lafferty harshly. "Now shut up and
follow these men." He nodded to the Navy man, who turned and began leading
them to another shuttle, one with the Secretary's seal on it.
The flight down to Deluros
VIII was both fast and uneventful. Each of the six prisoners spent the ten
minutes staring down the barrel of a burner or a screecher. Not a word was
spoken, and as quickly as they landed they were ushered out.
Cole looked around. He was
on a rooftop. He'd never been on the roof of this particular building before,
but Deluros VIII was not unknown to him. It was a huge planet, far larger than
Earth, but through some fluke of position and rotation, it possessed an almost
identical gravity and atmosphere. It had enough room for endless expansion that
Man had all but abandoned Earth and moved the seat of government here, to the
larger and more convenient location. The planet was covered by a single city,
which sprawled hundreds of miles in every direction, covering deserts,
burrowing through mountain chains, submerging beneath the oceans, totally
interconnected, a proper capital world for the galaxy's dominant race.
"Where are we?"
asked Lafferty, who had never been on Deluros VIII before.
"We're on the roof of
the Knight's Castle," answered the leader of the Navy squad.
Lafferty frowned. "I
don't believe I've heard of it before."
"It's the media's name
for the Secretary's Mansion," was the reply. "Follow me,
please."
The man led them to a raised
structure that had a large door in it. It sensed their approach and opened.
"Some security!"
snorted Lafferty, trying to appear impatient and officious, and doing a
reasonably good job of it.
"It read my retina,
bone structure, and ID chip"—the Navy man placed a finger to the side of
his neck, where a small scar indicated the chip was embedded—"or it wouldn't
have opened."
Lafferty nodded sagely and
tried not to look as silly as he felt.
"This way, sir."
The Navy man entered the
enclosure and waited on a cushion of air until Lafferty, Cole, two of
Lafferty's men, and four police officers were inside the structure. They then
descended four levels, stepped off, and waited while the next batch of
prisoners and guards were brought down. After the third trip they were all
assembled once again, and the Navy man led them down the brilliantly lighted
corridor, past a holo of Johnny Ramsey, who was universally considered to be
the greatest of all the Republic's Secretaries, and finally came to a door that
had four armed, uniformed Security men on each side of it.
"Secretary Wilkie's
office," he announced.
"Just how big is the
damned thing?" demanded Lafferty.
"Pretty big."
"That's no answer.
These are dangerous men, even manacled as they are. I'm not going to have them
cause any trouble in a crowd and then make a break for it—or, worse still, go
for the Secretary."
"You can't enter alone,
sir," said one of the Security men. "By your own admission, these are
dangerous men, and there are only eight of you."
"We caught the bastard,
which is something no one else in the damned Republic could do for four
years," said Lafferty, feigning anger. "We can take care of
him."
"It's against the
Secretary's own rule for anyone to enter the office until some of us also
enter."
"All right," said
Lafferty, frowning as if considering his options. "Choose some of your men
and we'll accept it." He turned to the Navy man. "You and your team
got us here safely from the shuttle, but we are
here now, and in these gentlemen's hands. Thank you for your service."
"Will you be coming
back, sir?"
"Eventually. We left a
skeleton crew on the Theodore Roosevelt,
just to make sure it's still functioning. They're under guard, of course, and
now that we're here we'll unload them and turn them over to whoever will be in
charge of them." He paused and pugnaciously jutted his chin forward.
"But not until we get our reward."
The Navy man saluted,
turned, and motioned his men to return to the airlift.
"Let's get
started," said Lafferty, heading to the door.
"One moment, sir,"
said a guard.
"What is it?"
demanded Lafferty.
"Just a precaution,
sir," said the guard, pulling out a personal scanner and running its beam
over every inch of Cole's body from a distance of about five feet. "Last
month we caught a man trying to come in here with a tiny explosive device
inside a false molar. Others have hidden weapons and explosive in their shoes,
in their clothes, even inside their bodies." He turned the scanner off.
"You're clear," he said to Cole. "Commander Forrice next."
Braxite stepped forward for examination.
It took another five
minutes, but finally the man announced that all the prisoners were clean.
"All right, sir,"
he said, ordering the door to open, and a moment later Cole and his five
associates were brought, manacled and at gunpoint, to the desk of the most
powerful man in the Republic, quite possibly the most powerful man who had ever
lived.
"Captain Cole,"
said Egan Wilkie, getting to his feet, "you have no idea how much I have
longed for this moment, how I have planned for it and plotted for it and even
prayed for it." He allowed himself the luxury of a triumphant smile.
"You will be given a fair trial, you will be fairly judged, and"—the
smile became broader—"you will be fairly executed."
"I don't think
so," said Cole.
"I admire your
audacity, Captain Cole," said Wilkie, "but your grasp on reality
leaves a little something to be desired."
Cole nodded his head almost
imperceptibly, and an instant later Lafferty's five men, Chadwick, and Gentry
all had their weapons out and aimed at the guards.
"Is my grasp on reality
getting any more secure?" asked Cole, tensing and breaking out of his
manacles. The other five prisoners followed suit.
Cole turned to the guards.
"Mr. Pampas here is going to disarm each of you in turn. If you offer no
resistance, you won't be harmed. If you resist, or cause any problems before we
leave, I have absolutely no compunction about ordering your deaths. Bull,
collect their weapons, please."
Pampas went from one guard
to another, disarming them. The very last one backed up a step and reached for
his weapon. Val, who had posed as a member of Lafferty's team, drilled him
squarely between the eyes with a beam of solid light, and he collapsed to the
floor.
"He was warned,"
said Cole. "I want each of you to walk to the far end of the office.
Gentry, did you bring that tape I asked for?"
She nodded and held up two
rolls of tape.
"Mr. Pampas and Mr.
Sokolov, take the tape from her, and bind each of our prisoners' hands and
feet—you'll need knives or scissors to cut it; Gentry will supply them. And you
might as well cover their mouths while you're at it." Sokolov seemed about
to ask a question.
"It's all right, Mr.
Sokolov," said Cole. "I know it's light in weight, but even Val
couldn't break free of it."
Pampas and Sokolov went to
work, while a couple of Lafferty's men pitched in and helped. The job was done
in less than three minutes, and Cole turned his attention back to Wilkie.
"Are you all through
with empty threats and false claims of victory, Secretary Wilkie?" he
asked.
"What do you
want?" growled Wilkie.
"I should have thought
that would be obvious," said Cole. "I want amnesty for every man,
woman, and alien serving under me, I want your pledge to keep the Navy out of
the Inner Frontier, and"—he paused briefly—"as a public show of
contrition for all the abuses of your administration, I want your resignation
and that of your cabinet and advisors."
"Never!" said
Egan. "I am the duly elected representative of the people!"
"I'm sure you
are," said Cole. "I'm even sure it was an honest election. Well, as
honest as elections get to be. But that in no way alters the fact that you are
a disgrace to your office, and your continued presence in it is no longer
tolerable."
"Says the
mutineer!" said Wilkie contemptuously.
"Did Susan Garcia ever
explain the conditions surrounding my act of mutiny?" asked Cole.
"No. Why should
she?"
"No reason that I can
think of," said Cole. He shrugged. "It's ancient history anyway.
We're not here to rehash it, but to make some new history. I want you to summon
your top three advisors. There's no sense having you resign if your successor
is just going to carry out the same policies. We'll want a mass
resignation."
"You go to hell!"
said Wilkie.
"I don't think you
understand your position, Mr. Wilkie—or ours, for that matter. If we walk out
any of these doors while your government is in place, the very best we can hope
for is a quick and painless death. Therefore, we're not going to do that."
"Do your worst!"
snapped Wilkie. "I'm not resigning!"
"I want you to consider
what our worst entails, Mr. Wilkie," said Cole. "You already know
that we can't leave this office while you remain the Secretary of the Republic.
The choice is yours: you can resign, or you can be removed in a more permanent
way."
Wilkie glared at him and
made no reply.
"I'm going to ask you
again: will you tell your top three advisors to report here?"
"I will not."
"I think you've made a
very unwise decision," said Cole.
"I can live with
it."
"For about thirty more
seconds," said Cole. "Val, will you come over here, please?"
The Valkyrie walked over
until she was standing at Cole's side.
"The reason I asked for
you rather than one of the others is because Mr. Wilkie has seen that your
burner works. I wouldn't want him to make a foolish decision on the assumption
that this was a ruse. Please point your burner at him."
Val raised her weapon and
aimed it at Wilkie.
"I want you to count to
ten," said Cole. "If he hasn't agreed to summon his assistants by
then, fire the weapon."
Val began counting. On
"six" Wilkie seemed to slump into himself.
"All right," he
said.
"Damn!" muttered
Val.
"Keep it trained on
him," said Cole. "If the first three people to show up aren't his
advisors, use it." He turned to Wilkie. "All right, Mr. Wilkie. A
galaxy is waiting."
Wilkie touched three spots
on his desk. "I need the three of you," he said. "Right
now!"
"Colonel
Blacksmith?" said Cole.
"Yes?" said
Sharon.
"You're the security
expert. Did that seem legitimate to you? No hidden signals, no codes?"
"It looked
normal."
"Mr. Wilkie, what door
will they come through?"
"Two will use the door
you entered through," said Wilkie. "The third will use that
one," he continued, pointing to a different door.
"I hope you're
right," said Cole.
All three advisors arrived
within two minutes. Cole had them stand behind Wilkie's desk, where Val and the
others could watch the four of them, and then explained the situation.
"If you resign
willingly, we have no further business with you," Cole concluded.
"There will be no trial, no jail time, nothing but a complete retirement
from public life."
"And just who do you
think will replace us?" demanded one of them. "Yourself?"
"No," said Cole.
"So you'll hold an
election?" continued the man. "Well, we won the damned election! You don't like our policies? I'm sorry
about that, but you can't be so dumb as to think every policy in the Republic
gets made in this room! Good God, man—we're governing sixty thousand worlds and
fighting four wars!"
"Four?" said
Sharon, surprised.
"You think the Teroni
Federation is the only power that's opposed
to the Republic? Where the hell have you been?"
"Where you couldn't
reach us," said Cole.
"So you've taken it
upon yourself to get rid of Secretary Wilkie and us," said the man.
"What about his other advisors? One of them might have given the
particular advice you object to. You'd better get rid of them all. Same with
his cabinet. And of course you'll have to dissolve parliament. They might pass
a bill you don't like."
"Who is this man?" demanded Val angrily.
"I'm Aloysius Chang,
and I'm sorry if you don't like what I'm saying, but the truth is often
uncomfortable." He turned to Cole. "You want to depose Secretary
Wilkie? Maybe kill him? And you think that will change everything?" His
face contorted in a sneer. "It'll change nothing! It'll just be a case of the king is dead, long live the
king. You don't change something like the Republic by getting rid of one man—
or four, as the case may be."
"You're right,"
agreed Cole.
"Well, then?"
"We have to start
somewhere," said Cole, "and it makes more sense to start at the top
than at the bottom."
"Do you think you'll
live to see any noticeable change?" asked Chang.
"I'm the most wanted
man in the Republic, standing here in the Secretary's office on Deluros VIII. I
may not live out the afternoon."
Chang smiled. "Well,
you're honest anyway, Captain Cole," he said. "But you're not
realistic. The Republic is too damned big and far-flung for any change to have
a major effect in one mere lifetime."
"You make a lot more
sense than Wilkie does," said Cole. "Why aren't you the Secretary?"
"Come back in five
years," said Chang with a smile.
"I think not,"
said Cole.
"Then leave now. I'll
guarantee you safe passage out of the Republic."
"The hell you
will!" snarled Wilkie.
"Shut up, Egan,"
said Chang, "and maybe I can save your ass." He turned back to Cole.
"What do you say, Captain Cole?"
"You can do that?"
asked Cole.
"In the Secretary's
name, yes," said Chang. "Take my offer, Captain. You can't beat the
odds."
"You had the Navy
hunting us for four years and we beat those odds," said Cole. "Mr.
Wilkie is in the best-protected office on the best-protected planet in the
galaxy, and we beat those odds, too. Now you tell me it's a million-to-one
against our effecting a change. Maybe you're right, but we're going to have to
find out for ourselves."
"I bear you no ill
will, Captain Cole," said Chang. "In fact, you are precisely the kind
of man who explored the stars and created the Republic in the first place. But
you are making a serious mistake, and I will do everything in my power to stop
you."
"Well, I bear him
plenty of ill will," said Wilkie, "and if we survive this episode, I
plan to prove it."
Cole glanced at Wilkie, then
leaned over and said, making no effort to hide the contempt in his voice,
"How do you stand it?"
"If I wasn't here,
things would be much worse," answered Chang just as softly.
"Wilson?" said
Sharon suddenly.
"Yes?" said Cole.
"What is it?"
"Wilkie has glanced
very furtively at his watch two or three times in the last couple of
minutes."
"Well, Mr.
Wilkie?" said Cole. "Who are you expecting, and when?"
"No one," said
Wilkie.
"Oh, for God's sake,
Egan, don't be an ass!" snapped Chang. He turned to Cole. "We're due
to have a meeting with the leaders of the parliament in about ten
minutes."
"Here in this
office?" asked Cole.
"Yes."
"You fucking
traitor!" yelled Wilkie.
"Use your brain,
Egan!" snapped Chang. "They've got eight men and women with their
weapons out, and they're in enemy territory. If they don't know who's coming,
they'll kill anyone who walks in through that door."
"How many are we
expecting?" asked Cole.
"Six," replied
Chang. "There's time to cancel it. I won't tell them you're here."
"No, let them
come," said Cole. "We might as well have some unimpeachable witnesses
to Wilkie's resignation."
"They'll claim it was
at gunpoint and isn't valid."
"I think the leader of
the opposition will take a different view of it," said Cole.
Chang shrugged, then checked
his own timepiece. "We'll know soon enough."
Suddenly the building seemed
to shake.
Cole frowned. "A
quake?"
"We've never had one
before," said Chang.
There was a massive
explosion a mile to the north, the building shook again, and the air outside
the window turned black with smoke.
"That's no quake!"
exclaimed Val. "That was a bomb!"
"Planted?" asked
Sokolov.
"Hell, no!" she
said as five more explosions followed in rapid order. "Somebody got
through the planet's defenses!"
Cole walked over to the
window and looked out.
"A lot of somebodies," he said, as the massive court building
across the plaza took a direct hit and collapsed in a pile of rubble.
"This has got to be
their number one target," said Val. "We're sitting ducks here. We'd
better try to get back to the ship."
"Forget it," said
Cole.
"We can't just stay
here!" said Lafferty nervously.
"Try to remember where
you are," said Cole as another explosion rocked the building. "This
office is the only place on the whole damned planet where you won't be shot on
sight."
"I've got to contact
the Navy and find out what's going on!" said Wilkie. "The Teronis
weren't supposed to be within thirty thousand light-years!" He reached for
a panel on his desk.
Cole grabbed his hand.
"I don't trust you, Mr. Wilkie."
"Damn it, I have to
know what's happening!" said Wilkie as a nearby explosion shook the
building again.
"Mr. Chang, you contact
whoever you need," said Cole.
Chang walked swiftly behind
the desk and began touching various hot spots, asking terse questions, getting
disjointed answers. After a moment he looked up, a puzzled frown on his face.
"It's not the Teronis," he said.
"Who is it?" asked Wilkie.
"We don't know. But
they're here in numbers, and they have formidable weaponry."
"Why didn't we have any
warning?" demanded Wilkie.
"I don't know,
Egan," replied Chang. "This is the first minute of a surprise attack.
We're not going to get all the answers immediately."
A corner of the parliament
building crumbled.
"You may not live long
enough to get any answers at all," said Cole, looking out the window.
"How bad is it?"
asked Val.
"The sky is black with
ships, and they sure as hell don't look like the Navy's."
"What's that?"
asked Cole sharply.
"The parliamentary
leaders," said Chang.
"Mr. Chang, go to the
door and let them in one at a time. No Security personnel can enter. Val, if
Mr. Wilkie tries to summon help from the corridor or anywhere else, kill
him."
"I could kill him right
now and save a lot of bother," she said.
"Just do what I say.
Bull, you and Vladimir stand guard by the door. I think Mr. Chang is a
reasonable man, but I won't bet your lives on it. If any Security personnel, or
anyone besides the people we're waiting for, try to enter, or take a shot from
outside the office, kill them."
Pampas and Sokolov
accompanied Chang to the door. It split open, he quickly ushered in seven men
and women, and it snapped shut again.
"Do we know who's
attacking us?" asked one of the women.
"No," said Chang.
She suddenly noticed Cole
and his team, and the bound Security men.
"What's going on here,
Aloysius?"
"I'll explain it
later," said Chang. "Right now we and Captain Cole seem to have an
enforced truce while we're dealing with the greater danger."
As he spoke a bomb left a
huge hole in the adjacent street, and the weapon-proof glass in the windows
shattered.
"Captain," said
Chang, "you've got a ship up there. Two ships, in fact. Can either of them
give us a clearer picture of what's happening?"
"I'll have to see if
either of them still exist," said Cole, pulling out a communicator. He
decided to send it coded and scrambled, on the assumption that if Deluros survived
the attack, he still had a planetful of enemies.
"Are you all right,
sir?" said Christine's voice. Her image appeared and surveyed the room.
"Who are all these people?"
"Forget that,"
said Cole tersely. "What's going on up there?"
"A fleet of maybe a thousand
ships just appeared out of nowhere, sir," she said. "It looks like
they're doing heavy damage to the planet."
"They're not bothering
you or the Sabine Nova?"
"Not so far. Most of
the Navy has flown to meet them. I don't think they're concerned with a pair of
ships that are docked in orbit."
"Stay docked," ordered Cole. "This
isn't our battle."
"Yes, sir."
"If I don't check in
every hour, assume we're dead. Make one final attempt to contact me, Val, or
Lafferty, and if you can't, then get the hell away from Deluros whenever you
think the coast is clear."
"I won't leave you,
sir."
"If I'm dead, I won't
mind," said Cole. "Just follow my orders, damn it!"
"Yes, sir," she
said miserably, and broke the connection.
"You're wrong,
Captain," said Chang.
"It wouldn't be the
first time," said Cole. "What do you
think I'm wrong about?"
"You're a Man. This is your battle."
"We know who our
enemies are, Mr. Chang," said Cole. "These guys don't even know we're
here. If they kill us, it'll be by accident."
"You'll be just as
dead."
"Spare me your
moralizing. If they leave this whole planet in ruins, all that means is that
the Republic can set up shop somewhere else and make a fresh start."
The light on the desk began
flashing, and this time Wilkie responded to it, while Val kept her burner
trained on him. He spoke in short sentences and low tones, and finally looked
up. "The Xerxes has been
destroyed," he announced.
"Wasn't that Susan
Garcia's flagship?" asked Lafferty.
"It was the Republic's flagship," said Wilkie.
"Susan Garcia is no longer aboard it." He frowned. "Fleet
Admiral Bolinski was aboard it. His second and third in command were also
killed."
"So who's in
charge?" asked one of the politicos.
Wilkie shrugged. "The Xerxes was supposed to be impregnable.
Most of our senior command was aboard it."
"So no one's directing
our response?" asked another.
"Someone must be trying, but there's no reason
for the others to accept his or her authority. They're probably all acting on
their own now."
"So much for the
greatest Navy ever assembled," snorted Val contemptuously.
Wilkie seemed shell-shocked.
He moved his hands in meaningless frantic gestures. "This wasn't supposed
to happen," he said at last.
"Yeah, I'll bet that's
what every beaten general says," she replied.
"I think, Egan,"
said another woman, "that you had better call Admiral Garcia back."
"Don't be foolish,
Anya," said Chang. "She's half a galaxy away, and besides, her ship
has just been demolished."
"It's not her ship," said Wilkie petulantly
as the remainder of the parliament building collapsed.
"It's not anyone's
ship, not anymore," said Chang.
"Are you blaming me for that?" demanded Wilkie.
"Do you think Susan could have defended it any better than Bolinski?"
"We'll never know
now," said an advisor.
The light flashed again, and
this time it was Chang who began whispering with the voices at the other end of
the transmission. Finally he looked up. "We're in big trouble."
"You're just figuring
that out?" said Val.
"There's no central
authority. The Navy's like a snake without a head. It's thrashing about with no
direction."
Wilkie glared at Cole.
"This is your fault!"
"I'm not bombing your damned planet,"
said Cole.
"But if it wasn't for
you, half the ships we had in reserve against the Teronis wouldn't be crisscrossing
the galaxy looking for the Theodore
Roosevelt, and I wouldn't have had to fire Susan Garcia." A tear,
whether of regret or frustration or terror, rolled down his cheek. "She
was the greatest military mind of her era."
Another bomb hit nearby, and
the building literally swayed.
"I have an idea,"
said Chang. He looked at Cole. "I need to pull a more powerful
communication device out of his desk drawer. May I?"
Cole signaled Val to walk
around to the side of the desk where she could see exactly what Chang was
doing. "Go ahead," he said.
"Thank you," said
Chang, opening a drawer, pulling out a complex communicator, and putting it on
the desk. He programmed in a complex code, and a moment later Susan Garcia's
face—gaunter than Cole remembered it, but every bit as arrogant—appeared.
"Why are you disturbing
me?" she said coldly.
"Deluros is under
attack by an unknown foe," said Chang.
"Not the Teronis?"
she asked as another bomb shook the building.
"No."
She smiled. "You do
seem to have your work cut out for you."
"The Xerxes has been destroyed," said
Chang.
"That's a shame,"
she said. "That ship was my home for eleven years."
"Admiral Bolinski has
been killed. So have Admirals Palatine, Burstein, and Ngima."
"I'm very sorry to hear
it," said Susan Garcia. "They were all good friends. But I don't know
what you expect me to do about
it."
"You know damned well
what we want!" said Chang.
She uttered a cold laugh.
"I admire your audacity, Aloysius. Was this his idea?"
"It was mine."
"You can guess my
answer."
"You didn't hear my
offer yet."
"Oh?" she said.
"You mean there's more than simply the chance to die in glorious battle
for the government that publicly humiliated me?"
"A lifetime appointment
as Fleet Admiral, which can't be rescinded," said Chang.
"I thought I had
that," said Susan Garcia. "What Wilkie gives, Wilkie can take away.
You know the old saying, Aloysius: fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice,
shame on me."
"What if Wilkie resigns
his office conditionally upon your accepting our offer?" said Chang.
"What?" bellowed Wilkie.
Chang turned to him.
"Your office won't be worth two credits if we can't repel this
invasion."
"Never!" said
Wilkie.
"It's all right,
Aloysius," said Susan Garcia. "I wouldn't have accepted anyway."
Her image looked directly at Wilkie. "I hope you don't die instantly,
Egan." She reached a hand out and broke the connection.
"Nice try," said
Cole.
"I can't say that I
blame her," replied Chang.
Another explosion, and two
nearby buildings burst into flame.
"No vaporizer,"
noted Val. "Just thumpers. Level 3 or 4, or we'd just be a hole in the
ground."
"It's not a suicide
attack," said Cole. "I haven't seen any ships plunge down."
"You say that as if it
means something," said the woman named Anya.
"It means they didn't
come here to die," said Cole. "And that means they probably can't
conceive of anyone having a more powerful pulse cannon than their own. If they
could defend against a Level 5 cannon, they could create one, and clearly they
haven't."
"You sound like you
know what you're talking about," said Anya.
"He served in your Navy
with distinction for almost twenty years," said Sharon proudly.
Chang stared at Cole for
almost a full minute, studying him.
"Don't look at me like
that," said Cole. "I have even less reason to love your Navy than
Susan Garcia has."
Chang continued to stare at
him.
"I came here to
overthrow your government," continued Cole. "Now someone's doing it
for us. I have no serious problem with that."
"Do you have a problem
with eleven billion innocent men and women dying?" asked Chang.
"Innocent of
what?" said Val sarcastically. "They all work for the Republic."
"Can you let them all
die?" persisted Chang.
This time it was Cole's turn
to stare. Finally he said, "If I agree to what you want, I'll ask a lot
more than Susan Garcia did."
Chang looked out the window
at his city in flames, then turned back to Cole. "List your demands."
"First, amnesty for
every man, woman, and alien under my command," said Cole.
"Agreed."
"Second, complete
control of the Navy for the duration of the battle. I don't want any
freelancers, and I don't want anyone questioning my authority."
"Done—at least to the
best of our ability."
"Third, a Security
patrol to escort us to the shuttle that will take us up to the Theodore Roosevelt. I suspect that most
of the people in this building are sure we're responsible for what's
happening."
"All right,"
agreed Chang.
"Fourth, I want the
entire government to resign. Not just Wilkie, but all his advisors including
yourself, as well as his cabinet and the parliament."
"Never!" shouted Wilkie.
"Shut up, Egan,"
said Chang. He turned to the politicians. "Will you consent to Captain
Cole's demand?"
Another explosion, and the
ceiling began caving in.
"Have we got a
choice?" said Anya grimly, and the others nodded their consent.
"Yes, we do," said
Chang. "But it's not a very palatable one."
"The rest of you can do
what you want," said Wilkie doggedly. "I'm not resigning."
Chang turned to another
advisor. "Mr. Berkmeyer, write up a brief statement of resignation and
have everyone in the room sign it."
"I'm not signing
anything!" said Wilkie.
"Captain Cole, you have
my word that your conditions will be met," said Chang. "I think you'd
better make your way back to your ships while you still have ships to return
to."
"What about him?" said Cole, indicating Wilkie.
"He'll sign it."
"And if he
doesn't?"
"We are on the
thirty-seventh floor. If I have to throw him out the window, I will."
"You're out of
shape," said Val. "I'd be happy to do it for you."
The ceiling crumbled a bit
more.
"I'm going to trust
you, Mr. Chang," said Cole. "Get us a Security squad to escort us to
the shuttle, have a pilot waiting, and get the word to the fleet before we
reach our ships."
"I will."
Cole waited until Chang
informed him that the squad was outside the door, and then he and his crew left
the office. There wasn't much visible damage in the corridor, but when they
took the airlift to the roof the damage was extensive. The shuttle that had
brought them down from the docking station was a twisted piece of metal, buried
in the rubble of a collapsed air vent.
"We're not going
anywhere in that thing," said Val as the Security squad withdrew, their
job done.
They stood there for a
moment, then realized that their position was totally exposed to enemy fire,
and began returning to the airlift when a shuttle rose up above the edge of the
roof. A panel opened and the pilot gestured for them to approach.
"I can't land," he
said. "The roof won't hold the weight. Just come to the edge and you
should be able to get in."
When they were all aboard,
the shuttle took off to the east, and only after it had gone a quick fifty
miles did it begin climbing.
"The whole planet's one
enormous city," said the pilot. "If they're bombing the court and the
parliament, they're familiar with the design of the city, so it made sense to
get out of the line of fire. I'll signal ahead and find out which docking
station you're at. They try to make them orbit at the exact speed of the
planet, so it's always the shortest route down to your destination and back up,
but they haven't got it perfected yet."
They reached the required
altitude, and the pilot frowned. "Half of the docking stations have been
blown to hell and gone." Another few seconds passed. "If yours is
still there, it's not answering."
Cole pulled out his own
communicator. "Christine, are you there?"
"Yes, sir," she
said. "But the Sabine Nova was
hit. We managed to transfer the crew to the Teddy
R, but I don't think you can get the Nova running again."
"That's okay. We'll be
there in a couple of minutes. Have someone standing by to open the shuttle
bay."
"Yes, sir."
Cole turned to the pilot.
"You know which station we want?"
"Yeah, I've got it
programmed here," he said, patting his control panel.
"Then let's go."
As the shuttle jumped ahead
Cole turned to his crew and Lafferty's men.
"I assume you all heard
that?" he said.
A general nodding of heads.
"It means that a
century-old ship that should have been decommissioned eighty years ago is about
to become the flagship of what's left of the Republic's Navy," he
continued. "The very same Republic that we came here to destroy." An
ironic smile crossed his face. "As I remarked once or twice to the late
Commander Forrice, we seem to live in interesting times."
They made it safely to the Teddy R. The shuttle elected to stay
docked in orbit, on the reasonable assumption that any location was safer than the surface of Deluros VIII.
"Where's Jacovic?"
asked Cole as he walked onto the bridge.
"His shift finished a
few hours ago," answered Christine.
"Get him up here. He's
had more experience at this kind of thing than any of us. I'm going to want his
expertise."
"Yes, sir."
"Val, take a nap."
"The hell I will,"
she said. "If we're going to get blown apart, I want to see who did it so
I can hunt them down in hell."
"Your logic is
impeccable," said Cole, "but there's every chance we won't get blown apart in the next eight
or ten hours, and I want you fresh and alert when Jacovic starts fading."
"Well, I'll grab a beer
and a sandwich," she said, heading off to the airlift. "But I'm not
sleepy."
"Christine, as
difficult as this will be for you to believe, the Teddy R is now the flagship of the Republic's Navy. I don't have
codes, IDs, or even positions for any of the ships, so you're just going to
have to broadcast whatever orders we have for them and hope the attackers don't
speak Terran."
"I speak English,
sir," said Rachel, who was at one of the stations.
"And I speak
Swahili," added Christine.
"There might be a few people on the receiving
end who speak one or the other, but we can't count on it." He lowered his
head in thought for a moment. "Contact Aloysius Chang—he'll be in the
Secretary's office—and tell him we really need the codes, IDs, everything. We
have to have some safe channels."
"Will he respond,
sir?" she said. "I mean, we came here to depose his superior."
"He's a sensible
man," said Cole. "He'll respond—and Egan Wilkie isn't superior to
anyone."
"I'll get right on it,
sir."
Cole walked over to Jacovic.
"You've been watching the ships?"
"Yes," said the
Teroni.
"Ever see anything like
them?"
Jacovic shook his head.
"They're very similar in outline to the Molarian Class XB," he
replied. "But that may not mean anything."
"They didn't fire any
Level 5 thumpers or burners, at least that I could tell from my vantage
point," said Cole. "Is it possible they're holding back?"
"I don't think
so," said Jacovic. "This is a surprise attack, and it caught Deluros
off guard. But the Republic does have
more than three million ships. Probably ninety-five percent of them are engaged
against the Federation and can't be relocated, but that still leaves well over
one hundred and fifty thousand ships that the attackers can't account for. You
and I know that most of them are patrolling their own sectors, and probably a
few thousand are in the Inner and Outer Frontiers, but they don't know that. It makes sense that they'd hit Deluros with
everything they have and then leave before reinforcements arrive. Clearly this
isn't a war of conquest, not with only a thousand ships."
"So we shouldn't wait
for reinforcements," said Cole. "They figure to do their damage and
run."
"That would be my
conclusion, yes, sir," said Jacovic.
"Rachel, capture an
image of one or two of those ships, and see if the computer can identify
them," said Cole.
"I've been trying,
sir," she replied. "That was the first thing I thought of when they
flew by and started attacking. But so far I haven't had any luck."
"Okay, don't bother
anymore," said Cole. "If the computer can't find them in its data
banks in a minute or two, they're not there." He turned back to Jacovic.
"If all they've got are Level 3s, we ought to be able to move with
impunity. If they have Level 4s, how many hits do you think we can take?
Twenty? Thirty?"
"I believe we'll have
to check with Mr. Odom, sir," said the Teroni.
"Do that, please,"
said Cole. "Where's Mr. Briggs?"
"I think he's sleeping,
sir," said Rachel.
"Wake him up. I need
him here."
"Yes, sir."
Cole walked over to the main
viewscreen and watched it, hands on hips. There were perhaps two hundred enemy
ships, swarming like bees, over the section of Deluros VIII he'd just left. He
couldn't spot a single Navy ship.
"Sir," said
Jacovic, walking up to him, "Mr. Odom says it will depend on the proximity
of the other ships, and the angle of attack, but our defenses can take a
minimum of twenty Level 4 pulse strikes before any portion of the Teddy R loses its structural
integrity."
"How about Level 4
burners?"
"Unless the pulse
attacks weaken the shields and screens, we should be practically immune to
Level 4 laser cannons."
Cole grimaced. "I
distrust that word 'practically.'"
Jacovic looked at the
viewscreen. "We could safely withdraw from this position now, sir. Have
you any instructions for Wxakgini?"
Cole shook his head.
"Where would we go? We're probably safer here than as a moving target. We
need to devise some sort of strategy before we show ourselves."
"As you wish,
sir."
"I don't suppose you
ever found yourself in an analogous situation?"
"One ship, momentarily
safe, surrounded by perhaps a thousand enemy ships?" said Jacovic.
"No, never."
"Somehow I'm not
surprised," said Cole.
Malcolm Briggs came onto the
bridge, rubbing his eyes. "Welcome back, sir. I'm glad to see you're all
unharmed."
"I'm sorry to wake you,
Mr. Briggs," said Cole, "but we need your expertise."
"What would you like me
to do, sir?"
Cole looked around the
bridge. "Christine and Rachel are at the main computer stations. Take the
small one in the corner, or go down to my office and use mine."
"And do what,
sir?" persisted Briggs.
"You and Christine are
my two best computer operators, and I'm going to keep her busy for the next few
hours. I want you to try to capture any enemy messages—they're acting in
concert, so they must be communicating with each other—and see if the computer
can make any sense out of them. If not, tell Mr. Aloysius Chang that you're
acting on my behalf—Christine will give you the contact information—and get
permission to tie in to the Master Computer down on Deluros. Maybe it can translate them if our own
computer can't."
"Yes, sir," said
Briggs. "If you don't mind, I'll use your office. There will be fewer
distractions."
"Fine," said Cole.
"Ground crews are
firing up at the ships, sir," noted Jacovic when Briggs had left,
"but they're too far away. They've only made two hits in the last few
minutes." He paused. "On the other hand, the ships have moved their
center of operations some four hundred miles to the west."
"Rachel?" said
Cole.
"Sir?"
"This is clearly not a
war of conquest. It's more like the kind of punishment party the Navy sent up
to Singapore Station, maybe a little larger but the same principle. Have the
computer scan all the news reports for the past five years—and not just the
local ones. Let's see if it can figure out who would be mad enough to try to
destroy Deluros VIII."
"And who has the
technology to avoid detection," added Jacovic. "After all, they just
suddenly appeared. As far as I know, no one reported seeing them approach, and
no one tried to stop them."
Cole frowned. "You have
a point. We've been so busy ducking we forgot to ask the operative question:
how the hell did they get here?"
"They had to use a
wormhole, sir," said Jacovic. "It's the only way they could get this
far undetected."
"Pilot," said
Cole, "is there any wormhole that would let a ship out within the Deluros
system?"
"Infrequently,"
answered Wxakgini.
Cole frowned. "What do
you mean: infrequently?"
"The Stutz Wormhole is
extremely unstable. It occasionally exists in the Deluros system, between
Deluros II and III."
Cole and Jacovic exchanged
looks. "That explains it," said the Teroni. "All of the Navy's
defenses were geared to stopping an invasion from outside the system, not from
within."
"Just a minute,"
said Cole. "If Pilot knows it, and damned near every ship in the Navy has
a member of his race on it, why didn't they all know it?"
"I told you," said
Wxakgini. "The Stutz Wormhole is unstable."
"How often does it
exist inside the Deluros system?"
"It exists for an
average of thirty hours once every seventeen years," answered Wxakgini.
"This time frame is only an estimate. The interval has been as short as
fourteen years and as long as thirty-four."
"That's your
answer," said Jacovic. "You don't build your defenses around a
weakness that occurs one day every seventeen years."
"That's a long time to
hold a grudge," remarked Cole.
"How long have you held
yours?" asked Wxakgini.
"Not quite that
long," said Cole. "But I'm young yet. Relatively speaking."
"How much longer will
the Wormhole remain here?" asked Jacovic.
"Twenty-seven hours,
eleven minutes, and sixteen seconds," answered Wxakgini.
"Where does the other
end let out?
"I don't know,"
said the pilot. "It has never been charted. Well, not by any member of the
Republic, which is where the navigational computer draws its information."
"Wonderful,"
muttered Cole.
"Sir?" said
Christine.
"Yes?"
"I have most of the
codes and contact information you requested, sir."
"Good. Send a message
to our ships right now. Tell them if they're within twenty-five hours of the
Deluros system to get here as fast as they can. Tell them that they'll be
taking their orders from the Teddy R, and if they have any problems
with that, to check with the Secretary's office."
"Right away, sir."
"Summoning all those
ships isn't going to help much," Cole confided to Jacovic. "The enemy
will deliver its ordnance and get the hell out of here. They're not going to
stick around till the last minute."
"I know."
"Can you mine a
wormhole, I wonder?"
Jacovic shook his head.
"I wouldn't think so, sir. Normal time and space don't exist in wormholes.
I wouldn't think explosives do, either."
"Ships work in
them."
"Ships cannot
accelerate in a wormhole," replied Jacovic. "The momentum is supplied
by the wormhole, not the ship." He paused thoughtfully. "It's
entirely possible that a ship does not produce oxygen or water for the crew in
a wormhole, but we traverse them so quickly we don't notice because we're not
inside them long enough to run out."
"I know," said
Cole. "I'm just grasping at straws."
"I beg your pardon,
sir?"
"I'm hoping for a
solution, other than the obvious one."
"The obvious one,
sir?"
Cole nodded. "If we
can't find out where they're from in the next hour or so, we're going to have
to enter the hole before it moves. And if we
know that the hole leads to their home system, or at least near it, they know
it too."
Jacovic nodded his
agreement. "And if they have this many ships here, on a surprise mission,
how many ships will they have protecting their home when they know the Navy
will be able to find it by traversing the wormhole?"
Cole went down to his
office, where Briggs was working at the computer.
"Any luck?"
"I've captured a few
messages," said Briggs. "The problem is that they're not anything the
computer recognizes."
"Even the Master
Computer on Deluros VIII?" said Cole, frowning. "That doesn't make
any sense. These people didn't choose Deluros out of a hat. They clearly have a
grudge against the Republic. That means at some time in the past they must have spoken to them."
"The Master Computer is
down, sir," said Briggs. "I don't know if it's been destroyed, or has
merely lost its power source—something that big and that powerful must take a
lot of power. But whatever the reason, I can't access it."
"These messages,"
continued Cole. "Audio or transmitted in code?"
"Code, sir."
"Then keep working on
it. The ship's computer may not be able to translate growls and snorts and
clicks, but if we feed it enough written or coded transmissions, sooner or
later it'll start to make sense of them."
Cole left the office and
wandered to the mess hall, where he sat as his usual table and ordered a
coffee. Sharon appeared in the doorway a moment later.
"Want a little
company?" she asked.
"Sure."
"You look
troubled," she said. "Or at least preoccupied."
"I'm missing
something," he said, "and I haven't been able to put my finger on
what it is."
"I'm sure you'll think
of it before the Navy ships start arriving— and you really can't do anything
until then."
"I think that's what's
bothering me," he said. "We won't be at anything near full strength
for almost a Standard day, and I think the enemy will be long gone by then.
Hell, the first of our ships will be arriving in an hour; I don't even know if
the enemy will stick around that long."
"I don't know what you
can do about it," insisted Sharon. "There are hundreds of them,
possibly a few thousand. You can't do battle against them alone."
"I know."
"So we just sit it out
until our ships start arriving," she concluded.
He shook his head. "Not
good enough."
"Wilson," she
said, "the Teddy R can't stand
against a fleet of these ships, even if they don't have Level 5 weapons."
"We can't just stay
here doing nothing," replied Cole.
"This isn't like
you," she said. "I've never known you to take foolish risks
before."
"If I look troubled,
it's because I'm about to take the most foolish risk of all."
"Why don't I like the
sound of that?" she said with a failed attempt at flippancy.
"Because I don't
like the sound of it," said Cole. "But I don't see any
alternative." He frowned. "No, we have to do it." He got up from
the table. "And the sooner the better."
He walked briskly to the
airlift, and a moment later was back on the bridge.
"Pilot," he said
as he approached Wxakgini, "take us into the Stutz Wormhole."
"Are you sure?"
asked Jacovic. "We don't know what's waiting for us at the other
end."
Cole looked at Wxakgini.
"Do we?"
"No," confirmed
the pilot. "As I said, it's never been mapped by the Republic."
Cole frowned. "If it
was just the Teddy R I'd wait,"
he told Jacovic, "but it's not. We're the flagship now. I can't ask a few
thousand Navy ships to go through that hole if the enemy's ships have all
returned and I don't even know who or where the enemy is. We've got to find
what's at the other end of that wormhole." He turned to Christine.
"Send a coded message to our ships, that if we're not here when they
arrive we haven't deserted them, that we're scouting the enemy and will be back
shortly."
"Yes, sir."
"Okay, Pilot—let's
go."
The Teddy R burst out of cover and began racing for the wormhole. A few
ships spotted it and took up pursuit.
"Who's in
Gunnery?" asked Cole.
"Mr. Pampas and Mr.
Braxite, sir," said Christine. "And I believe one of Mr. Lafferty's
men, who has weaponry experience, is with them."
"Put me through to
them."
"Done."
"Bull, this is Cole.
We're being pursued by a half dozen enemy ships. They have nothing but Level 3
and 4 weaponry, and probably can't do us much harm. Take them out before we
pass Deluros V."
"Yes, sir."
"Pilot, what's the
transit time within the wormhole?"
"I don't know exactly
where the hole leads," answered Wxakgini. "A guess would be
twenty-five to thirty-five minutes."
"Damn!" muttered
Cole.
"What it is, sir?"
asked Jacovic.
"I wanted to get in and
out fast," said Cole. "Identify the location and the alien culture,
see how they've positioned their ships, and get the hell out of there."
"There's no reason why
we can't do that, sir," said Jacovic.
"I'm not so sure,"
said Cole. "After we've done a quick survey, we want to come back here so
we can inform our ships what's waiting for them, what to look out for." He
grimaced. "But if we're coming back in, say, an hour, we could run right
into the enemy in the wormhole." He turned to Wxakgini. "I don't
suppose we can fire a weapon inside the hole?"
"You can," replied
the pilot. "But you would probably outrun it and end up killing yourself.
Or it might not fire at all; remember, the laws of time and space do not
necessarily apply to the interiors of wormholes."
"You want to expand
upon 'not necessarily'?"
"They may apply," said Wxakgini. "Or
they may selectively apply."
"You are not the most
helpful guy I ever met," said Cole.
"Being helpful is not
my function," replied Wxakgini. "I pilot the ship. ETA for the Stutz
Wormhole is ninety-three seconds."
"Got the last of
them!" cried Pampas's triumphant voice. "Take a look!" An image
of a blazing fireball appeared, then vanished as the fire sputtered out and the
debris scattered through space.
Cole stared at the
viewscreen. He'd spent his entire adult life in space, and he still couldn't
get used to the fact that even though he knew a wormhole was dead ahead he
couldn't see it. In fact, he could see right through it, see all the stars
behind it, could see no hint of an entrance, no warping of space.
"Here it comes,"
said Rachel.
"You actually see
it?" asked Cole.
"No, sir," she
replied. "I was checking my watch."
There was a sudden shudder,
and then the Teddy R was inside the
wormhole. And, as always, the viewscreens ceased to work.
"All right," said
Cole. "When we emerge, Bull and Braxite will man the weapons from Gunnery,
and Jacovic will work the auxiliary weaponry, if needed, from the bridge.
Christine, I want you and Rachel to have your computers pinpoint our position,
because if this war lasts more than thirty hours after we launch our invasion,
we need to know where we are and how to get home—and I also want you to capture
any images that we can transmit to the rest of our ships. If the enemy's home
planet isn't obvious, then you're going to have to run an analysis on every
planet within five light-years, as well as determining their position." He
paused. "Correction: make that oxygen worlds only."
"Are you sure,
sir?" said Rachel. "I mean, there are
chlorine breathers."
"I know," said
Cole. "But when you hit them, they don't burst into flames the way the
ones Bull and Braxite hit did. You need oxygen for that." He paused.
"I don't know if they'll have any ships guarding the other end of the
wormhole, but it would be foolish to assume they won't, so I want a couple of
you without express duties to perform at that time to get down to Gunnery and
see if there's any way you can assist Bull and Braxite. That includes your
people too, Mr. Lafferty. There are more than two stations down there—but under
no circumstance do we fire unless we're fired upon. If we can just sneak in and
sneak out unseen, maybe they won't have a welcoming committee when we return
here with our Navy. Christine, put me through to Briggs."
"Yes, sir."
"Mr. Briggs," said
Cole. "Any luck yet?"
"Not much, sir,"
answered Briggs. "The computer says it's a logical language, but it knows
none of the reference points, so it may take as much as two days to translate
it."
"That's not going to be
much help," said Cole. "Can you just order the computer to keep
working, or do you have to be there?"
"I can program it,
sir."
"Good. Then do so, and
come back up to the bridge. I'm going to put you at that small computer station
you hate. I need all the data we can gather when we emerge from the hole. You,
Christine, and Rachel can divide it up any way you want, but I want the area
blanketed."
"Yes, sir."
"Once you're done, I
promise you can go back to sleep until we're ready to invade them," added
Cole.
"I'm wide awake now,
sir," said Briggs. "I'll be on the bridge shortly."
Cole turned to Jacovic.
"Am I forgetting anything?"
"Not that I'm aware of,
sir."
"Okay," said Cole.
"We've got about twenty minutes to go. Take over while I finish what's
left of my coffee."
He went back down to the
mess hall. Sharon was still sitting at the same table.
"I thought you'd be
back," she said. "I know how you dislike the bridge."
"It brings up images of
heroic captains standing by the wheel, sword in hand, the salt spray in their
faces. That's not me."
"It's closer to you
than you think."
He made a face. "Any
order I can give on the bridge I can give from right here."
"I take it we have
absolutely no idea who or what we're up against?" she asked.
"Not yet."
"Let me ask you a
question, Wilson," said Sharon.
"Go ahead,"
replied Cole.
"Has it occurred to you
that we should be joining them rather than fighting them? After all, we both
went to Deluros with the same target in mind."
"Not for a
second," said Cole. "They're bombing and killing indiscriminately,
just like the Navy has been doing on the Inner Frontier. And this is just a
hit-and-run. If its existence was threatened, the Republic would sign a truce
or a cease-fire with the Teroni Federation and pull three million ships back to
defend Deluros. At least if we pull this off, we can choose more reasonable
leaders for the Republic."
"Are there more reasonable leaders?"
she asked.
"We spent years living
in the Republic, and more years defending it," said Cole. "They're
not all bad. Hell, most of them are just like you and me; they just want to get
through the day without hurting anyone or being hurt. This Chang seems like a
reasonable man; surely there are others."
"All right," said
Sharon. "I just wanted to make sure you'd thought it out." A
self-deprecating smile. "I should have known you had."
"ETA in six
minutes," announced Jacovic's voice.
"Damn!" said Cole.
"I wish Briggs had broken their language or code or whatever the hell it
is. If we take any prisoners, I don't know how the hell you're going to question
them."
"It depends who you
capture," said Sharon. "They have to have had some contact with the Republic. With ten billion planets in the
galaxy, they didn't choose Deluros VIII by chance. What they speak to each
other is one thing; maybe some of them will speak or understand Terran, or
possibly Teroni."
"Five minutes,"
announced Jacovic.
"I'd better get up
there," said Cole, getting to his feet.
"You've already
explained to me why you don't have to."
"Under normal
circumstances, I can avoid the bridge for a week," lie said. "But
these aren't normal circumstances."
"Come on, Wilson,"
she said. "The truth?"
"All right," he
said. "They deserve to see their captain on the bridge, sharing the danger
with them."
"Strapped to the wheel,
sword in hand," she said with a smile. "You know, Rachel and Gentry
are looking better by the minute," growled Cole as he left the mess hall.
"We should be out of
the wormhole in about twenty seconds," said Jacovic.
They kept their eyes on the
viewscreen, and finally the Teddy R emerged
into normal space.
"No ships, sir,"
said Christine.
"I agree, sir,"
said Rachel.
Cole turned to Briggs.
"Mr. Briggs?"
"Nothing, sir."
"All right. Rachel and
Briggs, start surveying those planets, and see which ones have an oxygen
atmosphere and can support carbon-based life. Christine, try to figure out
where the hell we are." He paused. "Jacovic, just keep an eye out for
visitors."
After a minute Christine
spoke up. "This would be a lot easier if we could move a few light-years
ahead, sir. There are a lot of red and blue giants that are obscuring what's
beyond."
"Not unless we have
to," said Cole. "I don't want anyone to know we're here."
"They have to know the
wormhole works in both directions," said Christine.
"If the Navy had ever
used it, these people—whoever they are— would be a Republic colony by now. And
if they thought someone might use it,
they'd have been waiting for us when we came out of it."
"It does imply that
they will be easier to meet in battle than an enemy that prepares for all
eventualities," offered Jacovic.
"Sir!" said Rachel
excitedly. "I think I've got them!"
"Where?"
"Fifth planet circling
the type G star two light-years away, she said. "If you look at the
viewscreen, it's on the left side, toward the bottom."
"This one?" asked
Cole, indicating a star.
"Yes, sir. Oxygen
world, considerable neutrino activity, and I'm picking up planetary
transmissions."
"Mr. Briggs, see what
you can do about narrowing things down," said Cole.
"I beg your pardon,
sir?" said Briggs.
"I'm sure Pilot won't
mind your tying in to the navigational computer. I think we can assume no enemy
planet or empire could exist within twenty thousand light-years of Deluros, so
why don't you have the computer check every populated non-Republic oxygen world
that's the fifth planet circling a G-type star?"
Briggs looked up a minute
later. "There are thirty-two of them in the galaxy, sir."
"Well, that's a start.
Christine, you're on the best of our computers. Have it chart all the stars
within, say, ten light-years and see if it can narrow it down further."
"Checking . . ."
she said, whispering instructions to the computer that only she and the machine
understood. "We've narrowed it down to two planets, sir."
"Only one, sir,"
said Rachel a moment later.
"Explain," said
Cole.
"The eighth planet of
the Tamerlaine system has eight moons. The eighth planet of this system has six. Therefore, this has
to be the Rubino system.
"Very good," said
Cole. "At least we should be able to figure out how to get home if we
survive. Have we got anything on the Rubino system?"
A moment later Christine
turned to face him. "Rubino V is what we want, all right. Five centuries
ago they had an empire of twenty-seven planets. They tried to assimilate a few
of the Republic's worlds, the Republic warned them off, they ignored the
warnings, and the Republic destroyed almost their entire fleet in a single
afternoon. They also brought about half of the Rubino empire into the fold. As
far as I can tell, Rubino V seems to have disappeared from galactic history
thereafter. It was a little planet that flexed its muscles once too often, got
slapped down, and hasn't been heard from again."
"That is one hell of a
long time to plan your revenge," said Cole. "It makes me feel better,
though, that we're not fighting a world or an empire that's just trying to
break away from the Republic and gain its freedom. Do we know what the Rubinos
look like?"
"I doubt that they're
called Rubinos, sir," said Christine.
"They are until someone
gives me a better name."
"They're humanoid,
sir," said Rachel. "Erect bipeds, two arms, two legs, the usual
senses. I can't find out whether or not they're mammals."
"Any word on how many
planets they control today?" asked Cole.
"No, sir," said
Christine. "We have almost nothing on them for the past five hundred
years."
"So we know, or can
assume we know, that Rubino V is their headquarters world, but we don't know
for a fact that we won't face reinforcements from other worlds. I almost said
other nearby worlds, but I suppose we don't know that, either."
"No, sir."
"And we don't know if
the two thousand ships they sent through the wormhole was an attack team or
their entire Navy."
"That's correct,
sir."
"How far is Rubino from
Deluros?"
"Forty-seven thousand
light-years, sir," said Christine.
"That's a long walk
home from the battlefield," commented Cole. He turned to Jacovic. "Is
there anything I should be asking that I’ve missed?"
"There are things we
won't know until the battle begins, and there are things you have to decide,
sir, but there's no question that you have neglected to ask."
"Okay. Pilot, get us
the hell out of here," said Cole. "Same way w came."
"There's every
likelihood we'll meet the returning ships after we emerge from the hole,"
noted Jacovic.
"Better to meet them at
that end than this," said Cole. "Pilot, the second we're out of the
hole, get to the far side of the star, inside the orbit of Deluros I." He
turned to Jacovic. "That's the safest I can make us. We'll see if it
works." The ship shuddered as it entered the Stutz Wormhole. "Come
down to my office with me."
The Teroni accompanied Cole
to the airlift, and a moment late was sitting opposite him, with the desk
separating them, in the office
"You wished to speak
privately with me, sir?" said Jacovic.
"Yes," said Cole.
"I wish I could offer you a drink, but you don and I probably
shouldn't."
"I am not thirsty,
sir."
"I know," said
Cole. He leaned forward. "I just want to make sure we're on the same page,
or if not, what page I need to be on."
"I do not understand,
sir."
"Slang," said
Cole. "You said there were things we couldn't know before the battle
begins. I can think of a few. Let's compare notes."
"First, you cannot know
the size of their fleet," said Jacovic "Second, you cannot know if
they have weaponry on the planet that is superior to the Level 3 and 4 cannons
in their ships. Third, you cannot know if they will be supported by any
allies."
Cole nodded. "I also
don't know if their allies are oxygen breathers," he said. "I'd hate
to fly by a planet with a chlorine or methane atmosphere, pay no attention to
it, and have them attack our flank once the battle's started."
"True," said
Jacovic. "Some races are so outre that it is all but impossible to discern
their presence until they leave their planet."
"How much attention we
pay to that possibility will depend on the size of the fleet we assemble.
Remember, we've got to come back here within a Standard day or the mouth of the
wormhole will be somewhere else."
"I know," said
Jacovic. "And that leaves you even less time to make your decision."
"I know," said
Cole. "Do we punish them or annihilate them?"
"It is the kind of
decision that makes me glad I am no longer a Fleet Commander," said the
Teroni.
The Teddy R emerged into normal space in the Deluros system.
"Sir, the Rubino fleet
is approaching from Deluros VIII," announced Christine.
"Tell Pilot to do what
I told him to do," said Cole. He turned to Jacovic. "They've got to
be on their way home. They couldn't know we were going to come out of the
wormhole. I don't think they'll follow us."
"I'd better get back up
to the bridge," said Jacovic. "Just in case."
"Yeah, go ahead. The
crew needs to see someone in authority."
The Teddy R shot between Deluros I—a small, unwelcoming ball of
rock—and its sun, and soon positioned itself on the far side of the star as the
Rubino ships entered the Stutz Wormhole in a tight formation.
"The last of them has
entered the wormhole, sir," said Christine some fifteen minutes later.
"Okay," replied
Cole. "Have Pilot take us to fifty thousand miles from the hole and hold
that position."
"Yes, sir."
"Now see if you can
connect me to Aloysius Chang."
Chang's image appeared a
moment later.
"Good to see you,"
said Cole. "I half expected you'd be dead by now."
"Our ground batteries
destroyed about fifty of their ships," said Chang, "and when they
found out that part of the Third Fleet was racing to Deluros, they decided
they'd done enough damage and retreated." He frowned. "Where were
you? I tried to contact you three different times."
"Visiting their home
system," said Cole. "If I told you they were from Rubino V, would
that mean anything to you?"
Chang frowned. "Rubino
V," he said. "Rubino V." He shook his head. "I don't think
I've ever heard of it. What did we ever do to them to precipitate this
attack?"
"Nothing lately,"
said Cole. "This particular wound has been festering for half a
millennium." He paused. "Before we get into the next phase of this
thing—did Wilkie ever sign that paper?"
"No."
"Let me speak to
him."
"I'm afraid you can't,"
said Chang.
"You didn't really
throw him out the window?" said Cole.
"Of course not,"
said Chang noncommittally. "That would be illegal. He was merely a victim
of the battle." He paused. "Anya Kranchev is the Secretary now, but
she'd already signed, and says she'll honor it even though her position has
changed."
"Then we're still in
business," said Cole. "How many ships am I expecting in the next few
hours?"
"Only about four
thousand," said Chang. "We can't take any more away from the
front." He smiled. "It might interest you to know that more than
thirty of them have already checked to make sure that they are taking their
orders from you. I think the last four years have conditioned them not to like
you very much."
"They'll have to live
with it," said Cole, declining to comment on the idiocy of a front that
encompassed half the galaxy. "How many Class Ms and Class Ls have we
got?"
"I have no idea."
"All right,"
replied Cole. "We'll have to make do with whatever shows up."
He cut the transmission,
then went to his cabin. A moment later Sharon's image appeared.
"Am I seeing this
correctly?" she said incredulously. "You're actually lying down on
your bed?"
"You'd prefer I lie
down on the floor?"
"Damn it, Wilson!"
"Why not take a
nap?" asked Cole. "We won't be entering the hole for a few hours, and
I may not get another chance for the next couple of days."
"I don't know how you
can sleep at a time like this!"
"I can't," he
replied. "Not while you keep talking to me." He ordered the lights to
dim. "Wake me in about three hours."
She broke the connection,
and woke him about eighty minutes later.
"I said three
hours," he complained, staring at his watch.
"I know, but we need
you now," said Sharon.
He sat up instantly.
"We're under attack?"
"No," she said.
"But Chang told the Navy that they're taking their orders from you, and
some of them refuse to listen to Mr. Jacovic."
"Shit!" said Cole,
getting to his feet. "I should have thought of that. Most of them have
been fighting the Teronis since they joined the service. Have Christine patch
me through to all the Navy ships."
"Comb your hair while
I'm doing it," said Sharon. A brief pause. "You're connected."
"This is Wilson Cole,
the Captain of the Theodore Roosevelt.
As you've been told by Aloysius Chang or one of his surrogates, there have been
some changes in your chain of command. Deluros VIII has just undergone a
devastating attack, and we will be going to Rubino V, the attackers' home
world, to mete out retribution for their actions and make sure such an attack
never happens again. The Theodore Roosevelt will serve as the flagship of
this section of the Third Fleet, and you will take your orders from us. My
second command is Commander Jacovic, a Teroni. When he issues an order, it is
done with my full knowledge and approval, which means that you will be expected
to obey it. The fleet that attacked Deluros is neither human nor Teroni. They
are currently half a galaxy away, but they can be reached through an unstable
wormhole that will only remain in this system for another day. Have your pilots
program Rubino's location into their navigational computers. That is our destination."
"Captain Mellinara of
the Silver Flame here, Captain
Cole," said a voice. "What kind of weaponry and defenses have
they?"
"We know they didn't
use Level 5 cannons against Deluros," answered Cole. "But that
doesn't mean they don't have any. We also don't know anything about their
planetary defenses. We do know that our ground batteries destroyed about fifty
ships in the air above Deluros VIII, so their defenses are not up to our Class
Ms and Class Ls—at least, not the ones we shot down."
"Commander Bainshank
here," said another voice. "Are we just going after their fleet, or
their home world as well?"
"We'll start with the
fleet, and any ground units," said Cole. "We're not here to kill
civilians if it can be avoided. If it can't be avoided, we'll worry about it
when the time comes."
"I notice they didn't
have any such compunction about killing our
civilians," said another captain.
"Our missions are
different. If you don't feel you can obey my orders, stay behind."
"Why are we taking
orders from you anyway?" continued the captain. "We've been hunting
you for four years."
"Because circumstances
change. A century ago the Molarians were your enemies; now they're your allies.
Today the Teronis are your enemies; next month or next year or next century
they'll be your allies."
"So who are we fighting?"
"The natives of Rubino
V," said Cole.
"Where the hell is
that?"
"Just beyond the exit
of the Stutz Wormhole, which we'll be entering in a few hours, when we're up to
strength."
There were no further
questions, and four hours later almost all of the ships had arrived. Cole
divided them into eight groups, lettered A through H, put a ship in charge of
each group, and had Christine program the eight group leaders into her
computer. He noticed that she was almost falling asleep at her station, and he
summoned Domak to replace her.
"But I don't want to
leave!" she protested. "This is my post!"
Cole stared at her.
"You really want to stay on duty?"
"Absolutely, sir!"
"All right. Report to
the infirmary, and get yourself a shot of adrenaline and some kind of pep pill
that won't affect your judgment. I'll see you back here when the doctor assures
me you can function rationally and responsibly."
"Thank you, sir,"
she said, heading off to the infirmary.
Cole gave orders to put him
through to the entire makeshift fleet.
"This is Wilson Cole
again. We're still missing a few ships, but the Stutz Wormhole is unstable and I
don't want to waste any more time. The area around the wormhole's exit was
totally unprotected when the Theodore
Roosevelt visited it a few hours ago. I don't imagine that will change, but
be prepared, just in case they do anticipate an attack."
He paused, ordering his
thoughts. "We know that Rubino V possessed a small empire of just under
thirty planets about five hundred years ago. Some may still be allies, so we
will have to be aware of that possibility. Also, since they've had spaceflight
for at least that long, and we know there are other inhabited planets within
their reach, there is every likelihood that commerce exists between the
planets. I want you to make sure you are only attacking military ships.
Passenger and cargo ships are not targets.
We will begin by softening their military, and when we know the extent of their
strength, we'll decide upon our next steps."
Cole waited for questions.
There weren't any.
"All right," he
said. "The Theodore Roosevelt will
go first, followed by Groups A through H in that order. The time for talking is
over. Let's go to work."
He nodded to Wxakgini, and a
moment later the Teddy R plunged into
the mouth of the Stutz Wormhole.
There were no Rubino ships
waiting for them when they emerged. Cole waited until his entire fleet was out
of the wormhole, then contacted his eight appointed leaders.
"Rubino V is about two
light-years from here. If anyone has trouble finding it, let me know now."
There was no response.
"We're going into this
blind," he continued. "We think
they don't have Level 5 thumpers or burners, but we don't know it for a fact.
We think they are not expecting us or we'd already be targets, but we don't
know that for a fact. All the ships that attacked Deluros VIII were of the same
general design, but that doesn't mean they don't have bigger and better ships
they didn't want to risk, and it doesn't mean they don't have allies positioned
all the hell over the area.
"For that reason, we're
not going to attack in full force, at least not at the start. Groups A, B, C,
and D, I want you to approach Rubino V. When they see that you've got two
thousand ships and recognize that you're from the Republic, they're not going
to wait or offer to talk. They'll start shooting. You have eleven Class L ships
between you. I want them to make the closest approach, because they should be
able to stand up under anything that Rubino can throw at you, at least for a
short period. Once you analyze the strength of their weapons, you can go on the
offensive. We'll try to pinpoint all ground batteries and feed them to your
ships, but most of your battle is going to take place against their fleet. I
have no idea whether it's in orbit around the planet, or possibly in orbit
around one of the moons or another planet in the system. Once they show
themselves, and they'll do it before you fire a weapon, we'll have a better
idea of what we're up against.
"Group E will target
any ground batteries that are harassing us during the battle and take them out.
Groups F and G will remain in high orbit as backups until we know we're facing
their entire military, and will then fill in at any spot where they're
needed."
"What about Group
H?" demanded the leader of that group.
"You stick with the Theodore Roosevelt" answered Cole.
"Doing what?"
"It will depend on
things we can't know now."
"We came here to
fight!" growled the leader.
"You came here on my
orders, and you're still subject to them," replied Cole. "Group H
stays in formation behind the Theodore
Roosevelt. I promise you'll see your share of action."
There were no further
comments or questions.
"All right. Groups A
through D can begin their approach. Remember: I want those Class L ships out
well ahead of you."
Two thousand ships began
approaching the Rubino system.
"Any sign of activity
there yet?" asked Cole.
"No, sir," said
Christine, who had returned from the infirmary and replaced Domak.
"Figures. It won't come
from the planet. What's the point of having a fleet of space ships if they're
not in space?"
"Got them, sir!"
said Briggs. He frowned. "Well, some of them. Maybe twelve hundred. They
were orbiting the second moon. But there should be more."
"There will be,"
said Cole.
The Rubino ships began
gathering in a defensive formation between the planet and the Navy ships, but
they didn't move out to meet them. The eleven Class L ships accelerated ahead
of the rest, and when they got within range the Rubino ships began firing.
"This is
Bainshank," came a group leader's voice. "So far they haven't got
anything we can't handle—or, rather, that the Class Ls can't handle."
"Let 'em know it,"
said Cole. "Don't fire back. Just keep moving and let them see they can't
harm you. Maybe we can convince them it's not worth the effort."
"Right," said
Bainshank. "We're within about ten thousand miles now and—"
Suddenly there was a
brilliant flash of light on the viewscreen.
"What the hell was that?' asked Cole.
"I don't know,"
said Jacovic. "Some form of pulse torpedo, but nothing I've ever seen
before."
"I can't raise Captain
Bainshank," said Christine. "Do you suppose that was his ship?"
"Probably," said
Cole. "Broadcast this to all of them: We've just lost Group Leader
Bainshank to an unfamiliar weapon that instantly destroyed his ship. Go on the
offensive immediately. Don't wait for them to prove it wasn't a fluke. If any
of you can spot anything that will help us identify which ships are carrying
that particular asset, let us know instantly."
"There can't be too
many of them," said Jacovic. "Otherwise, they'd have used it on
Deluros."
"Let's hope you're right,"
said Cole.
The Navy opened fire, and
the results were devastating. More than one hundred Rubino ships were destroyed
in the first three minutes. Then there was another brilliant explosion, and
another Class L ship vanished.
"I've spotted the
source of that weapon," said Mellinara's voice. "It's on the second
moon, but we can't break through to get to it yet."
"How the hell can they
shoot so accurately if their ships are shielding the weapon from your
attack?" asked Cole.
"I saw that energy bolt
or torpedo or whatever it was," said Mellinara, "and crazy as it
sounds, it seemed to thread its way through the Rubino ships. There's got to be
something in or on their structure that repels it . . . well, that sidesteps
it, at least. I've sent the coordinates to you."
"Got them," said
Christine.
"We'll take it from
here," said Cole. "Mr. Briggs, feed those coordinates to the leaders
of Groups F and G, and tell them to attack from opposite directions, get this
weapon in a crossfire and hit it with everything they've got."
"Just F and G,
sir?" said Briggs. "Not Groups E and H as well?"
"Just do what I tell
you," said Cole.
"Yes, sir."
"I wish to hell I knew
where the bulk of their fleet is," said Cole.
"Watching,"
answered Jacovic.
"Why aren't they
fighting?"
"Why aren't your Groups
E and H fighting?" replied the Teroni. "They're doing the same thing
we planned to do: testing your strength and your defenses with that weapon.
It's kept us occupied. We haven't fired a single shot at the planet."
"You're not suggesting
this is a ruse?" said Cole, frowning.
"No, sir. But I have a
feeling that once we destroy this weapon, as I'm sure we will, they'll find
other ways to draw our attention away from the planet, to lead us where they
want us to go."
"Where do you suppose
that is?"
"I don't know,"
answered Jacovic. "But wherever it is, that's where we'll find the rest of
their fleet."
"I agree," said
Cole. Then: "Let's not play in their ballpark."
"I beg your pardon,
sir?" said Jacovic, looking confused.
"Let's choose our own battlefield
and make our own rules of engagement," said Cole. "Christine, get me
the leader of Group E."
"Captain Gimanji
here," said a strong female voice.
"This is Cole. Don't
wait for the forces on the planet to shoot. Pick a couple of legitimate targets
on the surface, either military or something showing major industrial activity
if you can find them, and take them out. If you draw any fire, and I'm sure you
will, then go after the weaponry."
"Yes, sir."
"We destroyed the
weapon, sir!" announced Rachel excitedly.
"If they could make
one, they could make more," said Cole. "Let me think." He was
silent for a few seconds. "All right. Have Groups F and G start searching
for more weapons on the moon. With the instruments they have, and a thousand
ships sharing the job, we should know what's there inside five minutes. If
there is another one, coordinate
their efforts and take it out. If not, have them report to me." He turned
to Jacovic. "There won't be any, not there. If they wanted to draw us
farther away from the planet, they wouldn't do it by giving us a reason to keep
searching that moon."
"Sir," said
Rachel, "the planet is firing Level 5 lasers at Group E."
"All from one
location?"
"So far."
"Christine, put me
through to Gimanji."
"Done, sir."
"Gimanji, this is
Cole."
"You didn't tell me
they had Level 5 burners," she said.
"I didn't know."
"We'll turn them into
rubble in about ninety more seconds," she promised.
"Good. Once you do,
disperse your group around the planet. Fire at any likely target, and see what
fires back. If it's anything above Level 2, report its location and knock it
out."
"Will do."
He broke the connection,
then concentrated on the battle around the moon. They hadn't been fired on by
anything similar to the weapon that had destroyed Bainshank's ship, and their
superior numbers were grinding the Rubino fleet down.
"They have to show up
soon," said Cole.
"They may not like what
they've seen," suggested Jacovic.
"That would make sense
at Deluros, or the Inner Frontier," replied Cole. "But Rubino is
their home. They won't stand by while we blow it apart. I just wish I knew
what's keeping them."
"They're retreating to
the vicinity of Rubino VII, sir," said Mellinara's voice. "Do you
want us to pursue them?"
"Absolutely not,"
said Cole. "Hold your position, and tell the other groups to do the
same."
"Yes, sir."
Cole looked at the screen,
which was filled with the rubble of dead spaceships floating aimlessly,
occasionally colliding with each other or still-living ships.
"What are our
losses?" he asked.
"I can't be totally
accurate, sir," replied Briggs, "but I'd estimate we've lost two
hundred ships and they've lost, oh, it must be close to seven hundred."
"And nothing's taken
off from the planet?"
"No, sir."
"Have Groups F and G
finished hunting for another weapon on that moon?"
"Yes, sir. Results
negative."
"Get me
Mellinara." Cole waited a few seconds for the connection to be made.
"Are they still retreating toward the seventh planet?"
"Yes, sir, they
are," said Captain Mellinara.
"Okay. I want Groups A,
B, C, and D to approach Rubino V. If no one tries to hinder you, ask Captain
Gimanji what targets she's picked out and give her a hand with them. Try to
hold collateral damage to a minimum."
"We're on our way,
sir."
"Groups F and G,"
said Cole. "Take up orbit around the moon you've been searching. Those
Rubino ships aren't going to stay away when they see we aren't following them.
When they return, engage them."
The next five minutes
consisted of reports from Groups A through E, which were hitting selected
industrial areas on the planet and demolishing any ground batteries that fired
on them.
"Here they come,
sir!" Briggs suddenly announced.
"From the outer
planets?"
"Yes, sir."
"How many?"
"Six thousand, seven
thousand," he answered.
"Captain Mellinara,
Captain Gimanji, you're about to get some company," said Cole. "The
rest of their fleet is on the way. Groups F and G will meet them out by the
moon, but they're badly outnumbered and they're going to need some help. I want
groups B through E to withdraw from the planet and support our forces out by
the moon."
"What about us,
sir?" said a voice. "Captain Ramos, Group A, sir."
"Keep pounding
industrial sites and ground batteries," said Cole. "I'll let you know
if we need you at the moon."
"Seven thousand of
them, a little less than three thousand of us," noted Jacovic.
"It'll be a fair
fight," said Cole.
"Our weaponry is a
little better, and so are our defenses," said Jacovic. "But the
numbers ..."
"Weapons don't mean
that much in these quantities. What counts is that we refused to play their
game, and we've forced them to play ours."
"Could you explain
that, sir?" said the Teroni.
"They wanted us to
follow them; we didn't. We wanted them to reveal their full strength and come
back to Rubino V; they did."
"Sir!" said a
harsh voice.
"Who is this?"
"Commander Kristoff.
I'm the leader of Group H. Are you ever going
to use us?"
"When the time
comes," said Cole.
"When is that?"
"I'll let you
know." He signaled Christine to cut the connection, then turned to Jacovic.
"I admire his enthusiasm, if not his discipline."
"When are we going to use them, sir?"
asked Briggs.
"When the need
arises," said Cole. "It shouldn't be long now." He walked over
to Wxakgini. "Pilot, take us inside the orbit of Rubino V."
"How far inside?"
"Halfway to Rubino IV.
What's that—about twenty million miles?"
"Eighteen
million," Wxakgini corrected him.
"Mr. Briggs, make sure
Kristoff and his group follow us."
"What are you
expecting, sir?" asked Rachel.
"I'm not sure, but that
was pinpoint bombing we saw on Deluros VIII. The whole planet is one single
city, but they knew exactly where to hit the parliament and the court, and
where the Secretary's office was. What does that say to you?"
"They had previously
scouted out the territory," she said.
"Right. And if they
scouted it out, they had to know how massive and powerful the Republic's
military engine is."
"Maybe they thought the
wormhole would move before the Republic could mount a counterattack,"
suggested Briggs.
Cole shook his head.
"The Republic has three and a half million ships. They control a sizable
portion of the galaxy. They didn't need
the wormhole. It's convenient, but it's not necessary. They could mount a
massive retaliation without it, and I can't believe the Rubinos weren't aware
of it."
"What are you driving
at, sir?" asked Christine.
"That whatever they've
got in reserve, we haven't seen it yet. And if it wasn't on the outer planets,
it's either coming from the inner planets or a nearby system . . . and it can
get here a lot faster if it starts within the Rubino system."
"The fact that they
tried to draw us to the outer planets would seem to support that," agreed
Jacovic.
"We'll find out soon
enough," replied Cole. "That's why I wanted Captain Ramos to keep
bombarding the planet. If we all went
out to meet their fleet, they might wait to see the outcome before calling in
the reserves. I think this will encourage them not to hold anything back."
"I am now holding our
position," said Wxakgini.
"Fine," said Cole.
"It shouldn't be long."
Three minutes later Briggs
announced that a small fleet, numbering no more than fifty ships, was
approaching from the direction of Rubino II.
"We've got to find out
what they have, and quick," said Cole. "Clearly they don't plan to
overwhelm us with numbers."
"One ship seems much
larger than the others, sir," said Briggs. "It's almost as big as a
dreadnought."
"A dreadnought, even
the Xerxes, wouldn't turn the tide of
battle," said Cole. "It's something else."
"I'm getting an image,
sir," said Briggs.
Soon everyone on the bridge
could see the glowing mechanism that was larger than any ship on either side,
but seemed to be more weapon than ship.
"It's not flying,"
noted Jacovic. "It's being towed."
"Five will get you ten
it's the big brother of the one we destroyed on the moon," said Cole.
"Run the image by the groups that destroyed it and ask if it looks
familiar."
The reply was almost
instantaneous. It looked identical, but was twelve to fifteen times larger.
"Why don't they have
hundreds of them?" asked Rachel.
"I don't know,"
said Cole. "Maybe they have a limited supply of whatever it is that they
fire. Maybe they just invented it, and the one we destroyed was a prototype for
this baby. After all, they could have attacked any time in the past five centuries
if they felt safe. Clearly they think it's all they need to defend the planet.
Put me through to Kristoff."
"Kristoff here,"
came the reply a few seconds later.
"I think we're ready to
unleash you, Commander Kristoff. Do you see that huge weapon that's being towed
by the four Class J ships?"
"Is that what it
is?"
"That's what it
is," said Cole. "Destroy it and the battle's as good as over."
"We'll be happy
to!"
"And don't
underestimate it. I have a feeling that neither you nor I have ever seen a weapon
as powerful as this one. Spread your group out, try to englobe it, and do it
fast. Believe me when I tell you that you can't withstand it for even a
fraction of a second once it fires at you."
"What the hell is
it?"
"Powerful," said
Cole. "Now get to work."
Cole could hear Kristoff
giving orders to the five hundred ships in his group. They instantly spread
out, shooting off in different directions, and within a minute they had the
Rubino ships and the weapon englobed. The Rubino ships began firing, the Navy
ships returned their fire, and after another minute had passed some twenty-six
of the Rubino ships and eleven Navy ships floated dead in space.
Then the weapon joined the
battle. What looked like a series of lightning bolts shot out, and where each
hit a ship—and every single one of them hit a target—the ship exploded and
briefly became a fireball, just as the ship had during the initial encounter by
Rubino V's moon.
"Those blasts are like
heat-seeking missiles," remarked Cole, staring at the screen. "Once
they've chosen a target, they keep after it even if it's changed
directions."
"They're decimating H
Group, sir," said Jacovic. "It's not fighting like a weapon that's in
any danger of running out of ammunition."
"I agree," said
Cole. "We've got to think of something soon, before all of H Group is a
pile of ashes floating in space."
"More ships,
perhaps?" suggested Jacovic without much conviction.
Cole shook his head.
"More firepower usually just makes for more confusion and more collateral
damage. You win most battles by using your brain." He muttered a curse.
"Mine doesn't seem to be functioning."
"We've hit it fifteen
or twenty times, but we're not doing it any damage," reported Kristoff.
"Maybe the damned thing will run out of ammunition; I can't see any other
way to stop it."
"It won't run out of
ammunition," said Jacovic. "If there was a chance of it, they
wouldn't have put their planet at risk."
"You'd better think of
something quick," said Kristoff. "I've lost about fifty ships to it
already."
"Kristoff," said
Cole. "You've got a Level 5 thumper on your ship. Have you used it on the
weapon?"
"Didn't make a dent,
sir."
"Okay, thanks,"
said Cole. He broke the connection. "No sense using ours. It'll just make
the damned weapon concentrate on the Teddy
R." He stared at the viewscreen as the devastation continued— and
suddenly he peered forward intently. "I can follow those pulse blasts with
my eye."
"I don't follow you,
sir," said Jacovic.
"They're not going at
light speeds, or anywhere near," continued Cole. "Either they can't,
or they won't do it until they have to."
The Teroni merely stared at
him.
"That implies that a
ship could outrun the blast, at least for a few seconds."
"All right, it can
outrun the blast for a few seconds," said Jacovic, still puzzled. "So
what?"
"Get me Pampas."
"Done," said
Christine.
"Bull, get down to the
shuttle bay on the double. Program the Archie
to leave the ship, approach the weapon, fire a laser blast at it—"
"It won't do any good,
sir," said Pampas. "All the shuttles have are Level 2 weapons. That
won't make a dent in it."
"Then stop interrupting
and listen," said Cole. "The Archie
goes without a pilot or crew. I want you to program it to take evasive action
the instant it fires at the weapon. Got it?"
"Yes, sir," said
Pampas, as he got off the airlift and raced to the shuttle bay.
"I don't understand
what you're doing, sir," said Briggs.
"I think I'm beginning
to," said Jacovic.
"Ready, sir," said
Pampas.
"Turn it loose,"
said Cole.
They all watched on the
viewscreen as the Archie shot out of
the ship, made a beeline for the Rubino superweapon, fired a laser blast, and
then began evasive maneuvering. The weapon responded, the lightning bolt
spurted out and closed in on the Archie,
matching it move for move, and turned it into a fireball a few seconds later.
"It could work," said Jacovic.
"I'm still in the
dark," said Briggs.
"Me, too," agreed
Rachel.
"Mr. Briggs, instead of
Bull programming the Kermit, can you
fix it for me to control it from up here?" asked Cole.
"Yes, sir," said
Briggs. He manipulated his computer for a moment, then stood up. When you touch
this spot"—he indicated a place on the terminal—"a holographic panel
will appear. It won't have any solidity, of course, but it will be identical to
the controls on the shuttle, and as you touch them the Kermit will respond as if you were inside it at its controls."
"Let me give it a
try," said Cole. "Bull, open the shuttle bay again."
"No crew on the Kermit, sir?"
"None."
"All right, you're
ready to go, sir," said Pampas.
Cole touched the spot Briggs
had indicated, then held his hands just above the holographic panel. He moved
the Kermit out into space, and put it
through two minutes of maneuvers until he was comfortable with it.
"Put me through to
Kristoff," he ordered.
"Kristoff here."
"Commander, withdraw
your ships. You're not making any progress, and we're going to try something
different."
"Yes, sir," said
Kristoff, making no attempt to keep the reluctance and disappointment out of
his voice.
Cole waited until Kristoff's
group began clearing the area.
"Okay, here goes,"
he said. He turned the Kermit to face
the Weapon—Cole thought of it with a capital W now—and fired a totally
ineffective laser blast at it. As he did so, he simultaneously pushed the Kermit to near light speed, darted well
to the left of the Weapon and below, then turned and plunged directly toward
it. The lightning pulse caught up with the shuttle a microsecond after it
crashed against the Weapon, and the Weapon itself exploded in the biggest fireball
of all.
Cole turned to his crew.
"We destroyed it with the only thing strong enough to destroy it," he
said. A satisfied smile crossed his face. "I just had a feeling it might
work."
"This is
Kristoff," said a voice. "What the hell happened?"
"I'll explain
later," said Cole. "Right now I want you to ride shotgun for me while
I approach Rubino V." He broke the connection. "Mr. Briggs, how is
the conflict going out by Rubino's moon? I need a damage report."
"It's continuing, sir.
I can't give you an exact count—there's too much debris obscuring parts of the
battle—but we seem to be getting much the better of it." A pause.
"The reports are starting to come in, sir. Group B has lost twenty-seven
ships, Group C sixty-two, Group E thirty-nine ..."
"What about Group
D?"
"I can't contact them,
sir. I suspect their leader has been destroyed. Group F had lost one hundred
seventy-one ships and Group G one hundred sixteen, but those two groups did
bear the brunt of the attack. Enemy damages number upwards of three thousand."
"Good," said Cole.
"Pilot, get us to Rubino V and put us in orbit."
Once the Teddy R was circling the planet, Cole
walked over to Christine's station. "I want to send a message to the
president, premiere, secretary, king, whatever he is. Can you do that?"
"I don't have his code
or coordinates," she replied. "But I can broadcast your message to
the entire planet. It's sure to reach him, and we'll sort out which reply is
his."
"Fine," said Cole.
"Do it."
"Ready," she
replied in a few seconds.
"Leaders of Rubino
V," he said, "this is Wilson Cole, Captain of the Theodore Roosevelt, which is the
flagship of this response to your unprovoked attack on Deluros VIII. We have
destroyed your weapon, and we are currently decimating your fleet. We can
continue the battle until your last ship has been destroyed, and then land and
hunt down the members of your government one by one—and if you don't surrender
we will do just that. If, on the other hand, you do surrender, there will be no further hostilities, now or in the
future. Our collective memories will extend no farther back than this moment,
and you will be invited to participate in a galaxy-wide government."
"There isn't one,"
came the reply.
"Wait," he
promised.
Within ten minutes the
government had agreed to a cease-fire.
Cole and his senior officers
stood in the Secretary's office on Deluros VIII, facing Aloysius Chang, Anya
Kranchev, and half a dozen other members of the parliament.
"We have all signed
that paper," said Chang, pulling it out of his pocket. "I now present
it to you. Not everyone in this government has as low a regard for the truth as
our most recent Secretary."
"I hope you're not
expecting me to tear this up as a gesture of goodwill," said Cole, folding
the paper and placing it in a pocket. "There have been too many abuses
committed in the name of the Republic. Maybe the people in this room didn't
support them, but you didn't do anything to stop them either."
There was no response, and
Cole continued. "I think the Republic has outlived its usefulness. It was
necessary when Man made his first tentative steps into a galaxy that was
frequently hostile to him, but that time is passed. You need a government that
encompasses all the sentient life-forms on equal footing—including the Teronis
and the Rubinos."
"I won't even argue it
with you," said Chang. "In fact, we have discussed it among
ourselves, and we would be honored if you would accept the Secretaryship of
this new government."
"Me?" said Cole,
surprised.
"Yes."
"I hate politics, and with
all due respect, I hate politicians even more. I respectfully decline your
offer."
"Are you quite
sure?" said Anya.
"I am. But when you
form your government, I do have a recommendation."
"Oh?"
He put an arm around his
First Officer's shoulders. "Commander Jacovic is the most honorable being
I have ever known. I think you would be well advised to offer him a position of
some authority."
"But he's a
Teroni!" blurted Anya.
"Who better to
negotiate a peace treaty with the Teronis?" said Cole. "You can't build
a true galactic democracy without them."
The politicians whispered
among themselves for a moment. Then Chang approached Jacovic.
"Commander Jacovic,
would you consider joining our government's leadership?"
"I would be empowered
to negotiate with other races on behalf of the government?"
"That goes without
saying," replied Anya.
"When you're dealing
with politicians, nothing goes without saying," interjected Cole.
"Will all of you sign a statement agreeing to these conditions?"
They didn't even bother conferring
this time.
"Yes, we would,"
said Chang. "Commander, once again: will you join us?"
"I would be
honored," replied the Teroni.
Chang turned to Cole.
"And what will you do?"
"The Teddy R still has a few years and a few
voyages left," answered Cole. "The Democracy will probably be better
than the Republic, especially with Jacovic in it, but to tell the truth I think
we're sick of all governments.
There's a big galaxy out there, and there are still a lot of things to be seen
for the first time."
And so saying, Wilson Cole
and his crew went off to see them.
THE
ORIGIN OF THE
It happened in the 1970s.
Carol and I were watching a truly awful movie at a local theater, and about
halfway through it I muttered, "Why am I wasting my time here when I could
be doing something really interesting, like, say, writing the entire history of
the human race from now until its extinction?" And she whispered back,
"So why don't you?" We got up immediately, walked out of the theater,
and that night I outlined a novel called Birthright:
The Book of Man, which would tell the story of the human race from its
attainment of faster-than-light flight until its death eighteen thousand years
from now.
It was a long book to write.
I divided the future into five political eras—Republic, Democracy, Oligarchy,
Monarchy, and Anarchy—and wrote twenty-six connected stories
("demonstrations," Analog called
them, and rightly so), displaying every facet of the human race, both admirable
and not so admirable. Since each is set a few centuries from the last, there
are no continuing characters (unless you consider Man, with a capital M, the
main character, in which case you could make an argument—or at least, I
could—that it's really a character study).
I sold it to Signet, along
with another novel titled The Soul Eater.
My editor there, Sheila Gilbert, loved the Birthright Universe and asked me
if I would be willing to make a few changes to The Soul Eater so that it
was set in that future. I agreed, and the changes actually took less than a
day. She made the same request—in advance, this time—for the four-book Tales of
the Galactic Midway series, the four-book Tales of the Velvet Comet series, and
Walpurgis III. Looking back, I see that only two of the thirteen novels I wrote
for Signet were not set there.
When I moved to Tor Books,
my editor there, Beth Meacham, had a fondness for the Birthright Universe, and
most of my books for her— not all, but most—were set in it: Santiago, Ivory, Paradise, Purgatory,
Inferno, A Miracle of Rare Design, A Hunger in the Soul, The Outpost, and The Return
of Santiago.
When Ace agreed to buy Soothsayer, Oracle, and Prophet from me, my editor, Ginjer
Buchanan, assumed that of course they'd be set in the Birthright Universe—and
of course they were, because as I learned a little more about my
eighteen-thousand-year, two-million-world future, I felt a lot more comfortable
writing about it.
In fact, I started setting
short stories in the Birthright Universe. Two of my Hugo winners—"Seven
Views of Olduvai Gorge" and "The 43 Antarean Dynasties"—are set
there, and so are almost twenty others.
When Bantam agreed to take
the Widowmaker trilogy from me, it was a foregone conclusion that Janna
Silverstein, who purchased the books (but moved to another company before they
came out) would want them to take place in the Birthright Universe. She did
indeed request it, and I did indeed agree.
I recently handed in a book
to Meisha Merlin, set—where else?— in the Birthright Universe.
And when it came time to
suggest a series of books to Lou Anders for the new Pyr line of science
fiction, I don't think I ever considered any ideas or stories that weren't set in the Birthright Universe.
I've gotten so much of my
career from the Birthright Universe that I wish I could remember the name of
that turkey we walked out of all those years ago so I could write the producers
and thank them.
THE LAYOUT OF THE
The most heavily populated
(by both stars and inhabitants) section of the Birthright Universe is always
referred to by its political identity, which evolves from Republic to Democracy
to Oligarchy to Monarchy. It encompasses millions of inhabited and habitable
worlds. Earth is too small and too far out of the mainstream of galactic
commerce to remain Man's capital world, and within a couple of thousand years
the capital has been moved lock, stock, and barrel halfway across the galaxy to
Deluros VIII, a huge world with about ten time's Earth's surface and
near-identical atmosphere and gravity. By the middle of the Democracy, perhaps
four thousand years from now, the entire planet is covered by one huge
sprawling city. By the time of the Oligarchy, even Deluros VIII isn't big
enough for our billions of empire-running bureaucrats, and Deluros VI, another
large world, is broken up into forty-eight planetoids, each housing a major
department of the government (with four planetoids given over entirely to the
military).
Earth itself is way out in
the boonies, on the Spiral Arm. I don't believe I've set more than parts of a
couple of stories on the Arm.
At the outer edge of the
galaxy is the Rim, where worlds are spread out and underpopulated. There's so
little of value or military interest on the Rim that one ship, such as the Theodore Roosevelt, can patrol a couple
of hundred worlds by itself. In later eras, the Rim will be dominated by
feuding warlords, but it's so far away from the center of things that the
governments, for the most part, just ignore it.
Then there are the Inner and
Outer Frontiers. The Outer Frontier is that vast but sparsely populated area
between the outer edge of the Republic/Democracy/Oligarchy/Monarchy and the
Rim. The Inner Frontier is that somewhat smaller (but still huge) area between
the inner reaches of the Republic/etc. and the black hole at the core of the
galaxy.
It's on the Inner Frontier
that I've chosen to set more than half of my novels. Years ago the brilliant
writer R. A. Lafferty wrote: "Will there be a mythology of the future,
they used to ask, after all has become science? Will high deeds be told in
epic, or only in computer code?" I decided that I'd like to spend at least
a part of my career trying to create those myths of the future, and it seems to
me that myths, with their bigger-than-life characters and colorful settings,
work best on frontiers where there aren't too many people around to chronicle
them accurately, or too many authority figures around to prevent them from
playing out to their inevitable conclusions. So I arbitrarily decided that the
Inner Frontier was where my myths
would take place, and I populated it with people bearing names like Catastrophe
Baker, the Widowmaker, the Cyborg de Milo, the ageless Forever Kid, and the
like. It not only allows me to tell my heroic (and sometimes antiheroic) myths,
but lets me tell more realistic stories occurring at the very same time a few
thousand light-years away in the Republic or Democracy or whatever happens to
exist at that moment.
Over the years I've fleshed
out the galaxy. There are the star clusters—the Albion Cluster, the Quinellus
Cluster, a few others, and a pair that are new to this series, the Phoenix and
Cassius clusters. There are the individual worlds, some important enough to
appear as the title of a book, such as Walpurgis III, some reappearing throughout
the time periods and stories, such as Deluros VIII, Antares III, Binder X,
Keepsake, Spica II, some others, and hundreds (maybe thousands by now) of
worlds (and races, now that I think about it) mentioned once and never again.
Then there are, if not the
bad guys, at least what I think of as the Disloyal Opposition. Some, like the
Sett Empire, get into one war with humanity and that's the end of it. Some,
like the Canphor Twins (Can-phor VI and Canphor VII) have been a thorn in Man's
side for the better part of ten millennia. Some, like Lodin XI, vary almost
daily in their loyalties depending on the political situation.
I've been building this
universe, politically and geographically, for over a quarter of a century now,
and with each passing book and story it feels a little more real to me. Give me
another thirty years and I'll probably believe every word I've written about
it.
THE
BIRTHRIGHT UNIVERSE
Year |
Era |
World |
Story or Novel |
|
|||||||
1885 |
A.D. |
|
"The Hunter" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
1898 |
A.D. |
|
"Himself' (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
1982 |
A.D. |
|
Sideshow |
|
|||||||
1983 |
A.D. |
|
The
Three-Legged Hootch Dancer |
|
|||||||
1985 |
A.D. |
|
The
Wild Alien Tamer |
|
|||||||
1987 |
A.D. |
|
The
Best Rootin' Tootin' Shootin' Gunslingi |
|
|||||||
|
|
|
in
the Whole Damned Galaxy |
|
|||||||
2057 |
A.D. |
|
"The Politician" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
2403 |
A.D. |
|
"Shaka II" |
|
|||||||
2988 |
A.D. |
= 1 G.E. |
|
|
|||||||
16 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Curator" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
264 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Pioneers" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
332 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Cartographers" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
346 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Walpurgis
III |
|
|||||||
367 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Eros
Ascending |
|
|||||||
396 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Miners" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
401 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Eros
at Zenith |
|
|||||||
442 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Eros
Descending |
|
|||||||
465 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Eros
at Nadir |
|
|||||||
522 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"All the Things You Are" |
|
|||||||
588 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Psychologists" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
616 |
G.E. |
Republic |
A
Miracle of Rare Design |
|
|||||||
882 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Potentate" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
962 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Merchants" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
1150 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Cobbling Together a
Solution" |
|
|||||||
1151 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Nowhere in Particular" |
|
|||||||
1152 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The God Biz" |
|
|||||||
1394 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Keepsakes" |
|
|||||||
1701 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"The Artist" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
1813 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Dawn" (Paradise) |
|
|||||||
1826 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Purgatory |
|
|||||||
1859 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Noon" (Paradise) |
|
|||||||
1888 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Midafternoon" (Paradise) |
|
|||||||
1902 |
G.E. |
Republic |
"Dusk" (Paradise) |
|
|||||||
1921 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Inferno |
|
|||||||
1966 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Starship:
Mutiny |
|
|||||||
1967 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Starship:
Pirate |
|
|||||||
1968 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Starship:
Mercenary |
|
|||||||
1969 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Starship:
Rebel |
|
|||||||
1970 |
G.E. |
Republic |
Starship:
Flagship |
|
|||||||
2122 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The 43 Antarean Dynasties" |
|
|||||||
2154 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Diplomats" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
2239 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"Monuments of Flesh and Stone |
|
|||||||
2275 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Olympians" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
2469 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Barristers" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
2885 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"Robots Don't Cry" |
|
|||||||
2911 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Medics" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
3004 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Policitians" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
3042 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Gambler" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
3286 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
Santiago |
|
|||||||
3322 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
A Hunger
in the Soul |
|
|||||||
3324 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
The
Soul Eater |
|
|||||||
3324 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"Nicobar Lane: The Soul Eater's
Story" |
|
|||||||
3407 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
The
Return of Santiago |
|
|||||||
34-27 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
Soothsayer |
|
|||||||
3441 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
Oracle |
|
|||||||
3447 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
Prophet |
|
|||||||
3502 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"Guardian Angel" |
|
|||||||
3504 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"A Locked-Planet Mystery" |
|
|||||||
3504 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"Honorable Enemies" |
|
|||||||
3719 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"Hunting the Snark" |
|
|||||||
4375 |
G.E. |
Democracy |
"The Graverobber" {Ivory) |
|
|||||||
4822 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Administrators" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
4839 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
The
Dark Lady |
|
|||||||
5101 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
The
Widowmaker |
|
|||||||
5103 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
The
Widowmaker Reborn |
|
|||||||
5106 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
The
Widoivmaker Unleashed |
|
|||||||
5108 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
A
Gathering of Widowmakers |
|
|||||||
5461 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Media" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
5492 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Artists" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
5521 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Warlord" (Ivory) |
|
|||||||
5655 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Biochemists" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
5912 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Warlords" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
5993 |
G.E. |
Oligarchy |
"The Conspirators" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
6304 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
Ivory |
|
|||||||
6321 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"The Rulers" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
6400 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"The Symbiotics" (Birthright) |
|
|||||||
6521 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"Catastrophe Baker and the |
|
|||||||
|
|
|
Cold Equations" |
|
|||||||
6523 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
The
Outpost |
||||||||
6599 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"The Philosophers" (Birthright) |
||||||||
6746 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"The Architects" (Birthright) |
||||||||
6962 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"The Collectors" (Birthright) |
||||||||
7019 |
G.E. |
Monarchy |
"The Rebels" (Birthright) |
||||||||
16201 |
G.E. |
Anarchy |
"The Archaeologists" (Birthright) |
||||||||
16673 |
G.E. |
Anarchy |
"The Priests" (Birthright) |
||||||||
16888 |
G.E. |
Anarchy |
"The Pacifists" (Birthright) |
||||||||
17001 |
G.E. |
Anarchy |
"The Destroyers" (Birthright) |
||||||||
21703 |
G.E. |
"Seven Views of Olduvai
Gorge" |
|||||||||
Novels not set in this
future
Adventures (1922-1926 A.D.) Exploits (1926-1931 A.D.) Encounters
(1931-1934 A.D.) Hazards (1934-1939
A.D.)
Stalking
the Unicorn ("Tonight")
Stalking
the Vampire ("Tonight")
Stalking
the Dragon ("Tonight")
The
Branch (2047-2051 A.D.)
Second
Contact (2065 A.D.)
Bully! (1910-1912 A.D.)
Kirinyaga (2123-2137 A.D.)
Kilimanjaro (2235-2241 A.D.)
Lady
with an Alien (1490
A.D.)
A Club in Montmartre (1890-1901 A.D.)
Dragon
America: Revolution (1779—1780
A.D.)
The
World behind the Door (1928
A.D.)
The
Other Teddy Roosevelts (1888-1919
A.D.)
If you've been reading the Starsbip books, you know that the
quickest way to traverse the galaxy at many multiples of the speed of light is
by the use of wormholes. A science fiction invention, you say? Guess again.
The term
"wormhole" was actually invented in 1957 by John Wheeler, an American
theoretical physicist. The concept predated him by thirty-six years, and was
theorized by Hermann Weyl, a German mathematician.
So do they break Einstein's
laws of the universe? Well, Einstein didn't think so. He and a colleague named
Nathan Rosen came up with Einstein-Rosen bridges, which are bridges between
areas of space that get around the limitations posed by Einstein's special
theory of relativity . . . and for the record, they inspired what have come to
be known as Schwarzschild wormholes and Lorentzian wormholes.
There has even been some
interesting cross-pollination. Carl Sagan, old "Billions and
Billions," was writing his first novel, Contact (science fiction, of course), in 1985, and asked
cosmologist Kip
Thorne to devise a wormhole
that was traversable, at least in theory— and Thorne and his partners proceeded
to do just that. The traversable wormhole is now known as the Morris-Thorne
wormhole. (A side effect was that the science behind these wormholes allowed
Thorne to make a legitimate, scientifically sound proposal for a time machine.)
Are there wormholes in space?
Almost certainly.
Can we travel through them.
The obvious answer is no.
The optimist's and the
science fiction writer's answers are: not yet . . . but stick around.
ETHICS
I hope the Starsbip books are fun, but like most
science fiction, they also deal with serious human problems. Starsbip: Mutiny examined the question of when (and if) you must refuse a
legitimate order, regardless of consequences. Starsbip: Pirate explored
the unwritten rules of engagement for someone who is forced to operate outside
the law. Starsbip: Mercenary considered when (and if) you
must refuse a job in your chosen field due to moral considerations. Starsbip: Rebel was concerned with the reaction to serious abuse when it is
committed not to yourself but to someone else, and what (if anything) must be
done about it.
For Starsbip: Flagship, the question was in this week's headlines (as I
write this in late May of 2009), and it concerns the debate over the harsh
interrogation of prisoners. At what point, the American people are being asked
to decide, is harsh interrogation justified? At what point does it become
torture? And is torture itself ever justified?
Well, of course, every
civilized person's first response is to say that no, of course torture is never
justified.
Okay. We now know that
waterboarding revealed the existence of a planned attack on a bank tower in Los
Angeles, a plan that was thwarted only because the victim of the waterboarding,
who had refused to cooperate with his interrogators for months prior to that,
gave them all the vital details after his experience.
Unjustified?
I think a good many people's
initial reaction would be yes.
Now let's pretend that my
wife works in that building, and would be instantly killed when a plane rammed
into it.
Still unjustified? I don't
think so any longer.
So we come to the crux of
it: Is torture acceptable under rigidly defined extreme circumstances, like
saving five thousand Angelinos who would be in that tower? Or—everyone's
favorite example—if it is the only way to find out where a bomb (possibly a
nuke) has been hidden before it explodes?
But there's another
consideration, too. Everyone will grant that waterboarding and similar methods
are harsh methods of interrogation indeed. But are they torture?
After all, the terrorist who
revealed the information about the tower was perfectly healthy the next day. He
suffered no ill effects, and waterboarding him may have saved a few thousand
lives. (Of course, it may not have saved them; we'll never know what continued
gentler methods might have achieved.) But the fact remains that, unlike the
torture American soldiers suffered at the hands of the Japanese in World War
II, this man emerged none the worse for wear. Indeed, our US Navy Seals undergo
waterboarding routinely to prepare them for it should they fall into enemy
hands; no one has ever died or been permanently disabled by it.
Still, many feel that it is
opposed to the principles outlined in the Constitution. There is an argument,
perhaps valid, that using such methods makes us no better than our enemies. And
there is another argument that until you know
there is a hidden bomb set to explode in three hours, you apply all legitimate
methods of questioning on the assumption that sooner or later you'll get the
answers you need.
I realize there are two sides
to the question, and each side is sure it has the morally correct position.
Which made it a perfect
problem for Wilson Cole to come to grips with.
THE BALLAD OF
WILSON COLE
John Anealio
Verse 1
In the time of
the Galactic Era in the year of 1966
Commander Cole
had to wrestle control from the Polonoi running the ship. And despite his four
medals of courage they court-martialed him anyway. The men of his crew came to
his rescue and embarked on their own deep in space.
Refrain
Yes they say Wilson
Cole was a hero and the captain of the Teddy R. He kept up the fight and
he did what was right as he led his fleet through the stars.
Verse 2
Then it came to 1967
after the ship's mutiny.
They made a deal with David Copperfield
and they allied with the Valkyrie.
And he didn't make much of a pirate
Wilson has an honest man.
He went and retrieved A Tale of Two Cities
and decided
that he'd change his plan.
Refrain
Verse 3
Then they
became mercenaries the year was 1968.
Their destination was Singapore Station
so they met at the Platinum Duke's Place.
Then they met the Teroni Jacovic
who became the ship's Third Officer.
Cole marshaled one thousand ships against a
lunatic
Csonti
retreated then went berserk.
Refrain
Verse 4
The Navy
murdered First Officer Forrice at a brothel on Braccio II.
Cole went and avenged the death of his
best friend killing the Endless Night and its crew. Then the Navy laid
waste to the planet and Wilson searched for volunteers. He gathered a fleet
that would never retreat as it defended the Inner Frontier.
Refrain
Verse 5
And then in
1970 Cole infiltrated Deluros VIII. He aimed his gun at the Admiral just as the
sky filled
with enemies
set to invade.
Wilson Cole led
the Theodore Roosevelt
and the ships
of the Republican Fleet.
The enemy was
defeated and the Secretary ceded
Cole's mission
was finally complete.
Refrain
John Anealio writes songs about science fiction and fantasy.
Alternate-tuned acoustic guitar picking, soaring synthesizers, and catchy pop
hooks power his odes to androids, princesses, starship captains, and vampires.
You can download "The Ballad of Wilson Cole" and many other original
songs for free at http://scifisongs.blogspot.com.
Locus, the trade journal of science fiction, keeps a list of the winners of
major science fiction awards on its Web page. Mike Resnick is currently fourth
in the all-time standings, ahead of Isaac Asimov, Sir Arthur C. Clarke, Ray
Bradbury, and Robert A. Heinlein.
He is the leading award-winner among all
authors, living and dead, for short science fiction.
Mike was born on March 5,
1942. He sold his first article in 1957, his first short story in 1959, and his
first book in 1962.
He attended the University
of Chicago from 1959 through 1961, won three letters on the fencing team, and
met and married Carol. Their daughter, Laura, was born in 1962, and has since
become a writer herself, winning two awards for her romance novels and the 1993
Campbell Award for Best New Science Fiction Writer.
Mike and Carol discovered
science fiction fandom in 1962, attended their first Worldcon in 1963, and
sixty science fiction novels into his career, Mike still considers himself a
fan and frequently contributes articles to fanzines. He and Carol appeared in
five Worldcon masquerades in the 1970s in costumes that she created, and they
won four of them.
Mike labored anonymously but
profitably from 1964 through 1976, selling more than two hundred novels, three
hundred short stories, and two thousand articles, almost all of them under
pseudonyms,
most of them in the
"adult" field. He edited seven different tabloid newspapers and a
trio of men's magazines, as well.
In 1968 Mike and Carol
became serious breeders and exhibitors of collies, a pursuit they continued
through 1981. During that time they bred and/or exhibited twenty-seven champion
collies, and they were the country's leading breeders and exhibitors during
various years along the way.
This led them to purchase
the Briarwood Pet Motel in Cincinnati in 1976. It was the country's
second-largest luxury boarding and grooming establishment, and they worked
full-time at it for the next few years. By 1980 the kennel was being run by a
staff of twenty-one, and Mike was free to return to his first love, science
fiction, albeit at a far slower pace than his previous writing. They sold the
kennel in 1993.
Mike's first novel in this
"second career" was The Soul
Eater, which was followed shortly by Birthright:
The Book of Man, Walpurgis III, the
four-book Tales of the Galactic Midway series, The Branch, the four-book
Tales of the Velvet Comet series, and Adventures,
all from Signet. His breakthrough novel was the international bestseller Santiago, published by Tor in 1986. Tor
has since published Stalking the Unicorn, The Dark Lady, Ivory, Second
Contact, Paradise, Purgatory, Inferno, the Double Bwana/Bully!, and the collection Will the Last Person to Leave the Planet Please Shut Off the Sun? His
most recent Tor releases were A Miracle of Rare Design, A Hunger in the Soul, The Outpost, and the The Return of Santiago.
Even at his reduced rate,
Mike was too prolific for one publisher, and in the 1990s Ace published Soothsayer, Oracle, and Prophet', Questar published Lucifer Jones', Bantam brought out the Locus best-selling trilogy of The Widowmaker, The Widowmaker Reborn, and
The Widow-maker Unleashed', and Del Rey published Kirtnyaga: A Fable of Utopia
and Lara Croft, Tomb Raider: The Amulet of Power. His current releases
include A Gathering of Widowmakers for Meisha Merlin, Dragon America for
Phobos, and Lady ivitlo an Alien, A Club in Montmarte, and The World behind the Door
for Watson-Guptill, Hazards and Kilimanjaro for Subterranean Press, and Stalking the Unicorn, Stalking the Vampire, Stalking the Dragon, and the
Starship series for Pyr.
Beginning with Shaggy B.E.M. Stories in 1988, Mike has
also become an anthology editor (and was nominated for a Best Editor Hugo in
1994 and 1995). His list of anthologies in print and in press totals
forty-eight, and includes Alternate Presidents, Alternate Kennedys, Sherlock
Holmes in Orbit, By Any Other Fame, Dinosaur Fantastic, Down These Dark
Spaceivays, The Dragon Done It, Alien Crimes, and When Diplomacy Fails, plus
the recent Stars, coedited with
superstar singer Janis Ian.
Mike has always supported
the "specialty press," and he has numerous books and collections out
in limited editions from such diverse publishers as Phantasia Press, Axolotl
Press, Misfit Press, Pulp-house Publishing, Wildside Press, Dark Regions Press,
NESFA Press, WSFA Press, Obscura Press, Farthest Star, and others. He recently
served a stint as the science fiction editor for BenBella Books, and in 2006 he
became the executive editor of Jim Baen's
Universe.
Mike was never interested in
writing short stories early in his career, producing only seven between 1976
and 1986. Then something clicked, and he has written and sold more than 235
stories since 1986, and now spends more time on short fiction than on novels.
The writing that has brought him the most acclaim thus far in his career is the
Kirinyaga series, which, with sixty-seven major and minor awards and
nominations to date, is the most honored series of stories in the history of
science fiction.
He also began writing short
nonfiction as well. He sold a four-part series, "Forgotten
Treasures," to the Magazine of
Fantasy and Science Fiction, was a regular columnist for Speculations ("Ask Bwana") for
twelve years, currently appears in every issue of the SFWA Bulletin ("The Resnick/Malzberg Dialogues"), and
wrote a biweekly column for the late, lamented GalaxyOnline.com.
Carol has always been Mike's
uncredited collaborator on his science fiction, but in recent years they have
sold two movie scripts—Santiago and The Widowmaker,
both based on Mike's books—and Carol is
listed as his collaborator on those.
Readers of Mike's works are
aware of his fascination with Africa, and the many uses to which he has put it
in his science fiction. Mike and Carol have taken numerous safaris, visiting
Kenya (four times), Tanzania, Malawi, Zimbabwe, Egypt, Botswana, and Uganda.
Mike edited the Library of African Adventure series for St. Martin's Press and
is currently editing The Resnick Library
of African Adventure and, with Carol as coeditor, The Resnick Library of
Worldwide Adventure for Alexander Books.
Since 1989, Mike has won
five Hugo Awards (for "Kirinyaga," "The Manamouki,"
"Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge," "The 43 Antarean
Dynasties," and "Travels with My Cats") and a Nebula Award (for
"Seven Views of Olduvai Gorge"), and has been nominated for
thirty-three Hugos, eleven Nebulas, a Clarke (British), and six Seiun-sho
(Japanese). He has also won a Seiun-sho, a Prix Tour Eiffel (French), two Prix
Ozones (French), ten HOMer Awards, an Alexander Award, a Golden Pagoda Award, a
Hayakawa SF Award (Japanese), a Locus
Award, three Ignotus Awards (Spanish), a Xatafi-Cyberdark Award (Spanish), a
Futura Award (Croatia), an El Melocoton Mechanico (Spanish), two Sfinks Awards
(Polish), and a Fantastyka Award (Polish), and has topped the Science Fiction Chronicle Poll six times, the Scifi Weekly Hugo Straw
Poll three times, and the Asimov's
Readers' Poll five times. In 1993 he was awarded the Skylark Award for Lifetime
Achievement in Science Fiction, and both in 2001 and in 2004 he was named
Fictionwise.com's Author of the Year.
His work has been translated
into French, Italian, German, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, Bulgarian, Hungarian,
Hebrew, Russian, Latvian, Lithuanian, Polish, Czech, Dutch, Swedish, Romanian,
Finnish, Danish, Chinese, Greek, Slovakian, Portuguese, and Croatian.
He was recently the subject of
Fiona Kelleghan's massive Mike Resnick:
An Annotated Bibliography and Guide to His Work. Adrienne Gormley is
currently preparing a second edition.