January 2829, Imperial Standard Reckoning
Imperial Palace, Nova Alexandria, EARTH
Elena was dead.
The fact struck him again like a whip as they reached the ballroom. Eun Alba
stopped to collect himself. His
reflection wavered ghostlike in the
silver-veined marble pillar next to him. It showed neither anguish nor fury. It
was a mask.
Elena died believing she was disgraced. Eun Alba watched his reflection twist
into an expression of rage. Elena was
dead, damn it! The marble felt
cool and unyielding beneath his fingertips. She would be avenged, he vowed to
himself.
"You all right, Jaguar?" Jaguar. His callsign.
Eun Alba’s friend loomed protectively over him. Oliphant Praldar Singh,
callsign Rajah, was an imposing figure,
scarred and muscled like a huge
tiger, the tattoo of his Sikh faith gleaming bright on the dusky skin of his
forehead.
Eun Alba nodded curtly and willed his face back to the mask. He and Singh
proceeded the last few meters and
handed their cards to the herald. An
archaic custom, but tradition often demanded a more low-tech touch. The man
glanced at the cards and placed them on a crystal tray before ushering the
Knights past him with a flourish.
They checked each other’s comportment quickly.
"Button your collar," Eun Alba told Singh as he straightened his own jacket.
Both wore the platinum and sable of
the Terran Defense Force elite Imperial
Knights, resplendent with dress swords and emerald jewelthread sashes.
Large
brass shoulderpieces echoed the look of ancient samurai.
"Oh, Gods, Col, no one’ll see it under the beard."
"They will, and you know it. Button it until after you’ve presented yourself to the Emperor, at least."
Singh made a great show of struggling to button the high green collar while
the herald waited with a pained
expression on his thin face. Singh finished
and made his eyes bulge comically. Eun Alba smiled in spite of himself.
The herald posed them quickly and cleared his throat before calling out,
"Colossa Eun Alba and Oliphant Praldar
Singh, Knights-Captain of His
Imperial Majesty’s Order of the Knights of the Rising Earth!"
The herald’s voice keyed hidden amplifiers and echoed over the Jubilee
gathering, accompanied by a large holovid
of the two Knights standing at the
head of the stair for the traditional five second count. Some of the glittering
crowd paused to taste the names and examine the holo, to decide, Eun Alba
observed cynically, whether anyone
important had arrived. Most of the faces
turned away, though a curious few did continue to watch, curious as to
whether he and the Hangman would clash, as they had occasionally during the
nearly thirty years of their feud.
There would be more than enough
witnesses.
Eun Alba hoped the Hangman was watching, too. His hand knotted on his sword
hilt. The Hangman would pay for
shaming Elena.
Had it only been an hour since she died? Ah, God, it was a wonder the world
went on! A raw hole yawned in Eun
Alba’s existence, a hollowness that ached
to be filled. And all he had now was fury. White-hot, like plasma in his
chest.
"Jaguar," Singh murmured. "Time to go down."
"Of course. Thank you."
Singh raised an eyebrow, clearly wondering if Eun Alba was up to this. Eun
Alba had insisted. Family honor had to
be protected decisively, before the
rumors could begin to spread. He would be strong enough, for Elena’s sake.
Eun Alba strode down the stairs with the arrogant confidence expected of an
Imperial Knight, one hand at his side,
the other resting comfortably on the
hilt of his saber. Beside him, Singh mumbled complaints at the tight collars of
their uniforms. The floor of the Grand Ballroom was a black mirror
stretching away on all sides beneath huge
columns of white marble. The
Emperor’s guests sparkled on that mirror, mingling lazily beneath emerald
banners
adorned with the Imperial Angel of Earth. Lamps seemed to float
above the throng. Eun Alba descended into a
murmur of conversation laced
with gentle music. At the bottom of the stair, he accepted a flute of champagne
from
a servant’s tray. Singh, he noted automatically, took a brandy.
Singh leaned against a pillar and pointed. "By God, Col, did you ever see anything so damned silly?"
A pair of ornate, gold plated Gorgon-class Hercs towered over the multitude.
The one on the left carried the Aztec
solar calendar etched on its upper
torso; the one on the right bore the leering face of some ancient god. The
titanic
machines gleamed under the glowlamps, a gilded display of Imperial
power. Despite the Imperial streamers
cascading over the barrels, the twin
Techau-Sauvage plasma cannons each Herc carried were no fripperies; they
could blow away anything short of an Apocalypse in a single blast.
Eun Alba grunted noncommittally. He didn’t like Gorgons, despite their
awesome firepower; they handled too
sluggishly for his taste.
"Bloody ridiculous," Singh added. He tossed his brandy down with a gulp and
called a servant over for fresh
drinks. Eun Alba didn’t even remember
tasting his, much less finishing it. He reminded himself to be careful.
Once they both held full glasses again, Singh took Eun Alba’s arm in his own
and led the way deeper into the
Jubilee celebrants. A woman in a dress of
liquid silver laughed gaily and extended a shapely arm toward them as
they
passed a flock of courtiers sharing a horseshoe-shaped couch. Eun Alba smiled
and nodded automatically, but
didn’t stop. Flirting among the court normally
offered a pleasant distraction, but not tonight. Not with the rage and
ache
inside him. He sipped from his glass. The brandy burned his tongue pleasantly,
and his mind drifted back to
happier times, horseback rides through the
orchards of the estate in Italy, laughter shared with Elena.
Yet Elena’s dead, the ache reminded him. Dead and gone.
Eun Alba scanned the crowd, anger and hurt sharpening his senses. Some
Knights were easily visible: Hellhound,
Throwback, Mako,
Pirouette, Deathwish, Flayboy — he knew them all, but the Hangman was
nowhere in sight.
He almost slopped brandy on his boots as Singh elbowed his arm. "For God’s sake, Raj —"
"Hsst! The Emperor!"
Eun Alba forgot the brandy and composed himself. The Emperor approached at
the head of an entourage, all
resplendent in dress finery. His Imperial
Majesty appeared as a hologram clad in the golden robes of a Chinese
Mandarin. The garb shimmered and flowed with the motion of coiling dragons.
The Emperor glanced over from his
conversation with a SpaceFleet Admiral and
nodded. His image and movement were high resolution, very lifelike,
Eun Alba
noted, and as always, somewhat disconcerting. One never knew where the Emperor’s
viewpoint was
located. The entire ballroom contained sensor links to relay
information back to its Master. He certainly wasn’t
looking at his guests
through those penetrating, light-woven eyes.
On the other hand, His Majesty’s hologram face looked less ravaged than his
real one, a small vanity Eun Alba
was glad of. Just seeing the Emperor’s
ancient husk with its army of life support machinery was painful. When Eun
Alba had attended the Emperor in person a few months ago, His Imperial
Majesty had been confined to a
wombcouch with an army of tubes and medical
devices sprouting from his body. The Emperor was immortal, as
everyone knew,
but his body wasn’t immune to the weight of age. No one knew how long he would
last, even with
the finest medical technology.
The Knights clicked their heels and bowed deeply. The Emperor acknowledged
them with a brief smile and a nod
before returning his attention to the
Admiral. Eun Alba saw no sign of the Imperial Escort, but the Emperor’s elite
bodyguards undoubtedly waited nearby. As a matter of face, even His Imperial
Majesty’s hologram would not be
left unattended.
A hush greeted the Emperor as he passed into the crowd like a ship sailing
through suddenly calm waters. People
on all sides bowed and curtsied, hushed
by the Imperial presence. Eun Alba felt dwarfed by the frail old man and all
he stood for: The Great Human Empire, the pinnacle of human achievement. The
guardian of Mother Earth, His
Imperial Majesty was the Empire. And against
Prometheus and the Cybrid menace, he was the only hope.
Prometheus. The name held a death-taint for Eun Alba as it did for all
sane humans, a bitter fear worse than Hitler,
Pol Pot, or Zenchenko. The
Cybrids were like a plague of scorpions waiting to fall out of the night,
stinging and
clacking. Eun Alba’s grandfather had fought in The Fire under
Sainted Gierling, whose memoirs were required
reading in the Eun Alba
family. There would be no peace while Cybrids still existed. And no quarter
would be given
when they came again.
"Razorfire! O’ jewel of the Knights, your presence moves me to song!" Singh
had already finished his second
brandy and replaced it with another drink
that smelled of peaches.
"For Hunter’s sake, slow down." Eun Alba told him quietly.
"Jaguar, you worry too much! It’d be a sin to let all this brandy go to
waste, eh? Ruby, you’re as beautiful as ever!
It’s a wonder the sun doesn’t
set and let you shine in its place!"
"Thank you, Singh — but spare us the songs tonight, please." She smiled and
clasped Singh’s arm. "What kept
you?"
Ruby Hokanson-Li had received the nom de guerre "Razorfire" for her deadly
accuracy with Herc weaponry. She
was also strikingly beautiful, which never
hurt in building a reputation. Hokanson-Li wore the same uniform as Eun
Alba
and Singh, and her family crest was a lotus flanked by two red dragons.
Eun Alba clasped her arm in greeting and forced a smile. His face felt wooden. "An emergency, you might say."
Hokanson-Li cocked her head slightly, inviting further elaboration. Eun Alba
ignored it. "I’m looking for the
Hangman. Is he here?"
"Of course," she said, eyes narrowing. The feud with the Thau-Yuros was well-known. "Is there trouble?"
"Yes," Singh rumbled. "Much." He set his glass carefully on the edge of a
nearby fountain and moved to Eun
Alba’s side.
"Jaguar, Rajah, you must’ve found a rebel nest or something, to be so
untidily late!" Titus Thau-Yuros was lean
and elegant, with a high forehead
and gaunt features. A silk patch covered his missing left eye, an old injury
from
Eun Alba from their first duel years ago. His callsign came from his
preferred method of dealing with enemies of
the Empire. Yet now he strolled
up full of bonhomie.
"I had untidy business." Eun Alba handed his glass to Singh. "There are those
who don’t care about honor, who
repeat slanderous rumors. Lies, even. I’m
sure you’re familiar with that kind of thing, Titus."
The Hangman’s eye glittered. "No more than anyone in the court, Colossa."
Singh swore softly and emptied Eun Alba’s drink at a swallow.
"This is Jubilee, Jaguar...," Hokanson-Li warned.
"Even Titus understands slander," Eun Alba replied blandly. The smile froze on Thau-Yuros’s face.
Hokanson-Li blinked. "Gentlemen, there are better things to discuss!"
"Certainly," Thau-Yuros agreed. "Such as your charming sister. How is she, Colossa?"
Eun Alba stiffened. The desire to kill was very strong now, a metallic taste
in the mouth. He itched to take
Thau-Yuros by the throat and tear the life
out of him.
"Dead." His hand knotted into a fist. "Murdered by lies."
"You aren’t calling me a liar, are you, Colossa?" Thau-Yuros asked coolly.
"You accused Elena of being a traitor to His Imperial Majesty. She couldn’t
live with that. Thus, you caused her
death and blackened my family name. I
demand satisfaction."
Thau-Yuros sniffed. "Elena was with Harabec Weathers — our rebel traitor —
for a long time, old boy. They were
lovers, she and the Phoenix."
Singh sighed and placed Eun Alba’s glass on the fountain by his own. "That’s
not proof!" he rumbled. "Harabec’s
been gone for nine years!"
Eun Alba nodded. "Singh’s right. That’s no proof."
"Ah, but what about the secret meetings with Harabec last year?"
Hokanson-Li looked shocked. Singh eyed his boots morosely.
"That’s still not proof, Titus," Eun Alba said slowly. "The meetings weren’t
secret, just discreet. They’d been
seeing each other occasionally over the
years. Our family knew, and so did the Weathers. Your sources didn’t have
to
work hard. Elena wasn’t much for secrets. And no one knew about Harabec —
including Imperial Intelligence."
Thau-Yuros returned a thin smile. "Excellent, Colossa, but flawed. After all,
why kill herself, old boy? Unless she
couldn’t live with the shame of being
a traitor."
"Perhaps you’re right," Eun Alba replied coldly. "The mere accusation killed her. The lies."
Hokanson-Li put her hand on his arm. "Col, this isn’t the place for this. It’s Jubilee."
Eun Alba remembered Elena’s broken body, her blood splattered on the garden
path, his mother’s stunned tears.
"It’s as good a place as any." He looked
at the courtiers gathered around them. "You heard him. This liar’s
baseless accusation killed my sister!" He directed his gaze back to
Thau-Yuros, anger worming into his words.
"Well, Titus? What’s your
pleasure? Blade or pistol?"
"Here. Now. Swords. I shan’t wait a moment longer, Jaguar. Your sister whored for the rebellion —!"
His control evaporated then, and Eun Alba lunged forward, but Singh grabbed
him and held him in a grip of stone.
Passion choked him. Honor was
everything. Losing it was tantamount to losing one’s soul.
"The Code, Jaguar! Stick to the bloody Code!" Singh hissed in his ear. The
Imperial Code Duello set forth the
etiquette and rules for settling matters
of honor with fist, blade, or pistol. Properly followed, the Code made
violence and the occasional killing an acceptable part of aristocratic
society.
Eun Alba stopped struggling. "Yeah, OK! Here. Now. By the book." Singh
released him and he drew a deep,
shuddering breath. The crowd pulled back,
forming a clear space beneath one of the marble ribs.
"Titus Thau-Yuros slandered my sister and my name. I formally challenge him
to defend his honor," Eun Alba
managed at last.
"We’ll keep our jackets on," he told Singh. "I don’t want to wait." He drew
his blade and made a few relaxed cuts
to limber up. It was a heavy cavalry
saber of duracore parasteel, and could score ceracrete without losing its edge.
The Hangman carried a longer, straighter sword with a basket hilt. He had an
advantage in reach, but Eun Alba
normally kept the edge in speed.
Everything narrowed to himself, Thau-Yuros, and the electric fury that raced
through him. Singh was trying to tell
him something, but Eun Alba waved him
off. Thau-Yuros saluted. Eun Alba returned a cursory salute, impatient to
begin.
A slash at the Hangman’s wrist started the battle.
The Hangman parried and counterattacked. Eun Alba twisted away and snapped
out a hard cut that grazed the
Hangman’s shoulderpiece before the other got
his sword up in time to avoid being split to the breastbone.
Thau-Yuros stepped back with a bland expression and feinted before stabbing
low. Eun Alba parried and riposted
with a fierce blow to the head. The
Hangman’s blade blocked his attack, and for a moment, the two men strained
against one another.
"HOLD!" The command exploded around them. The Emperor’s image blazed up
before them as Knights and
Terran Defense Force officers pushed through the
circle. Among them was a stunning woman in form-fitting
ceremonial armor,
holding a plasma glaive with cool, graceful competence. Imperial Escort, Eun
Alba realized. One
of the Knights strode past her: Caanon Weathers, Grand
Master of the Imperial Knights.
Eun Alba glanced at Thau-Yuros, who offered him a mock salute. Eun Alba
cursed silently. Another time. He
sheathed his blade, and the Hangman did
likewise.
"What is the meaning of this?" Weathers demanded icily. Hokanson-Li and Singh
knelt before the Emperor. Eun
Alba couldn’t read any expression on the
hologram.
"Your Majesty. Milord Grand Master." Eun Alba bowed deeply. "A thousand
pardons. We are resolving a matter
of honor."
"Indeed," Weathers responded. "A matter important enough to warrant a brawl
in the heart of the Jubilee? There
are proper places and times. You ignored
protocol — as did your companions." He shot a cold glance at
Hokanson-Li and
Singh.
"Grand Master," the Emperor cut in gently. "Discipline them as you think
best, but leave them fit for battle.
Remember, we stand on the eve of war."
"War, Your Majesty?" Eun Alba straightened. Hokanson-Li rose, her fists
clenched at her side. Singh left off
admiring the Escort and stood to
listen. Thau-Yuros simply smiled.
A trace of bitterness bled into the dry voice. "Yes. The colonies are in
rebellion. Grand Master Weathers asked to
hunt down his brother Harabec, the
traitor general. It’s time to crush this serpent and bring the colonies to heel.
Your request is granted, Grand Master." A ghostly smile flitted across His
Imperial Majesty’s face. "And take
these firebrands with you!"
Anticipation rushed through Eun Alba, tangling with the grief and fury,
filling him with renewed purpose. The other
matter of honor lay on Mars,
with the traitor. Harabec must also answer for Elena’s death. And the Hangman
would be there too. Very well. One way or the other, Mars would be the
crucible of redemption.
On your name, I swear it, Elena. You will be avenged.
Chapter Two
Stormalong 184 F.S. Martian Reckoning
April 2828 Terran Standard
Verity grabbed for a better handhold as the dustcrawler lurched sharply with
a shrill whine of servos. The restraint web went
taut for a second, holding
her tightly against the shockfoam of her seat. Then the web relaxed as the
‘crawler regained its
equilibrium. The man in front of her grinned, showing
yellowed teeth as he leaned easily into his own web.
"Gets a bit rough in the spring, don’t it?" he shouted over the din. The
dustcrawler lurched again and Verity felt her stomach
drop for a moment.
There came a sudden jolt and then the whine and rumble of the servos ceased. All
sense of motion
stopped. Outside, rocks banged against the armored hull of
the dustcrawler with a machinegun-like speed. It was like being
inside a
giant rattle, Verity decided. It made her head hurt. She could feel the
vibrations with her feet.
Her companion spat. "‘Crawler’s waiting out a bad gust. Lowers itself and
fires anchorbarbs into the ground. Like as not it’ll
only be a few shakes
‘til we get moving again." He wiped grit from his eye and spat a second time.
Verity looked about. Their surroundings were grimy and confining, a narrow
corridor deep in the guts of the dustcrawler. Her
knees nearly touched the
shockfoam seat in front of her. Even though only she and her companion occupied
the space, Verity
still felt a twinge of claustrophobia. She couldn’t
imagine how crowded it would be if it were full. The air was stale and cold and
tasted faintly metallic. The only light came from dim amber cubes set into
the ceiling every few meters. She sat directly under
one such light, and it
flickered unhappily. Most of the metal had a reddish cast to it. She reached out
and ran a gloved hand
over a support rib on her left. It felt rough and left
traces of red Martian dust on her fingertips. The dust seemed to be
everywhere on Mars, even after centuries of terraforming. Dust was
relentless as time, the Martian saying went.
"One of the old mining transports," the man said, watching her. "Pretty much
an antique, but still used to check the pipelines in
the scornstorms. Like
now."
Saxon. She’d spaced it when they first hit the scornstorm, but she remembered it now. His name was Saxon.
"Makes its way by buried radio beacons and an inertial navigation system,"
Saxon said. He hunched back and she could see his
breath frost the air when
he spoke. Mars was still a cold planet, compared to Mother Earth or Venus.
"It’s computer-controlled, then?" she asked.
"Yup. Simple system, not a lot of thinking room. Easy to override if you have
to. Good for reacting to the signals from the
beacons’ wind sensors. It
knows to hunker down when the wind gets up to over seven hundred klicks. When
the gust passes,
it’ll start up again. Used to be, the wind got up to over a
thousand klicks, they say. Back in the first days. Even a crawler en’t
much
use then."
Verity started and gasped as the ‘crawler shuddered under a tremendous bang.
Saxon swore. The rattling grew louder for
awhile, then began to decline.
When the noise finally stopped, Verity’s ears were ringing. She huddled in
her dustcloak and dialed the on-board heating up
another notch. Vapor puffed
out of Saxon’s hood, slow and regular. Verity wondered if he were asleep. The
servos took up
their complaints as the dustcrawler stood up and continued
its progress. Verity tried to imagine it as she jounced along, a
pockmarked,
dustscored centipede, like a train with legs like Hercs. Only not exactly like
Hercs. More like a crab’s legs, all
splayed out to the side.
"We ought to be there soon," Saxon told her.
Verity tried to smile. She didn’t really know exactly what they were doing.
She just knew Terran Defense Force enforcers had
killed her father in the
Tharsis City riot last week. She had put out feelers about joining the rebel
movement soon after, and to
her surprise, Saxon had made contact almost
immediately. I’m a librarian, she thought. What can I do against the
Earthers?
Her father had tried, though. Verity knew she had to try too. Tears welled,
but she resisted the impulse to wipe her eyes. She’d
get dust all over her
face. She stared at her hands and thought about nothing.
The dustcrawler jolted to a halt and lowered itself again. Everything was
still. The only sound was the distant rustle of the dust
sluicing over the
external carapace of the ‘crawler.
Saxon ripped free of his safety web.
"We’re there. Grab your kit." He reached over and hauled up his backpack and
began to make his way down the narrow
space between the seats. "Move it!"
Verity grabbed her pack and followed, trying not to get entangled in the pulse
flares
strapped to the pack’s sides. Saxon stepped through a rust encrusted
airlock and set his pack down by a large iris valve on the
floor. He punched
some buttons on a dust-filmed control panel. Lights clicked on and off on the
panel, and Verity heard a
grinding sound beneath her.
"Are we going out?" she asked. Surely not! Even in dustcloaks, the scornstorm
would rip them to tatters in seconds, if it didn’t
.smash them into a cliff
first.
Saxon just stared at her. Then he said, "Nah. We’re over one of the conduits
to the Weber-Meridian mining tunnels. We’re
going down." Verity flushed in
embarassment. What a stupid question! The lights on the panel flashed green and
the iris valve
shuddered open, dislodging traces of dust into the widening
blackness.
"Come on." Saxon disappeared into the hole. Verity took a deep breath and
lowered herself after him. There were solid rungs,
layered with some kind of
rubbery material. She couldn’t see anything, but the descent was easy enough.
She found herself
standing with Saxon in a small round room, very much like
the inside of a pipe. A standard hatchway offered the only exit.
Above her,
the iris valve closed, a shrinking pinwheel of light.
"The ‘crawler’s on its way. It’ll be back in a few days. We should be done by then."
Saxon rapped on the hatch door. Someone on the other side opened it and
exchanged muttered words with Saxon. Verity
could hear the sounds of people
moving, people at work. Through the open hatchway spilled harsh light. The
mining cavern
inside was full of people and machinery. A grimy Herc strode
slowly past. Crudely painted block letters spelled out ALLEY
CAT on its
side, right by a colorful depiction of a rangy cat with an eyepatch hissing and
clawing at something.
"C’mon, lady, we’re clear." Saxon waved Verity through the opening. She
followed him into the chamber. They threaded their
way between stacks of
crates, rows of pressure tents, marching people garbed pretty much like her,
various light labor Hercs,
and small groups huddled around heatpods sharing
hot food and coffee. The faces she saw showed lines of fatigue, but also
held a strangely moving excitement. Verity felt that excitement infecting
her, too. Like she was ready. Like this whole place was
ready. Everyone
seemed to have a weapon, either on them or close at hand. Some of the gear
Verity thought she recognized
from adventure virtuvids. Other things didn’t
even look like guns to her, but people seemed to act like that’s what they were.
Saxon shot a glance at her. "New tech. You’ll find out about it soon enough.
It’s gonna win the war for us. The other stuff’s
pretty standard, mostly
hypervelocity rifles and candleguns, a few assault lasers when we can get
dust-resistant models." She
nodded quickly.
They approached a knot of people sorting themselves through plasteen benches
set up in rows. A heavy Herc squatted in front
of them, and a short man in a
parka stood on the ledge afforded by the hip assembly. He had his hood back, and
Verity caught
a glimpse of blond hair before Saxon hustled her to a place in
the front row.
"Saxon!" the blond man called down. "You dustdog! It’s about time you got
here!" He tossed something toward them. Before
Verity could think, her hand
flashed out and plucked the object out of the air before Saxon could grab it.
Saxon wheeled on her, surprised. Verity cringed back. "Sorry," she said.
"You’ve damned fast hands, lady! You snapped that up faster ‘n a sandflicker snagging a brigbug."
"Sorry," she said, and offered the object to Saxon who took it with a scowl.
It was a small package. Chocolate from Earth, a
rare luxury on Mars. Saxon
opened it and took out couple of pieces, passing one to Verity. She put it into
a pouch for later,
grateful for the wrapper that kept the dust out.
"‘S’okay," he said.
The blond man was laughing. Verity could see he wasn’t native. He was
slightly shorter than the average Martian, and more
heavily built. When he
vaulted the three meters down to the ground with the kind of easy effort of
someone used to a higher
gravity environment, Verity knew he had to be
Terran.
A Dirtborn? Here?
The blond man came over. Tall for a Dirtboy, Verity guessed, only a little
shorter than her. She looked into cheerful blue eyes
and a face weathered
with smile lines. An expressive face.
Saxon offered back the chocolates. "Keep it, Sax. I’ve got more we liberated from Earth," the blond man said.
"Sure, Bek. Thanks." The chocolate vanished into Saxon’s dustcloak.
Bek regarded Verity with an oddly penetrating look, his smile lingering at
the corners of his mouth. Verity felt her pulse pick up.
It flustered her,
this unexpected charisma from a Dirtboy.
"Verity Vargas," Bek said at last. "First runner-up of the Scuttlebot Biathlon at Nix Olympica in ‘22, right?"
Verity nodded, caught by Bek’s eyes, which almost seemed to catch fire as he looked at her, the cheer hardening to intensity.
"You nearly set a record on that obstacle course. You would have, if the winner hadn’t set his own record."
"Yes," she managed. How did he know all this?
"You’ve still got the reflexes. Why did you give it up?"
Verity looked from Bek to Saxon and back. She couldn’t think. "I... I
couldn’t go back," she found herself saying at last. "I put
everything I had
into that race, and I got beat." She looked down. "I never got over losing, I
guess.
Then she remembered her father and anger stirred in her. "But this is
different! I’m not just in a race now!" Her passion
shocked her.
Bek nodded. "You’ll get your chance to prove it." He turned to go back to the
Herc, then paused for a moment. "Are you here
for you, or because you think
your Dad wants you to be here?"
The question threw her. Then she got angry. "I’m here for me, dust it! Dad, he ... Dad —" She choked back tears.
"I have to ask," he said. The intensity was gone now, replaced by sadness.
Bek returned to the Herc, clambered back up onto
the hip with the easy grace
of that Terran physique. Then he turned to address the group.
Saxon’s hand pressed Verity’s shoulder. She swallowed in embarassment and sat down.
"People," Bek began, "Friends." He raised his arms. "We’re here tonight for a
reason. The day when the TDF arrives isn’t far
off. And when Teddy comes,
he’ll come with the cream of the crop, the Imperial Knights." He emphasized the
last two words
and paused.
"Mars needs something to counter the Knights, who are, at the moment, the
finest and best equipped warriors in the System.
When the Knights come, they
won’t be astride the old Mohicans and Starblades the Imperial garrisons have run
out here. No,
they’ll be in Basilisks and Minotaurs, Apocalypses and
Gorgons. State of the art Hercs, make no mistake about it. And the
Knights
know how to use ‘em.
"Mars needs people to stand up to the Knights! Martian warriors to pilot
Martian Hercs! Well, that’s you! And you!" He
jabbed a finger out
into the crowd. "And you." He pointed at Verity, who sat in shock. Her? A Herc
pilot? Against Imperial
Knights? Verity couldn’t wrap her brain around the
concept. A Herc was a lot bigger than a scuttlebot, with real military
weapons instead of the pennypot targeting laser a scuttlebot pilot used in
competition.
Bek continued to talk awhile, but Verity didn’t pay close attention. She was
in shock at the implications. She was going to be
piloting a Herc in the
rebellion? They had to be kidding! Verity tried to focus again on Bek. He was
saying something about
new weapons, stuff the Terrans didn’t even know
about.
"... so we need to start training our warriors now. That’s why you’ve been
brought out here. We’re going to put you through a
rough time here. But all
of you can do it. You’ve all been picked because you have natural aptitude for
the kind of work you’re
going to do. You’re going to be the seed of the
Martian army, our heavy talent. Together, we’re going to burn the Empire and
free Mars!" Bek’s arms shot up.
To her surprise, Verity was on her feet, the fear and excitement blazing up
in her. "Free Mars!" she burst out. Saxon stood
beside her, taking up the
cry. "Free Mars!" Behind her, other voices joined in, louder and louder. "Free
Mars!" The rest of the
encampment picked it up, then, and the cavernous
tunnel thundered around her. "Free Mars!" Verity felt tears on her cheeks,
but not of grief.
"Free Mars!"
"Free Mars!"
"FREE MARS!"
Chapter Three
November 2799, Imperial Standard Reckoning
The Herc shuddered and stumbled in a blast of flame-tortured metal. Col spit
off a curse and leaned hard to the left, trying
instinctively to use his own
body’s weight to regain balance. The thirty-five ton Herc didn’t respond to such
a meaningless
gesture, though, and continued to follow the laws of physics.
Col managed to fire his lasers one more time before his whole
world toppled
over with a crash. The holoscreens flared and winked out, leaving him alone in a
dead cockpit.
"Christ and Hunter," he mumbled, frantically flipping switches. Auxiliary
power from backup cells cut in and the control panels
flared to life once
again. "Aww…no!" The status readout showed his Herc’s image colored completely
scarlet, with the right
side armament and leg completely gone. Power wavered
at fifteen percent, shields were blown stone dead, and his left side
weapons
pod was only at thirty-percent capacity. A flash and a shudder illuminated his
cockpit then, and the weapons pod
vanished from the holo. Another flash and
his view flicked to an impossible vantage. From about 100 meters overhead, Col
watched helplessly as his Starblade exploded, taking him with it.
"Exercise terminated at thirty-seven point three seconds." The computer’s
voice, a soft feminine contralto, sounded almost
regretful. "Falcon
Two, you have been destroyed."
"Tell me about it." The cockpit began to right itself quietly as the lights
came on, revealing the smooth gray interior of a
virtusim-training pit.
Blastblastblast! What the hell went wrong? I had him, damn it! Didn’t I?
"- suffered eighty-three centimeter penetration at central thorax, directly
into the power plant. Surface temperature reached
1500 degrees Celsius,
enough to vap-"
"Belay that." Col didn’t want to hear the grisly details. Damn computers,
always too literal. Besides, he would hear enough
about this encounter, all
right. Enough to make him sick. He punched the arm of his wombchair in
frustration. Hunter’s bones!
The cockpit side popped open, and Col’s shockharness retracted into the
wombchair with a chorus of snicks. As he levered
himself out of the pit, Col
was pleased to note his knees held up. The adrenaline rush of combat usually
left him shivering for
minutes afterwards. The pit closed softly behind him,
a gray egg embedded in a metaplas housing containing datafeeds and
kinetic
replicator pods. His own personal domain, usually, but not today.
"You call that piloting, boy?" His Grace the Duke Leonidas Eun Alba stood in
front of him, his face splotched with fury. A tall
man with a regal sweep of
graying hair and a finely trimmed beard, he wore a dark blue battleskin with the
Imperial Angel
blazing gold from the left shoulder, the family ship and
stars gleaming silver on the right. His callsign was Lionback, sprung from
his displays of terrible strength and ferocity.
Leonidas shook his helmet at Col. "That wasn’t piloting! That was stumbling!
Like a drunken farmer pawing at his maggoty
wife! And that last shot into
the hillside? I wasn’t anywhere near there, by good sweet Christ and holy
Hunter! Nowhere! Aside
from killing trees, you’re worthless! Worthless, damn
your -"
"Father, I –"
"You dare to interrupt me? Drop and give me a hundred!"
"But -"
"Now! Are your ears filled with pig scat? I said drop!" Leonidas
hurled the helmet aside and struck Col hard across the face
with his other
hand. The helmet clattered against the wall and rolled to a stop by a statue of
Gaea near the door. One of the
techs stooped to pick it up, but Leonidas
waved him off. "Leave it, damn you! Begone!" The tech and his assistant fled.
Face stinging, Col quickly got down and began the push-ups. The blow had been
a warning only. His father meant business.
Col wondered how far it would go.
A hundred push-ups he could do easily. But there’d be more ass chewing, more
push-ups.
Then a hard twenty-kilometer run. At least. He gritted his teeth
and tried to direct his resentment into his arms.
His father’s voice thundered over him. "Thirty-seven seconds! Fah! If this
were real, you’d be dead now, boy. Dead and
honorless." A boot thudded into
Col’s ribs, startling him. The voice snapped out like a whip. "Keep up the pace!
If you stop, I
swear by Hunter I’ll kill you now. I’ll not tolerate the loss
of honor, d’you hear? I’d sooner you die today rather than risk you
disgracing the family." Another kick, harder this time. Col grunted with
pain, forced himself to continue pushing. It required
serious effort not to
jump up and strike back.
"Do you hear?" A boot stepped hard on his outstretched fingers. Pain.
Col stifled a yelp. "Yes, Father!"
"Yes what?" Col’s fingers felt as though they were being ground into the duracrete floor.
"Yes, Honored Father!"
The boot remained. It was all Col could do to keep doing the push-ups. "Are
you mocking me, boy?" Leonidas sounded quiet
now, deadly. Col could feel the
tension reach near the breaking point. His father had never blown this far
before. Another kick
nearly cracked a rib. Col resisted the almost
overwhelming urge to cry out and leap to his feet. Rage was building in him now,
and he struggled to contain it. His hand -!
"How many push-ups is that, boy?"
"Twenty-nine…Honored…Father -!" Col had learned years ago never to lose
count. A superior ability to divide one’s attention
was among the most
important components of Herc piloting, and all potential Knights practiced from
an early age. Col could
crack out push-ups or beta-drills forever while
thinking through classwork, Herc weapons arrays, or girls. Right now he was
trying to figure out his father’s temper. Why this beating, far harsher than
any Col had received before?
"Agh…" Col couldn’t help it. His fingers felt like they were ready to crack.
He squeezed out the next push-up. You won’t
scream, he told himself. Won’t.
"So it hurts. Good! I mean it to, boy! Disgrace our name again, I’ll kill you
with my own blade. You’ve had hundreds of hours
of training. You’ve had the
best instruction we can afford, the finest simulations Sung Industries makes.
Another performance
like today’s and I’ll not waste another Imperial
credit!" Another kick, this time in the stomach. Col’s taut abdominal muscles
absorbed it harmlessly, but it still hurt. The boot moved off his hand,
finally. Relief sliced through the anger. Col wanted to curl
up around his
injured fingers.
"Get up, boy."
Anger reasserted itself. Col executed another push-up. "Thirty-two," he gritted.
Silence.
"Thirty-thr-"
A brutal grip closed on his shoulder and hauled him to his feet. His father
slammed him up against the curved surface of the pit.
Cold metal pricked his
throat. Leonidas held the combat knife easily but firmly, the point just over
the carotid artery. Col knew
the edge was sharp enough to cut silk in the
air. The point would slide into his flesh like butter.
"Don’t mock me, boy." His father’s voice was flat now, almost calm. Col had
seen that look almost a year ago, just before
Leonidas had challenged
another Knight to a duel and killed her. He swallowed. His fingers throbbed.
"Papa!" A child’s voice chimed into the room. "What are you doing?"
Leonidas stepped back, his eyes still locked with Col, the knife still
touching Col’s throat firmly. "I’m teaching your brother a
lesson, Elena. A
lesson about honor."
Elena Constanza Eun Alba walked up to them. She was young, about six years
old, but she carried herself like a queen despite
the rough pantaloons and
linen blouse she wore this afternoon. With her curly black hair and delicate
features, she promised to
grow into a real beauty. Now she looked up at her
father bravely. "Honor’s very important, Papa. I’m sure Col understands
now."
Leonidas nodded slowly, the fury in his face diminishing. "Yes. I agree,
little one." He sheathed the blade fluidly and quietly, his
attention
remaining on Col.
"I agree that Colossa has learned his lesson today." Leonidas stepped back,
still regarding Col with a trace of anger. Col stood
straight and tried to
ignore his hand.
His father continued. "The Emperor has decreed a Century Tourney this coming
winter. The Knight-candidates of all the great
houses will be competing
there. Including you, Colossa. Including the Sicano, the Hassan-Holzer, the
Thau-Yuros, and many
others. Your abilities will be measured against others
of your age. Today’s performance was doubtless a small…deviation from
the
norm." Leonidas smiled thinly. "You will not repeat it."
"No, Honored Father." Col’s chest felt tight and cold. So that was it! A
Century Tourney…The emperor would be in
attendance.
Elena piped up. "Mama wants you, Papa! She says she needs you to look at some horses!"
Leonidas grunted. "Very well." He ruffled Elena’s head absently as he
withdrew. At the door he turned as if to say something,
then changed his
mind and simply left. Col and his sister listened to the footsteps dwindle away
before either spoke.
"Does your hand hurt lots?"
"What?"
"Your hand, silly. You’re holding it."
Col looked down. He was indeed cradling his injured hand against his stomach.
When had he done that? "It’s alright, ‘Lena. I’ll
take a Mederipil later."
Small, cool hands took his hand gently. She peered down at his fingers, then
carefully turned the hand around. "You’ve lost a
fingernail," she said
matter-of-factly. "It might be broken. Why was Papa so angry?"
Col sighed and sank down to the floor with his back to the ‘pit. Elena looked
down at him solemnly. "How much did you see,
little star?" he asked.
She bit her lip. "A little." Her voice hid a hint of tears.
He gathered her in his arms. "Ah, hells. Don’t cry, ‘Lena. Don’t." He felt
her holding it in and pride swelled in him at her
strength. "Shh. It’s all
right, little star. Big brother just had a bad day in the pit."
She looked up at him, wet-eyed. "When I saw him tromp on your hand, I thought
you were going to get up and hit him, Colly. I
did."
Col laughed at her use of her pet name for him. It always reminded him of a sheepdog. "I almost did," he admitted, hugging her.
"I’m glad you didn’t." Her voice was muffled now, her hair soft on his neck.
"Me too." Leonidas would have killed him, could have accomplished it easily.
Col was sure of that much. If the Thau-Yuros
were going to be there – well,
that explained a lot of it. Count Delos Thau-Yuros and Col’s father hated each
other beyond
measure, and that hatred was well on its way to being passed on
to the next generation. Col had met the Thau-Yuros brat Titus
exactly twice.
Titus was a few years older and acted like he was a Knight already. They’d
disliked each other independently of
their fathers’ feud, so it wouldn’t
take much to start one of their own. Col looked forward to such a development.
It would give
him someone else to hate besides his father.
"Papa shouldn’t have gotten so mad, Colly."
"It’s honor, ‘Lena. He’s afraid I’ll screw up and hurt the family name."
She got off his lap and sat down next to him, holding his hand – the uninjured one, thank Hunter. "You won’t," she said simply.
"I know." Suddenly he felt really tired. And he still had an evening run to
do. The push-ups would wait. The question came
back to haunt him now that
things had calmed down. Where had he gone so wrong in the V-sim?
"Honor’s important, isn’t it?" Elena’s question broke into his thoughts.
"Yeah, little star, it is. It’s the most important thing in the world.
Without honor, there’s no life." Hunter’s knobs, he sounded
just like his
father!
"I think there’s something more important."
Col snorted. "Yeah? Like what, o’ queen of wisdom?"
"Love," she said importantly. "Love’s bigger than honor."
A smile stretched over Col’s face. "Honor is love, little star," Col said
gently. "Love of family, love of self. Honor’s everything.
Everything. Love
is nothing without it."
"Really, Colly?"
"For true."
"I love you, big brother. Does that mean I honor you, too?"
Col laughed. He didn’t feel as tired now. "It does, squirt! And I love you
too!" Col stood and lifted Elena up onto his shoulder
with his good hand.
"Now why don’t we walk down to the orchard. I bet Fra Girofino will let us steal
a couple of peaches
before I go for my run."
He looked back at the silent shell of the pit as they left the room. I’ll be back for you later, he promised silently.
* * *
The Starblade was an obsolete class of Herc, a middleweight carrying paired
laser cannon pods, a light autocannon, and a
six-rack of missiles. It was
damn sluggish compared to newer models like the Talon, but it made a good
all-around trainer,
which was why his pit sessions concentrated on using it.
You had to learn about energy budgets and ammo conservation, as
well as deal
with the Herc’s limited mobility and defensive vulnerabilities.
Col ran through the recording of the day’s pit run for what felt like the
hundredth time. Step out of the startpoint and around the
stand of forest.
Hill sloping up on the left, river on the right. Radar showing nothing, no heat
signs – then the motion sensor
picking up a trace in the rock formation. The
valley had been downloaded from scans of Val’Carzano, about sixty kilometers
from the Eun Alba manor. The family had a villa there, and Col remembered
hunting in the woods there as a child. Now,
however, the familiar scene had
an entirely different feel.
There! His father’s Armiger came out of the rocks, darting for the cover of a
sharp ridge about 300 meters away. Col linked,
locked and fired the lasers
while urging the Starblade into a lumbering run. The Armiger was smaller but
swifter, armed with a
twin four-racks and a single laser cannon. Col’s laser
bursts lanced in and vaped the dorsal missile pod, and Col remembered
feeling triumph at seeing the Armiger’s right leg trail a flare of sparks as
well. Now he just shook his head. A missile volley,
fired too eagerly,
exploded harmlessly on the rocks as his father dodged the limping Armiger behind
them.
Col froze the sim. This was the crucial time. What had happened, exactly? His
father was piloting a smaller Herc with impaired
mobility and reduced weapon
capability. Col, on the other hand, was undamaged, with plenty of weaponry and
armor. How
had his father done it so quickly? Radar still showed no other
hostiles, no snipers came up on the heartbeat scan, no unusual
heat signs.
He sighed and unfroze the scene reluctantly.
His father’s Herc popped up on the other side of the ridge, firing a single
missile and a couple of zaps from the laser cannon,
and suddenly Col was
losing control, his Herc status blazing red everywhere, then his shameful fall
into the hillside. He had
flamed a tree with that last laser shot, true.
Chalk one kill up, at least. After that, Father had simply finished him with the
laser.
How had Father done it? Theoretically, the laser and the missile could breach
some weak point in the Herc’s defenses to cause
a near-instant kill, but
that would suggest a cockpit hit – which didn’t happen here. Plus the damage
radiated up from the legs,
which would account for the massive loss of
control. The missiles shouldn’t have penetrated the shields, but the shields
went
before the missiles hit -
Waitaminute! The legs… The answer had been there all the time!
Landmines. His father had added a different twist to the
program,
picked out familiar ground, set a trap. And Col had run straight into it, guard
down. He hadn’t even run a magscan.
Father must have dropped the mines and
set them for cascade detonation triggered by concussion. The Armiger’s missile
would have set off the entire cluster right under the Starblade’s feet,
where the shields offered no protection.
Col felt his face heat. Father had been right. He’d been a real idiot. It’d
have been better to move to higher ground and wait for
the Armiger to offer
another target opportunity for the Starblade’s missiles or lascannons. Then,
once he’d been hit, Col had
continued to charge ahead blindly for a couple
of seconds, offering a perfect target. He hadn’t even attempted a new target
lock!
He exited the pit and leaned dejectedly by the doorway. Hunter’s knobs, how could he have been so careless?
"Young Lord," came a mild voice from the shadows.
Col snapped into a defensive crouch, slipping a knife from his sleeve. He
could call out to the manor security system, if he had
time. Guards would be
here quickly. Automated systems were, of course, never used. No one would ever
trust his or her
security completely to a computer.
A chuckle. "You can put the sticker away, young Eun Alba. It wouldn’t help, anyway."
"Name," Col switched the knife to his other hand. "Come out and name yourself."
A lean man wearing a Knight’s uniform sauntered around the nearest row of
V-sim units and walked up to Col breezily.
"Danzig. Riet Danzig,
Knight-Prime. Callsign Bedlam." He had thinning hair and a scarred face that
spoke of years of hard
living. He smiled. "Your father sent me."
Col straightened and relaxed. The manor security system didn’t react, so this
fellow must be on the persona grata list. "Father
sent you? What for?"
Danzig’s foot snapped out suddenly, sending Col’s knife clattering along the
floor. Before Col could react, Danzig took him
down in a blur of motion,
pressing his face hard against the duracrete.
"Because, lad, you’re in need of some bloody serious training changes.
Lionback’s afraid he’ll lose his temper again and kill
you before you
learn." Danzig coughed. "Y’needn’t worry about that on my account, though. Not
bloody likely. I’ll never lose
his temper."
Col smelled Danzig’s breath, a spice of smoke and beer. Danzig breathed his next words in Col’s ear, articulating carefully."But mistake me not. You’ll learn, by Jesus and the Hunter. You’ll just wish I’d kill you before we’re done."
Chapter Four
September 2819, Imperial Standard Reckoning
Red rain was falling on Tharsis. It wasn’t much, not quite even a drizzle,
this trickle from the sky, but it was rain to the Martians.
A recent thing,
only having started some thirty years ago, it still evoked wonder as the water
beads gathered like jewels on wall
and rover and traced clean paths down to
the pressbrick streets of Tharsis City. The miracle drops were red, of course,
or
almost so, tainted with the fine dust that still lingered suspended in
the young atmosphere. Nevertheless, it was rain, a soft rain
for a hard
people. Martians loved it. Many just stood out in the open with their faces
turned up to the sky, relishing each faint
touch of moisture.
Verity loved it, too. She was happy and excited. Scuttlebot practice had gone
well, and she was sure she’d take first place in
the All-Mars Junior
Championships next month. She tilted her face up to feel the ghost-prickle of
the rain, licked the moisture
from her lips and thought how Mars only became
a "real" planet when it managed this magic at last.
Others were out on this thin summer evening, looking up at the fragile clouds
with smiles creasing their faces. The city was quiet
at these times, and
people almost forgot the pressures of the day. Even a pair of Imp Lice --
Imperial Police, Verity corrected
herself -- stood outside their rover
smiling. One of them had her helmet off, revealing cropped blond hair and an
elfin face. A
tattoo of flowers ran across her forehead. The Police were
Terrans, of course, short and heavily muscled compared to the
average
duster. The girl saw Verity watching her, and the smile vanished, the helmet
went back on. Verity looked away
quickly, feeling like she’d spoiled the
magic somehow.
The cops wore standard gear, light armor and helmet over a belt bristling
with the ominous tools of their trade: stunstave,
restraint tape,
chemdialer, pistol, minicomp, hardcuffs. Each also carried an HV assault rifle
slung over the shoulder. They stood
out among the dustcloak-clad citizenry.
Cop and duster both shared that ever-present film of dust, though, which you
mostly
forgot until you touched a shoulder and left a handprint behind.
Execs and folks with indoor jobs had light, clean dustcloaks in a
variety of
colors, whereas miners wore the heavier styles that looked like they were caked
in a hundred years’ worth of the red
stuff. Verity had seen miners who moved
in their own little haze, the only clean spots around their mouths where a
miner’s
dustmask clung during working hours.
Verity paused by a store window, caught by a glimpse of a bright sapphire
dress. Martians loved bright colors, particularly the
blues and greens.
Party colors on dusty Mars, where they stirred dreams of life and water. Terrans
laughed at a duster’s
reaction to vivid blue, and they didn’t treat these
colors with the respect of a people who yearned for green vistas. Some of the
Terrans who’d been here a long time recognized the specialness of something
like rain, but Verity hadn’t met any Dirtborn who
really knew what the
colors of life meant to a people raised among the gray and rust and scarred
orange of this world.
Verity lingered a long while over that dress, dreaming. Then she realized how
late it was and pulled her hand away from the
glass, hurriedly wiping the
smears of her touch with the edges of her sleeves. It didn’t do much good, but
Mother had always
been tidy, and Verity had inherited the same habits.
A shift change was happening now, and the streets filled as miner crews in
their battered crummies entered the traffic with the
other people in their
rovers. Streets and sidewalks were roomy -- Martians built large -- so there was
no real congestion. A
miner stuck his grimy face out of a passing crummy and
whooped appreciation at Verity. She smiled, blushed, and moved on.
Verity
was fifteen years standard today, and the attention she’d been getting lately
both disturbed and excited her. She knew
she was supposed to be pretty, but
couldn’t quite believe it. Her reflection in the window showed long black hair,
high
cheekbones, and a maybe too serious expression. Someday there’d be a
boy for her. Not today, but someday. She tried to put
that yearning away as
she walked, but the miner’s wide grin stayed with her all the way home.
Angular buildings rose around her, painted with the colors of the
corporations that occupied them. Those logos and windows
were the only
bright spots. Everything else was either gray ceracrete or the dark rust of
pressbrick fashioned from the Martian
duracrust. The sky was darkening to
the amber color that reminded Verity – unfortunately -- of whiskey. The rain had
stopped.
It was actually warm enough that Verity didn’t need her cloak, and
she pushed it back off the shoulders to enjoy better
freedom of movement.
She got several more complements on the way home, one not so nice.
The apartment was empty when she finally arrived at home, and her high
spirits plummeted. She put her daypack neatly by the
door and pulled off her
boots and cloak. They went in the closet, and Verity ran a hand through her hair
and looked around.
Empty beer bottles lined one wall neatly, changing at the
corner to a shorter row of equally empty whiskey bottles. A half-full
whiskey bottle sat with an empty glass on the sturdy metaplas table in the
dining alcove.
Verity looked miserably at the bottles, knowing Dad was pulling a Rio
tonight, since he wasn’t here like he’d promised. He’d
stagger in later,
maybe very late, smelling of whiskey or gin and or most likely that cheap Bulge
Horse stuff. If he made it back.
Verity throttled that traitor thought
immediately. When he got back. It should always be when.
Moving listlessly through the room, Verity made her way to the kitchen and
transferred the lone glass to the sink. She had
homework to do, but emotions
collided and chopped at each other; she was too restless to settle down with
problems in
tectonic engineering matrices just now. The apartment seemed
confining. It was a standard slot, tight and blocky, with a sunpipe
in the
living room to bring in the daylight, radiator arrays in the walls to provide
heat. There was enough room for a small couch,
a couple of chairs, and a
tidy holocenter. Most of Verity’s books were in her room. Dad had his own room,
but mostly slept on
the couch. Verity couldn’t remember whether he’d ever
slept in a bed since Mom died.
Mom. A holostat of Verity’s mother glowed on a small wooden table in the
corner opposite the bottles. The holo and table
would be safer in Verity’s
room, but she stubbornly refused to relinquish Mom’s presence in the common
room. They made a
little shrine for Verity, a source of strength. Wood was
expensive on Mars, and this table was the costliest possession they
owned.
Verity’d had to hide it a few times over the years, but lately Dad seemed to
accept that it was the one thing they
wouldn’t sell. She walked over to it,
knelt, and ran her fingertips over the wood. She usually marveled at the grain
and the rich
color, amazed that it actually came from a living organism, all
the way from Mother Earth. But tonight, the table’s magic didn’t
work. She
felt dully angry at Dad, at smiling miners, at everything. For a moment, she
even wished Mom’s image would vanish.
She looked at the holo, at the strong,
smiling woman in it, and tears began to flow.
She sent a silent apology to Mom and to the Madonna. It wasn’t that she
didn’t love Mom anymore; it was just that Dad didn’t
love anything but, even
eight standard years later.
Not even himself. Verity felt her guilt shift inside, coalesce into a coil of
anger. Why today? Of all days? Even as the questions
blazed up in her mind,
she knew they were stupid. Pointless. After all, this was how it was almost
every day. She’d have been
surprised if Dad had come home, if he had fixed a
birthday dinner like he’d promised. She’d have been doubly surprised if he’d
been sober.
But why, she thought as she got up, why couldn’t today be different?
She plopped onto the couch. "It isn’t fair! Nobody cares!"
Well, that wasn’t quite true. Roused by the noise, DT came out of her
hideyhole, stretched and yawned, then crawled purring
into Verity’s lap. Few
people on Mars had large pets. Dogs were costly, and the desert conditions were
harsh outside the
major cities. Since The Fire, Martians had taken to cats,
ferrets, and fish.
Dejah Thoris was certainly one of the more spoiled specimens of felinity on
Mars, at least by Verity. When Dad was home, DT
usually stayed out of sight.
Verity let the cat’s warmth and softness comfort her. She’d just gotten to a
peaceful state of mind
with the phone chimed.
"Audio," she said, not moving from the couch. Dad always maintained audio was
enough, that video was only for friends or
family. A circular mote of light
– a holo-icon – flashed into the air near her head.
"Miz Vargas?" an unfamiliar male voice asked.
"This is."
"Sergeant Balentine, Imperial Police." A pause. "OK, your voice print is jake. Miz Vargas, it’s your father."
"What about Dad?" Verity asked in a small voice.
"Well, kid," the officer managed to sound sympathetic but bored at the same
time. "I have to tell you, we picked him up on an
Intox-B, enhanced by
Public Disruption."
"What does that mean?"
"Flat staggering drunk down the middle of Thoboss Street, Miz Vargas. He
almost walked into a crummy. Nearly caused an
accident."
Verity hugged DT tightly. "Is he OK?"
"Oh, yeah. Reasonably. Listen, his records show this is his fourth time, right? You know we can’t let it go."
"What are you going to do?"
"Can you come down to the station?"
Verity shivered. The police weren’t known for their patience. Besides, it was
no secret that Dad was sympathetic to miners
who suffered under the Imperial
Proclamation. If he’d been spouting another one of his pro-labor, anti-Empire
tirades, the
Police would show even less mercy. Still, what would they do?
According to NewsNet, the detention centers were full of
dissidents and
labor criminals already. Dad hadn’t done anything but talk, and the Empire
wasn’t spending money on building
new prisons. What could they do to a
public drunk? He’d probably spend a few days in detox, and Verity would take off
school to cover for him so he kept his job. Then he’d come home early
because the Imperials didn’t have room to keep him
very long.
"Kid? You there? Can you come down to the station?"
"Oh! Uh, yeah, sure. I’ll be right down, if that’s jake."
"Sure, Miz Vargas. Make it quick, huh?" She heard what sounded like some kind
of disturbance in the background before the
cop cut the call off. Silence
swallowed the apartment.
* * *
The police station was a heavy, stand-alone building. The winged star of the
Imperial Police branded the ceracrete exterior and
seemed to broadcast
anxiety out into the boulevard. Citizens avoided looking at it. Many crossed the
street so as not to walk
directly past the building. A few Police rovers
were parked out front, swivel-mounted chainguns perched on top like ominous
black metal birds. Some Police sentries stood by the entrance, stunstaves
out and at full extension. It was dark now, and
streetlamps were ignited.
The low hum of their dustfilters added a faint but distinctive voice to the
night. Verity got out of the
rovercab and asked the driver to wait, since
she was sure Dad was in no condition to walk home.
It took a few minutes to get through the checkpoints. First one of the
sentries ran a scanner over her. She was a head taller than
he was, but felt
a spasm of fear when he had her open her dustcloak so he could pat her down
after the scan. His hands
lingered a little where they shouldn’t, but she
gritted her teeth and said nothing.
"You’re jake, bunny. Follow the flashing green line," he told her.
She entered a long, bunker-like hallway, passed through another scanner, this
one set into the wall around her, and then
followed the line to a room where
a vacuum tentacled out and sucked the dust off her. Finally, the flashing line
guided her to a
waiting room that reeked of disinfectant and quiet despair.
There was a metal bench against one wall, across from a huge pic of
some
forest on Earth, all blue water and enormous green trees. Probably some
Dirtborn’s idea of a joke to enthrall the
Martians waiting here. Verity
ignored it and went to the mirrored window beside what looked like a reinforced
door. It was
designed so the Police could observe the waiting room, but not
vice versa. Verity held her ID card to the ident plate and said
her name. A
tinny voice responded, telling her to be patient, that someone would be there
soon. She smiled a little at the slight
hiss and distortion in the speaker.
It meant the dust had sifted its ghostly fingers into the Police electronics
despite the Imperial
precautions. All the scans and sucking tentacles seemed
silly to her, all of a sudden, and she felt a bit better, in a way almost
vindicated.
Verity didn’t end up waiting long before a stocky man with a scratch of beard
and watery eyes came through the door. His
uniform showed a sergeant’s
slashes on the shoulder.
"Miz Vargas? I’m Balentine." He wasn’t surprised at all when she stood up and
was considerably taller than he was. Instead,
he smiled a little and ushered
her into the back.
It was warm, and there was a lot of conversation. He took her past neat rows
of desks sheltered by transparent plexiplas
barriers. Scattered police and
bureaucrats shared coffee and laughed. Almost everyone was Terran, and she felt
a little gawky
among these muscled frames. They all had to work out heavily
to avoid losing too much muscle tone in Mars’s lower gravity,
and it showed
in the sleek snap of their motions, the taut muscle under their uniforms. Verity
followed Balentine down a short
rack of stairs into the detention area. And
that’s where she spotted Dad slouched on a bench in a plexiplas holding cell
with a
dozen or so other dusters, most of them miners.
"Can I see him?" she asked Balentine.
The sergeant nodded a little impatiently. "We’re bringing him out in a
minute, ma’am. I need to have you sign for him first." He
handed her a
clipboard made of scratched white metaplas with the Police star embossed over
the screen. Verity looked over
the display.
"It’s a release," Balentine said. "It shows you took custody of him."
"He gets to go home now?"
"Yeah." Balentine grunted. "For what that’s worth."
Verity didn’t know what to make of this, but she kept her mouth shut and
signed on the blinking field, then returned the
clipboard and attached
stylus back to Balentine.
They brought Dad out. He was stumbling, and Verity smelled the liquor on him before he said anything.
"Verity," he said, wincing. "Sorry, hon." His eyes were bloodshot, and he
seemed hungover. There were a couple of watchful
Terran cops on either side
of him, their dark green uniforms crisp next to Dad’s battered outfit. They
directed him into a red
circle set into the floor. A holo-icon in the shape
of the Imperial Angel winked into the air on one side with some numbers under
it. Balentine stepped in front of Dad and Verity started to get a a really
bad feeling about this.
Balentine checked his clipboard. "Ernesto Soledad Vargas, this proceeding is
being recorded according to Imperial law. This is
the sentencing hearing
following a summary trial in case ZCV400-14. You were arrested and charged with
Public Intoxication.
We provided a rapid detox via standard acuzyme
catalysis and then found you guilty of the matter as charged. The maximum
penalty is one year detention and a fine up to 30,000 crowns. You have the
right to speak on your own behalf before I impose
sentence. Do you
understand the nature of these proceedings?"
Verity tugged at Balentine’s sleeve. "What’s going on?"
"Please be quiet, ma’am. This is a summary hearing, and I am the magistrate-"
"By what authority?" Dad interrupted, clearly experiencing some pain.
"Do you understand th-"
"By what dusting authority?" Dad shouted. "Under what law do you have the
right to do this -- this insanity?" He swayed now,
very pale.
Balentine sounded bored as he rattled off his answer. "Imperial Edict 2810
Chapter Four, section thirty-two, citizen. ‘All
Imperial Peace
Officers in colonial jurisdictions shall have the power to conduct trial of
suspects following arrest.
Such Officers are considered Imperial
Magistrates during the course of said trial and are empowered to sentence
convicted criminals as though the trial and sentencing occurred in a
court of law.’"
"Doesn’t he get an attorney?" Verity asked, definitely frightened now.
"No, ma’am. No right to legal counsel under 2810."
"Goddamn Imp Lice!" Dad lunged forward, but the two police officers grabbed
him with Terran strength and then Dad wasn’t
going anywhere. He continued to
shout until one of the officers slapped a strip of tapecuff over his mouth. The
police had to
keep holding him, though, and Verity could tell they were
getting mad.
"Dad, stop!" Verity was sick with fear for Dad. "What’s going on?" She turned
to Balentine and began to cry. "He’s just a
drunk, that’s all! A useless,
dusting drunk! Can’t he just be sent home?" That quieted Dad down fast, and
Verity felt like
crawling into a dark hole.
Balentine looked at her with those watery eyes. She couldn’t see any sympathy
in them. "That’s not the law, ma’am. Now,
please have a seat so we can
proceed." She could hear the warning in his tone.
Verity backed up and lowered herself carefully into a chair. It was designed
for a Terran, so it was short for her. Balentine
nodded at her before
continuing.
"Mr. Vargas, you are hereby also accused of contempt of court and of
resisting Imperial custody just now. I find you guilty on
both charges.
You’re damn lucky I don’t find a treason charge to add to ’em." Balentine tapped
his clipboard. "I’ve referenced
the new convictions under the same case
number. You have anything to say for yourself?"
Dad slumped in the arms of the police, but glared at Balentine. The tape
still covered his mouth. Verity opened her mouth to
protest, but something
in Dad’s expression stopped her.
"For the record, the defendant has nothing to say." Balentine put the
clipboard on a desk and plucked a compact silver pistol
from his belt.
"Don’t shoot him!" Verity jumped up and moved in between Dad and Balentine.
Balentine looked surprised for a second, then his eyes narrowed. "It’s not a
gun, girl. It’s a chemdialer. Now I know you’re
upset, but don’t interfere
any more. Or I’ll charge you with obstructing justice. You jake with that?"
Verity got it, yeah. Balentine wasn’t kidding. She moved aside feeling
totally helpless, tears streaking her cheeks. "This is
unfair," she managed
in a blurbly voice.
"This is justice, baby," one of the other cops muttered. "Get on with it, Sarge. She’s just a kid."
The other cop took a moment and ran his eyes up and down Verity. Then he
licked his lips. "Yeah, but she’s a sweet catch
anyway." Dad tensed again,
but the Terrans barely noticed.
"Cut it, dustbrains!" Balentine barked. "We’re still recording!" The cops
straightened up, looking a little embarrassed, and took
tighter hold of Dad.
Balentine moved up and pressed the muzzle of the chemdialer against Dad’s
neck. Then he went back to where he’d been and
continued in that dead-bored
voice. "Let the record show that the sentence was administered at, uh, 1925
hours Martian.
Defendant received a ten milligram dose of Debilven-Beta.
Said dosage is intended to cause 66% percent paralysis for six
standard
days, onset to be within sixty minutes from time of administration. Cease
record." The holo-icon vanished.
Dad slumped in disbelief. Verity wasn’t sure exactly what Balentine meant.
"You mean he’s going to be paralyzed?"
"Yes, ma’am. Mostly. He will have some gross motor capacity, although not
enough to get his hand to his mouth." He
chuckled. "That’s kind of the
point."
"How’s he going to work?"
Balentine shrugged, put the chemdialer away. "Not my problem."
"But how’s he going to eat?"
"Miz Vargas, he can eat like a dog. Just put his food and water on the floor.
I promise you he will be able to navigate by
crawling."
"But-"
He cut her off. "No, ma’am. That’s all. Make sure you have him sleep on his
side. Thank you for coming down. The boys here
will escort your father out.
You’d better get him home before Debbie kicks in."
Debbie? She must have looked completely blank, because Balentine said, "The drug."
As Verity followed the cops and Dad back the way she’d come in, she heard
Balentine add, "Have a nice evening, ma’am."
She bit her tongue hard so she
wouldn’t blister his ears with her answer. Imp Lice. They were all Lice,
the Terrans! Dad was
right…even if he was a drunk. Verity felt terrible
about having said it like that right in front of him, but it had been sort of a
relief
to say it, too.
The cab wasn’t waiting anymore. The driver must have figured she wasn’t
coming out or something. Verity and Dad had to slog
home on foot. They
didn’t talk much, each lost in thought, neither knowing quite what to say,
neither knowing how to heal the
hurt between them. By the time they got back
to their apartment, the Lice’s drug was starting to take effect, and Dad was
stumbling. Verity helped him inside and onto the couch. DT meowed and rubbed
up against her leg.
"Verity," Dad said thickly. Talking was becoming difficult for him. "Sorry about …all…this. You…know?"
Verity nodded and knelt to take Dad’s boots off. She felt his hand pat her head clumsily.
"I…mean…it. Y-you…deserve…better."
She hunched over his boot, the snapstraps limp in her hand. A tear splashed
onto the dust of the synthleather. She couldn’t
catch breath to answer back.
"I’ll…make…you…p-proud…some…day." Each word was clearly an effort for him now.
I love you, Dad! she wanted to say. I love you so much! I just want you to
get better! If she was just good enough, maybe he
wouldn’t miss Mom so
much…! She choked on a sob she couldn’t quite swallow. Dad tried to stroke her
head, but his arm
relaxed and went limp instead. She felt his hand slide off
and thump onto the cushion.
"Sor’, Ve’ty." The drug was working fast now.
I’m sorry, too, Dad, she thought. She looked up and saw his features going
slack. His eyes were alert, though, and filled with
misery. His mouth worked
and he said something she didn’t understand.
"What, Dad? I didn’t get that."
"Aaa’eey oooo’aay," Dad produced after a struggle. He repeated it and began
coughing. Verity moved him over onto his side,
let the drool run out of his
mouth onto the couch arm. He looked at her desperately, tears in his eyes, too,
and suddenly she
understood. Control slid away and she collapsed onto him,
hugging him hard as she cried.
Happy Birthday, he’d said. Happy Birthday.